What the heck

sgms good one, lasted an hour at least.

610 single shot Pack Rifle
Interesting little gun, This is there add.
https://www.packrifle.com/
The World’s lightest, fastest take-down rifle
from Mountain View Arms, LLC.
Our Pack-Rifle is an incredibly light weight, take-down, utility rifle. The receiver, and most other parts, of the Pack-Rifle are machined from high strength aluminum, while most wear parts and fasteners are constructed of stainless steel. The barrel is a precision button rifled, Cro-Moly liner with a carbon fiber composite outer. Carbon fiber is also used for the butt stock tube of the rifle. This construction makes the Pack-Rifle not only the lightest rifle out there, but very weather resistant as well.
But the feather-weight of our Pack-Rifle is only part of the story. In addition to being light, the Pack-Rifle also takes down to a very small size. The same mechanism that allows the loading and extraction of spent shells also enables the rifle to take down into two pieces, in less that 2 seconds without tools! It reassembles just as fast.
Other features include, but are not limited to, storage in the handle and butt stock tube of the rifle. Please see our Shop page for a full list of our wide range of options.
 
I hope some one can tell how this ugly thing was held as it was fired.
I don't get it.:confused:
 

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That is a ZB47, designed by Zbrojovka Brno in 1947 for armored vehicle crews, it has no protruding parts to catch on things when exiting a wrecked vehicle in a hurry. Your thumb goes through the big hole, index finger through the little hole, and hold onto the squarish stock.
 
Scorch Another one. I did see a photo of someone holding one in a movie and it does look like a horrible gun even if it was built to use from tanks and armored vehicles
640 ZB-47 SMG
The ZB-47 was a submachine gun of Czechoslovak origin chambered in the 9 x 19 mm Parabellum round fed from a 32 round magazine. It has a unique thumbhole grip and came with a fixed wood and retractable stock. The magazine of the ZB-47 is inserted vertically assisted with a swiveling pivoted extractor to cycle its operation.
 
Buzzcook You are correct sir.

651 Margolin 22 Pistol Target
http://www.forgottenweapons.com/margolin-target-pistols-video/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MCM_pistol
The Margolin Target Shooting Pistol (Russian: Пистолет Марголина Целевой Малокалиберный) is a .22 LR pistol primarily used for competitive target shooting in 25m Standard Pistol class under the rules of the International Shooting Sport Federation for bullseye round-target shooting at 25 m. The Margolin has been used since the 1950s, and complies with all international competition standards.
History[edit]
The pistol was designed by Mikhail Margolin. It was produced since 1948[1] and made its international debut at the 36th World Shooting Championships held in 1954 at Caracas, Venezuela.[2]
A very accurate, reliable and economically priced pistol of functional and simple design. The designer himself was blind.
There is some criticism of the pistol's elevated plane of sight, blaming it on an incorrect notion that the designer could not aim his pistol. This is incorrect.
Margolin's design should be judged in comparison to its Russian contemporaries.
Margolin's raised plane of sight is a deliberate design feature that increased the accuracy of the pistol. The bridge that made the rear sight stationary combined with the unusually high sights allows the shooter to hold the pistol lower and aligns barrel with the shoulder, giving the shooter an improvement in control in rapid fire competition. The high line of sight is a design feature that the Margolin's designs had in common with the famous AK-47. The AK-47, designed between 1946 and 1948, like the Margolin, had high sights which lowered the barrel, put it more in line with the shoulder, reducing muzzle climb.[3]
The barrel, being comparatively light-weight, can be equipped with an under barrel weight for added steadiness.
 
Yes an Agram and but ugly.

The Agram 2000 is a Croatian submachine gun based on Beretta's model M12. The vast numbers of ex-special forces Agrams in Croatia after the Croatian War of Independence, as well as the availability of a sound suppressor, has made it a popular choice for criminals. It has foregrip and a faster rate of fire than the M12.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agram_2000
 
mapsjanhere You got it.
6411 Arsenal Shipka
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arsenal_Shipka
The Shipka is a 9mm Bulgarian submachine gun produced in 1996 by the Bulgarian company Arsenal. The name is a reference to the famous Shipka Pass, near Arsenal's Kazanlak headquarters, in the Balkans where Bulgarian volunteers and Russian troops defeated the Ottoman Empire during the Russo-Turkish War of 1877, thereby liberating Bulgaria. The Shipka was developed for the Bulgarian police and military and is widely exported[citation needed].
The Shipka is a compact weapon originally intended for use by armored vehicle crews, pilots, and other shooters who might require either a close-quarter weapon or aimed shots at longer ranges.
The prototype and pre-production versions of the Shipka were chambered in 9×25mm Mauser and used a 30-round box magazine. Production versions were produced in 9×18mm Makarov with a 32-round magazine. After Bulgaria's entry into NATO, a version chambered in 9×19mm Parabellum with a 25-round magazine was introduced.
The design is a straightforward blowback operation firing from open bolt. The lower receiver along with pistol grip and trigger guard is made from polymer, the upper receiver is made from steel. The simple buttstock is made from steel wire and folds to the left side of gun.
 
mapsjanhere You got it again,,, 38 min:mad:;).


621 Pancor Jackhammer Shotgun
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pancor_Jackhammer
The Pancor Corporation Jackhammer was a 12-gauge, gas-operated automatic shotgun designed in 1984 and patented in 1987. Only a few working prototypes of the Jackhammer were built. In the late 1990s, the current owner of the design, Mark III, attempted to sell the patents, prototypes, and production rights for $350,000.[citation needed] Nonetheless, its distinctive appearance and futuristic design have made it a prop in action films, television programs, and video games.
Development[edit]
The Jackhammer was designed by John A. Anderson, who formed the company Pancor Industries in New Mexico. Reportedly, several foreign governments expressed interest in the design and even ordered initial production units once ready for delivery.[citation needed] However, the design was held up for production due to United States Department of Defense testing, though the design was eventually rejected. With no customers and little interest, Pancor went bankrupt. Supposed overseas orders were subject to United States Department of State approval that was not forthcoming. The assets of Pancor were sold off, including the few prototypes built.[1]
Though unconventional, the Jackhammer can best be described as a gas-operated revolver. Many parts were constructed of Rynite polymer to reduce weight. Layout was of a bullpup configuration with a 10-round revolving cylinder that fired conventional, 12-gauge shells. The cylinder's method of rotation was very similar to the Webley–Fosbery Automatic Revolver, an operating rod being used to rotate the cylinder.[2]
At the moment of firing, the front of the shell sealed inside the breech of the barrel much like the Nagant M1895 revolver. Unlike the Nagant, whose cylinder moved forward to form the seal, the barrel of the Jackhammer was driven forward and away from the cylinder by a ring-piston, using gas tapped from the bore. As the barrel moved forward, the breech cleared the front of the fired cartridge and an operating rod attached to the barrel rotated the cylinder through a "zig-zag" cam arrangement. As the next shell aligned with the bore, the barrel returned under spring pressure. Spent shells were retained in the cylinder, as in a traditional revolver. For reloading, the cylinder was removed from the bottom of its housing and shells were manually extracted. Removing the cylinder required the barrel be moved and secured in the forward position.[2]
 
Mag-7 shotgun. I haven't seen a picture of one in over 15 years. They were supposed to be the be-all-end-all multi-function shotgun for the South African military.
 
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