Engineering:List of 7.62×51mm NATO firearms
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The below table gives a list of firearms that can fire the 7.62×51mm NATO cartridge. This ammunition was developed following World War II as part of the NATO small arms standardization, it is made to replicate the ballistics of a pre-WWII full power rifle cartridge in a more compact package. Not all countries that use weapons chambered in this caliber are in NATO. This table is sortable for every column.
Name | Type | Country | Image | Years of service | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Steyr SSG 69 | Bolt-action sniper rifle | Austria | 1969–present | ||
FN FAL | Battle rifle | Belgium | 1953–present | ||
FN SCAR-H | Battle rifle | Belgium | 2009–present | ||
FN MAG | General-purpose machine gun | Belgium | 1958–present | ||
Colt Canada C19 | Bolt-action sniper rifle | Canada | 2018–present | Licensed copy of the Tikka T3 CTR | |
C6A1 FLEX | General-purpose machine gun | Canada | 2019–present | Improved variant of C6 GPMG. | |
CS/LR4 | Bolt-action sniper rifle | China | 2012–present | ||
CS/LR35 | Bolt-action sniper rifle | China | 2020–present | ||
QJY-201 | General-purpose machine gun | China | 2020–present | ||
Madsen-Saetter machine gun | General-purpose machine gun | Denmark | 1961–present | ||
Sako TRG | Bolt-action sniper rifle | Finland | 2000–present | TRG-21 and TRG-22 variant. | |
Tikka T3 | Bolt-action rifle | Finland | 2006–present | ||
FA-MAS Type 62 | Battle rifle | France | 1962 | ||
FR F2 | Bolt-action sniper rifle | France | 1986-present | ||
AA-52 | General-purpose machine gun | France | 1952–present | ||
Heckler & Koch G3 | Battle rifle | Germany | 1959–present | ||
Heckler & Koch HK417 | Battle rifle | Germany | 2006–present | Derived from the Heckler & Koch HK416. | |
Heckler & Koch PSG1 | Semi-automatic sniper rifle | Germany | 1972–present | ||
Heckler & Koch MSG90 | Designated marksman rifle | Germany | 1990–present | ||
Heckler & Koch G28 | Designated marksman rifle | Germany | 2006–present | Variant of the Heckler & Koch HK417. | |
SIG Sauer SSG 3000 | Bolt-action sniper rifle | Germany | 1992–present | ||
MG 3 machine gun | General-purpose machine gun | Germany | 1959–present | Derived from the MG 42. | |
Rheinmetall MG 60 | General-purpose machine gun | Germany | Designed in 1960 | Derived from the MG 45. | |
Heckler & Koch HK21 | General-purpose machine gun | Germany | 1961–present | ||
Heckler & Koch MG5 | General-purpose machine gun | Germany | 2015–present | ||
Ishapore 2A1 rifle | Bolt-action rifle | India | 1963–present | Derived from SMLE Mk III*. | |
Pindad SM-2 | General-purpose machine gun | Indonesia | 2003–present | Licensed copy of the FN MAG | |
Pindad SPR-1 | Bolt-action sniper rifle | Indonesia | 2003–present | ||
Pindad SPR-3 | Bolt-action sniper rifle | Indonesia | 2010–present | ||
Pindad SS3 | Battle rifle | Indonesia | 2016–present | ||
Komodo Armament D7 PMR SA | Designated marksman rifle | Indonesia | 2014–present | ||
Komodo Armament D7CH | Bolt-action sniper rifle | Indonesia | 2016–present | ||
Karabiner 98k | Bolt-action rifle | Israel | 1958–1970s | Rechambered from the original 7.92×57mm Mauser. | |
IMI Galil AR | Battle rifle | Israel | 1972–present | 7.62×51mm variant of IMI Galil. | |
IWI Tavor 7 | Bullpup battle rifle | Israel | Designed in 2013–2017 | ||
IMI Galil Galatz | Semi-automatic sniper rifle | Israel | 1983–present | ||
Beretta BM 59 | Battle rifle | Italy | 1959–present | Derived from M1 Garand. | |
Beretta MG 42/59 | General-purpose machine gun | Italy | 1959–present | Licensed copy of the MG 3 machine gun. | |
Howa Type 64 | Battle rifle | Japan | 1964–present | ||
Sumitomo Type 62 | General-purpose machine gun | Japan | 1962–present | ||
Kongsberg M59 | Bolt-action sniper rifle | Norway | 1959–present | Derived from the Karabiner 98k. | |
PSR-90 | Semi-automatic sniper rifle | Pakistan | Derived from the HK PSG1. | ||
Azb DMR MK1 | Designated marksman rifle | Pakistan | 2014–present | ||
UKM-2000 | General-purpose machine gun | Poland | 2000–present | ||
AK-308 | Battle rifle | Russia | 2018–present | ||
SV-98 | Bolt-action sniper rifle | Russia | 2003 | Export variant. | |
Vektor SS-77 | General-purpose machine gun | South Africa | 1986–present | ||
Denel DMG-5 | General-purpose machine gun | South Africa | Designed in 2016 | ||
S&T Motiv K12 | General-purpose machine gun | South Korea | 2012–present | ||
S&T Motiv K14 | Bolt-action sniper rifle | South Korea | 2012–present | ||
Ak 4 rifle | Battle rifle | Sweden | 1964–present | Licensed copy of the HK G3A3. | |
Ksp 58 machine gun | General-purpose machine gun | Sweden | 1958–present | Licensed copy of the FN MAG. | |
Kulspruta m/39 | General-purpose machine gun | Sweden | 1975–present | Licensed copy of the M1919A4. | |
Kulspruta m/42 | General-purpose machine gun | Sweden | 1975–present | Derived from the M1919A6. | |
SIG MG 710-3 | General-purpose machine gun | Switzerland | 1960s–present | ||
L7A2 | General-purpose machine gun | United Kingdom | 1954–present | Derivde from the FN MAG | |
L1A1 Self-Loading Rifle | Semi-automatic rifle | United Kingdom | 1954–present | Derived from the FN FAL. | |
L42A1 | Bolt-action sniper rifle | United Kingdom | 1970–1990 | Variant of the Rifle No. 4 Mk I (T). | |
Parker-Hale M85 | Bolt-action sniper rifle | United Kingdom | 1980s–present | ||
Accuracy International Arctic Warfare | Bolt-action sniper rifle | United Kingdom | 1990–present | ||
L4 machine gun | Light machine gun | United Kingdom | 1950s–1990s | ||
L94A1 chain gun | Chain gun | United Kingdom | 1980–present | ||
L129A1 | Desingnated marksman rifle | United Kingdom | 2010-present | ||
M14 rifle | Battle rifle | United States | 1957–present | ||
Mk 14 Enhanced Battle Rifle | Battle rifle Designated marksman rifle |
United States | 2002–present | ||
M1 Garand | Semi-automatic rifle | United States | 1965–1990s[1] | Mk 2 Mod 0 and Mk 2 Mod 1 variants were converted to 7.62 NATO for US Navy. | |
M24 Sniper Weapon System | Bolt-action sniper rifle | United States | 1988–present | Military and police variant of Remington 700. | |
Remington MSR | Bolt-action sniper rifle | United States | 2009–present | ||
M60 machine gun | General-purpose machine gun | United States | 1957–present | ||
M134 Minigun | Rotary machine gun | United States | 1963–present | ||
M240 machine gun | General-purpose machine gun | United States | 1977–present | Derived from the FN MAG. | |
Mk 48 machine gun | General-purpose machine gun | United States | 2003–present | Derived from the Mk 46 Mod 0. | |
Zastava M77 B1 | Battle rifle | Yugoslavia | 1977–present | ||
Zastava M77 | Light machine gun | Yugoslavia | 1977–present |
See also
- List of 5.56×45mm NATO firearms
- 7.62×54mmR
- .30-06 Springfield
- .303 British
- 7.5×54mm
References
- ↑ McCollum, Ian (22 November 2017). "Navy 7.62mm NATO Conversion M1 Garand - Mk2 Mod1". Forgotten Weapons. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C5Ax8abE-Co&t=390s.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List of 7.62×51mm NATO firearms.
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