Daniel Defense DDM4 V5 Rifle 223 Rem, 5.56 NATO 32
Daniel Defense DDM4 Tortor non reiciendis varius in, sed donec quis id fermentum, nibh quam id in hendrerit fusce eleifend. Aliquam eleifend et dapibus quo, consectetuer fermentum pulvinar, wisi maecenas tincidunt arcu. Soluta odio nec est consectetuer. Morbi in sed, libero eu duis velit arcu sed, ut cursus. Vitae fermentum turpis, erat platea, nunc tincidunt aliquet ornare accumsan, convallis tortor bibendum vel pellentesque ac arcu. Interdum ipsum tortor blandit vel magna phasellus, quis cras in lorem auctor, felis dolor donec quis suspendisse duis nonummy. Non sed feugiat nulla ac viverra in, in diam etiam mauris, conubia mi quis cras a suspendisse justo, rutrum vitae in senectus. Maiores sapien sed, ante id risus placerat quis quam. Non suspendisse ut felis erat, eu laoreet, vitae fames dolor et et vulputate posuere, suscipit elit euismod ac, nonummy in quam.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
| CAPACITY | 10+1, 30+1 |
|---|---|
| WEIGHT | 6.5 lb, 7 lb |
During World War II, the Sturmgewehr 44 rifle used by German forces made a deep impression on their Soviet counterparts. The select-fire rifle was chambered for a new intermediate cartridge, the 7.92×33mm Kurz, and combined the firepower of a submachine gun with the range and accuracy of a rifle. On 15 July 1943, an earlier model of the Sturmgewehr was demonstrated before the People’s Commissariat of Arms of the USSR. The Soviets were impressed with the weapon and immediately set about developing an intermediate caliber fully automatic rifle of their own, to replace the PPSh-41 submachine guns and outdated Mosin–Nagant bolt-action rifles that armed most of the Soviet Army.
The Soviets soon developed the 7.62×39mm M43 cartridge, which is used in the semi-automatic SKS carbine and the RPD light machine gun. Shortly after World War II, the Soviets developed the AK-47 rifle, which quickly replaced the SKS in Soviet service. Introduced in 1959, the AKM is a lighter stamped steel version and the most ubiquitous variant of the entire AK series of firearms. In the 1960s, the Soviets introduced the RPK light machine gun, an AK type weapon with a stronger receiver, a longer heavy barrel, and a bipod, that eventually replaced the RPD light machine gun








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