Tuesday, 24 December 2013

10 things you never knew about AK47 Kalashnikov rifle that has killed more people than any other gun


Russian inventor Mikhail Timofeevich Kal
Russian inventor Mikhail Timofeevich Kal
AFP/Getty
The designer of the AK47 Kalashnikov assault has died aged 94. He was in his 20s when he created the gun just after World War Two
1. It in one of the few weapons that can be totally submerged in water and then still fire straight away.
2. Due to its simplicity and easy of manufacture it is the most copied gun in the world.
3. The inventor of the AK-47 did not profit from the gun. Communist states had no patents, and until its collapse in 1991, Kalashnikov was simply an employee of the Soviet Union.

4. The AK-47 can be stripped in under a minute and cleaned quickly in almost any climatic condition. Even if it isn’t cleaned, an AK-47 is still more likely to fire than any of its rivals as it has wide mechanical tollerances.
5. With only eight moving parts the AK-47 is cheap to manufacture and easy to use — so easy in fact that users can be taught how to properly handle this weapon in a single hour.
6. The cost of one machine on the “black market” range from just £6 to Afghanistan to £3,000 in India.
7. The Kalashnikov rifle is in the “Guinness Book of Records” as the most common weapon in the world. Currently, there are about 100 million AK. This means that 60 adult inhabitants of our planet have on one machine.
8. It is in service with the armies and special units of 106 countries of the world.
9. The Kalashnikov rifle is shown in the arms of some states. Currently, it is present in the coat of arms of the African country of Zimbabwe (since 1980), the coat of arms and the flag of Mozambique (since 1975), emblem of the Asian state of East Timor. From 1984 to 1997, AK was depicted on the emblem of the African state of Burkina Faso.
10. In some African countries, a newborn is given a name Kalash - in honor of the Kalashnikov assault rifle.

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