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Background to the "AK Brotherhood"

 

Driving down a Bordeaux Street we saw a pub sign dangeling above showing a thirsty weather tanned pirate with a bandana, tipping back a tumbler of falling-down water, the sign proclaimed "Frere de la Cote" (Brotherhood of the Coast) the old pirate guild.

Not so many universal brotherhoods these days come to think of it. Military, Soccer, Formula 1 Racing perhaps...Stamp Collectors maybe.

 

But what about the 100+ Million AK owners, carriers and operators the globe over since 1947!? From the juvenile gun toting african pirate, over asian revolutionaries, to south american rebels and the budget pressed prepper of the western world and the 106 national military forces from Afghanistan to Zimbabwe that employ the AK. Russia not only distributed the Kalashnikov rifles all over the world, but also licensed its production in over 30 other countries, including China, Israel, India, Egypt and Nigeria.

The AK world is not only black and white, but covers all shades of grey also.

The world wide AK Brotherhood must be the most ambidextrous, widespread and mighty of all the modern day brotherhoods, but the stygmata of weapons these days has driven it in to being a subculture nobody wants to admit exists...eventhough each housewife and kid know what a "Kalashnikov" is, or how it generally looks like with its banana shape magazine.

The widely available Chinese copy of the AK, the Type 56, fascinates and warranted the creation of the

 "The Glorious International Appreciation Comittee for the Chinese Type 56 Rifle"

 due to one of those giant ironies of history: China that prohibits any private gunownership since Mao Tse-tung,

supplies the world in it's millions with "The Peoples Gun".

Appreciate with us!!

In the world wide "AK Brotherhood" movement

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Symbolism Official AK Owner Operator "Black Banner Patch"

 

-The raised AK symbolizes “The Peoples Gun” putting power in the hands of the individual to Fight for his place, rights and beliefs in life.

 

-The wreath elements symbolize laurel leaves of victory of the armed individual, being the true sovereign over his fate, governments and politics, or alternatively as a grain wreath, a reminder that we fight for our land or home and the harvest of our hard work we intend to protect. Also reminiscent of an ancient roman wreath it symbolizes culture, heritage and the values of our culture.


-The empty black banner stands for the 100+ million people armed with the ubiquitous AK; Commoners, Rebels, Guerrillas, Pirates, Revolutionaries, Radicals, Subversives, Insurgents, Anarchists, Peasants, Separatists, Secessionists, Freedom Fighters, Warriors, Resisters, Partisans, Survivors, Preppers, Concerned Citizens, Operators, Enthusiasts and Aficionados.

 

All the actual, irregular and clandestine AK cultures are represented by and in the nameless metaphorical black banner. 

 

 

 

This site proudly proclaims the world wide AK Brotherhood and Sisterhood for all users and enthusiasts of the AK System in all it's variants and origins. It institutionalises the offical AK Brotherhood insignia to this cause, for all AK aficionadoes.

 

Durability, low production cost, availability and ease of use are the features, which assured the AK-47 global success.

Relative cheapness has always been one of the most important advantages of the AK-47. The average global price of the assault rifle was estimated at $534 in 2005, according to Oxford University economist Phillip Killicoat. Though in African countries the price of AK-47 is on average $200 cheaper.  

 

 

Fail-safe, simple to use and cheap to produce – the world’s most popular weapon, the AK-47, will long remain a monument.

Next to mixing vodka, absinth, lemon, cinnamon and sugar, the recipe for the Kalashnikov shot drink, it will stay the founding stone of the actual, irregular and clandestine AK culture that is evergrowing.

 

The AK destroyed the ability of super powers to wage colonial style wars on innocent people and gave the little guy a fighting chance.

The weapon of the poor, it gives power to underprevilaged and deprived, to fight for their righteous place and be noted and heard in the world.

 

A great majority of those 100+ million Ak's are owned and operated by governments or by people who want to become governments.
Meanwhile, most governments want to prevent plain folk in their domains owning guns, especially machine or semi-automatic ones. They want to monopolize the killing. They must be afraid of the masses of plain people...

Thats why we celebrate and the appreciate the "The Peoples Gun" in the world wide AK Brotherhood.

 

But politics aside...the AK Brotherhood not only stands for the personal right to armed defence of it's followers, but also the joys of life worth fighting for.

Hence the AK Brotherhood site incorporates an even mix of realworld AK culture.

 

Enjoy!

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

 

The "AK Black Banner" Velcro Patch of the AK Brotherhood / Sisterhood is available directly from us for $9.99 per patch, including international postage.

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The Type 56 Assault Rifle

 

The Type 56 is a widely proliferated variant of the AK-47. Few assault rifles have been produced in such volume, been involved in so many far-ranging conflicts and wars and been used by one ally against another with such frequency as the Chinese Type 56 Assault Rifle.

When China fell to the communists after World War II, the Red Chinese sought the military help of their socialist mentor, the Soviet Union. China had millions of potential conscripts for its military, and all those troops required assault rifles that were dependable, durable, easy to maintain and relatively inexpensive to manufacture.

They found everything they were looking for in the Russian AK-47.

To make the Soviet AK-47 readily available and at a lower procurement cost, the Chinese took to locally manufacturing the assault rifle under the designation of "Type 56" albeit with some slight alterations to suit Chinese taste/needs. Overall, however, the Type 56 remained true to her AK-47 origins, making the Type 56 nothing more than a budget Chinese copy of the original. The key identifying feature of the Type 56 included a folding bayonet mounting underneath the barrel. This allowed the bayonet to be stowed for a more compact size and folded forward into combat position when needed. Early Type 56 production models also featured visible markers for the single-shot and full-automatic fire modes, marked distinctly (and respectively) as "D" and "L". Design began in 1947 and production started in 1956 (ongoing today as well). NORINCO of China handled manufacture and Bangladesh Ordnance Factory in Bangladesh signed on to produce local license-production copies. To date, some 10 to 15 million examples are believed to have been produced.

Base production assault rifles were designated simply as "Type 56" with the system entering operational service in 1956. Original forms had machined receivers while later ones were stamped to coincide with the modernized Soviet AK-47 series - the "AKM". Other operators (beyond the Chinese) have included Afghanistan, Albania (some locally-produced), Bangladesh, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Cambodia, Iraq, Laos, North Korea, Pakistan and Sudan (made under license) among others. Like the AK-47 before it, the Type 56 was chambered to fire the 7.62x39mm Soviet intermediate cartridge, these from a 30-round detachable, curved box magazine. As in the AK-47, the selective firing action was gas-operated with a rotating bolt.

The Type 56-1 variant was later unveiled to showcase a double-strut folding buttstock. As in the AKM, the process saw the stock folded forward and under the receiver as opposed to over it. These models could be identified and differentiated from the Soviet types by their use of noticeable rivets to hinge the arms for folding. The Type 56-2 was nothing more than the Type 56-1 production model appearing in 1980 and featuring an all new buttstock which folded over the side of the receiver. Additionally, the bayonet mounting was dropped and the rifle became an export product to interested parties. In 1991, the shortened Type 56C carbine version (official Chinese designation of "QBZ-56C") came to light and made use of more plastic furniture as opposed to the original's wood fittings. Other improvements from previous NORINCO-produced models (and revised Soviet-produced AK-47 models for that matter) were incorporated into the design to help it stay relevant to the changing conditions of the modern battlefield. These included the implementation of a side-folding stock sporting a cheekpiece (adding both portability and ergonomics to the weapon system) and a muzzle-brake/flash suppressor assembly over the muzzle. The Type 56C was also lighter and more compact, making for a stable gun platform that improved on portability - suitable for special forces use.

Two civilian versions became the Type 56S (also known as the Type 56 "Sporter" and the Type 84S. The former was offered in the typical "semi-automatic fire only" design while the latter was chambered to fire the 5.56x45mm NATO standard cartridge.

The Type 56 series, as a whole, went on to see extensive combat actions in the Vietnam War and several upcoming regional conflicts across Southeast Asia as well as the Sri Lankan Civil War, the Soviet War in Afghanistan, the Iran-Iraq War and the Kosovo War and its related conflicts to name a few. In the Vietnam War, the Viet Cong were known to utilize the weapon in great numbers. The Soviet AKM version eventually replaced these.

Mind you that "Type 56" is also used to designate the unrelated Chinese automatic rifle - essentially a copy of the Soviet SKS - though the two are very different weapons. The Chinese SKS is most often identified as the "Type 56 Carbine" to differentiate between the two weapon systems.

While Iran purchased stocks of Type 56 from China to fight the Iran-Iraq War, it also saw fit to reverse-engineered the rifle to create the indigenous (albeit illegal) KL-7.62 assault system. Design and production was handled by DIO and only later models differed from the original Type 56 by way of plastic stocks and foregrips.

 

The original Type 56, like the AK-47, has a milled receiver. In the mid-1960s, the Chinese switched to a stamped receiver to keep in lockstep with the new Soviet AKM.

It is speculated that the Chinese had to reverse engineer a copy of the AKM with the stamped receiver as they were not given a licence to produce the AKM and RPK by the Soviets because of failing relations after the Sino-Soviet split. The "Type 56" designation was also used for Chinese versions of the SKS and of the RPD, known as the Type 56 carbine and Type 56 light machine gun respectively. However, unlike the popular Type 56 rifle, all Type 56 carbines have been removed from military service, except a few used for ceremonial purposes and by local Chinese militia. The Type 56 light machine gun is still used by the Cambodian Army and Sri Lankan Army.

Side by side, the AK-47 and the Type 56 appear identical. Both weapons chamber the Soviet 7.62x39mm ammo. However, unlike the AK-47 (with its detachable bayonet), the Type 56 has a non-detachable, under-folding bayonet.

The AK-47 has Soviet markings, the Type 56, Chinese.

The notable difference between the two is the front sight. If it is fully hooded, it is a Chinese Type 56. AK-47 and AKM models feature a partially opened front sight.

The Type 56 is a gas-operated, rotating bolt, selective-fire assault rifle that uses 30-round magazines. It has a 650-round-per-minute rate of fire at 2,400 feet per second. Its effective range is 1,312 feet (400 meters).

During the Cold War period, the Type 56 was exported to communist forces in the Third World. Many of these rifles found their way to battlefields in Africa, Southeast Asia, and the Middle East and were used alongside other Kalashnikov rifles from both the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact nations of Eastern Europe. Chinese support for the Democratic Republic of Vietnam before the mid-1960s meant that the Type 56 was frequently encountered by American soldiers in the hands of either Vietcong guerrillas or PAVN soldiers during the Vietnam war. The Type 56 was discovered in enemy hands far more often than regular Russian-made AK-47s or AKMs. U.S. soldiers in Vietnam faced the Type 56 in the hands of the Viet Cong and the North Vietnamese. The Type 56 was later used by Vietnamese soldiers against Chinese combatants in the Sino-Vietnamese War. The Type 56 was used by the Mujahideen in Afghanistan against the Soviets in the 1980s and by the Iranians against Iraqis in the Iran-Iraq War (1982 to 1988). The Type 56 is an equal opportunity killing machine.

Type 56 was replaced by the Type 81 as the main battle rifle for the People’s Liberation Army in 1981. Millions of Type 56 can be found in armories worldwide.

Type 56 differences from Kalashnikov-type rifles

  • The Type 56 has a 1.5mm stamped receiver (like the RPK, although it lacks the reinforced trunnion of the RPK) versus the 1mm stamping of the AKM.

  • The barrel on the Type 56 is similar to the AK-47 and heavier than that of the AKM.

  • The front sights are fully enclosed, compared to the AKM and AK-47 which are partially opened.

  • Has the double hook disconnector of the AK-47 rather than the single hook disconnector of the AKM.

  • Has a smooth dust cover like the AK-47 and unlike the ribbed dust cover of the AKM.

  • May have a folding spike bayonet (nicknamed the "pig sticker") as opposed to the detachable knife bayonets of the AK-47 and AKM. There are three different types of spike bayonets made for Type 56 rifles. Type 56 assault rifles are the only AK-pattern assault rifles that use spike bayonets.

  • Military issued versions of the Type 56 lack the threaded muzzle found on the AK-47 and AKM, this means they cannot use an AKM compensator or blank-firing device. Commercial versions of the Type 56 may or may not have a threaded muzzle.

  • Has a blued finish like the AK-47 and unlike the AKM, which has a black oxide finish or a parkerized finish.

  • Has "in the white" bolt carrier, while the AKM bolt carrier is blued.

  • Like the AK-47, sights will only adjust to 800 metres, whereas AKM sights adjust to 1000 metres.

  • Nearly all Type 56's lack the side mount plate that was featured on many variations of the AK-47 and AKM.

  • Lacks the hammer release delay device of the AKM. The lack of hammer retarder is perhaps due to a preference of a slightly higher rate of fire, and simplicity. And did not have anything to do with thickness of the receiver, as the RPK included the hammer retarder also.

  • The gas relief ports are located on the gas tube like the AK-47, unlike the AKM which had the gas relief ports relocated forward to the gas block.

  • The fixed stock of a Type 56 has a less in-line stock like the AK-47, opposed to the AKM which has a straighter stock.

Bananas have more trade regulations imposed upon them, than the AK.

How did the AK-47 become the most abundant weapon on earth?

It's the most abundant gun on earth, used by national armies, guerrillas and gangsters. How did this simple firearm, created by committee in Soviet Russia, come to monopolise violence? Pulitzer-Prize winning reporter CJ Chivers dismantles the myth and symbolism of the AK-47.

 

The atomic bomb rested on a tower 100 feet above the ground. Known as RDS-1, it was shaped like a huge metal teardrop with rivets and bolts along its sides. Everything had been prepared. Inside its shell was a uranium and plutonium charge equal to about 20 kilotons of TNT, making it a rough equivalent to the weapon the United States had used to destroy Nagasaki four years before. It was 1949, and the Soviet Union was moments from entering the atomic age – ending the American monopoly in atomic arms, securing the Kremlin's status atop a global superpower, and giving the Cold War its sense of doomsday menace.

As diplomatic cables about the atomic explosion moved from embassies in Moscow to Western capitals, about 1,100 miles to the west of the test site, in a Russian industrial city in the Ural range, another of Stalin's secret military projects was gaining momentum. Within the dark brick walls of a set of immense factories, a product was being prepared for mass production. Teams of engineers, armourers, and factory supervisors were fine-tuning its design.

Communist Party leaders insisted that these factories were engaged in the manufacture of automobiles. But this product was neither a vehicle nor any of its parts. It was a weapon: a strange-looking rifle, deviating from the classic forms. At a glance, the new rifle was in many ways peculiar, an oddity, a reason to furrow brows and shake heads. Its components were simple, inelegant, and by Western standards, of seemingly workmanlike craftsmanship. The AK-47 was born. Within 25 years it would be the most abundant firearm the world had known.

The acronym abbreviated two Russian words, Avtomat Kalashnikova, the automatic by Kalashnikov, a nod to Senior Sergeant Mikhail Timofeyevich Kalashnikov, a 29-year-old former tank commander to whom the army and the Communist Party formally attributed the weapon's design. The number was shorthand for 1947, the year a technical bureau in Kovrov, a city east of Moscow, had finished the prototypes. It seemed a puzzling embodiment of a firearm compromise, a blend of design choices no existing Western army was willing yet to make. It was shorter than the infantry rifles it would displace, but longer than the submachine guns that had been in service for 30 years. It fired a medium-powered cartridge, not powerful enough for long-range sniping duty, but with adequate energy to strike lethally and cause terrible wounds within the ranges at which almost all combat occurs. It could be fired automatically, and at a rate like those of the machine guns that already had changed the way wars were fought. It could be fired on single fire, like a rifle of yore.

None of the Soviet Union's Cold War opponents had managed to conceive of, much less produce, a firearm of such firepower at such compact size. And this new weapon had other useful traits. It had little recoil compared to most rifles of its time. It was so reliable, even when soaked in bog water and coated with sand, that its Soviet testers had trouble making it jam. And its design was a testament to simplicity, so much so that its basic operation might be grasped within minutes, and Soviet teachers would soon learn that it could be disassembled and reassembled by Slavic schoolboys in less than 30 seconds flat.

Together these traits meant that once this weapon was distributed, the small-statured, the mechanically disinclined, the dim-witted, and the untrained might be able to wield, with little difficulty or instruction, a lightweight automatic rifle that could push out blistering fire for the lengths of two or three football fields. For the purpose for which it was designed – as a device that allowed ordinary men to kill other men without extensive training or undue complications – this was an eminently well-conceived tool.

The carefully packaged history of Soviet times, a cheerful parable for the proletariat, was that the AK-47 sprang from the mind of a gifted if unlettered sergeant who wanted to present his nation an instrument for its defence. This was a message made in the Communist Party's propaganda mills. It required redaction and lies. In publishing this account, the Soviet Union resorted to enough invention, some of it cartoonish, that even Mikhail Kalashnikov eventually publicly criticised it, albeit lightly. The AK-47 did not result from an epiphany at the workbench of an intent Russian sergeant. Heroism, in the classic sense, was nonexistent here. Spontaneity, according to a close reading of the available records, played almost no role. The automatic Kalashnikov was the result of state process and collective work, the output not of a man but of committees. And its wide distribution and martial popularity did not occur because the rifle is, as General Kalashnikov often said, "simple, reliable, and easy to use".

Ultimately, it was its production by the tens of millions by governments that gave them away or lost control of them that made the Kalashnikov the world's primary firearm. One way to understand the nature of its familiarity is this: had the AK-47 been created in Luxembourg, few people would likely have ever heard of it. But Luxembourg could not have created this weapon, because it lacked the Soviet bureaucracy and the particular historical pressures that ordered the Kalashnikov to its form within the USSR. The Soviet state is the inventor here – both of the weapon and its fables.

In the mid-1950s, while the Soviet Union staggered out of Stalin's reign, the Kremlin was in a unique position. It was both the world's standard bearer for socialism and a nation with the military power to help fraternal nations with their armament desires. Soviet arms became a form of Soviet political currency. To compete with this new weapon, combatants faced a choice. Either use the Kalashnikov, or come up with a rifle that could match it in a fight.

War reorganised around Stalin's gun. Nations queued up, seeking their share, as did revolutionary groups, and, later, terrorist organisations. As the AK-47 gained acceptance and approval in the Soviet army, the Kremlin used it as a readily deliverable tool in the game of East-West influence jockeying, both as a diplomatic chip to secure new friendships and as an item to be distributed to those willing to harass or otherwise occupy the attention of the West. On the practical side, convincing allies and potential allies to select Soviet equipment expanded standardisation. It also made client states accept that in the event of their own local wars, they would need to be resupplied via the Kremlin.

The result was a logistical and psychological arrangement that created dependencies serving Kremlin interests. On the political side, sharing military technology cemented allies and made new friends for the Kremlin, all the while helping to frustrate the West. Foreign acceptance of Russian firearms created the impression that Soviet equipment was preferable to Western military products. For a nation that struggled to manufacture decent elevators and shoes, in a system in which wool shirts were not necessarily wool, approval of a Soviet weapon served as a refreshing endorsement of an industrial base often making shoddy goods.

For all of these reasons, the period centred on the 1950s marked the most important years for the Kalashnikov line. The weapon had been developed. The man credited for its invention would be given public stature and material rewards and would be regarded as a proletarian hero. The infrastructure would be built to manufacture the assault rifle across the socialist world, and the Russian assault rifle would see its first combat use – both by conventional forces and by insurgents. The United States military, all the while, would misjudge the meaning and significance of the AK-47's arrival. Beyond dismissing the value of the socialists' main firearm with parochial superiority, it would develop weapons for its own forces that would fail when it mattered most, losing one of the most important but least-chronicled arms races of the Cold War. The Kalashnikov Era had arrived. We are living in it still.

Tanks can rout conventional armies. GPS-guided ordnance can scatter combatants. Land mines, suicide bombers, and improvised explosives have attracted more attention in recent years. Yet the rifle remains pre-eminent. Whenever an idea organises for battle it gathers around its guns. Few weapons are as accessible or can be as readily learnt. No other weapon appears in as many conflict areas year after year. None is as sure to appear in each future war, if only because no other weapon is as well suited for as many missions and tasks. And of all the rifles available for war today, the Kalashnikov line stands apart as the most abundant and widely used rifle ever made.

Virtually everyone has seen a Kalashnikov. With its stubby black barrel with a parallel gas tube above, its steep front sight post, and the distinctive banana clip, its unmistakable profile has become a constant presence in the news. It is the world's most widely recognised weapon, one of the world's most recognisable objects.

More than six decades after its design and initial distribution, more than 50 national armies carry the automatic Kalashnikov, as do an array of police, intelligence, and security agencies. But its fuller terrain lies outside the sphere of conventional force. The Kalashnikov marks the guerrilla, the terrorist, the child soldier, the dictator, and the thug – all of whom have found it to be a ready equaliser against morally or materially superior foes. Celebrated by Soviet propagandists as a tool for self-defence and liberation, its first lethal uses were for repression – crushing uprisings in East Germany in 1953 and in Hungary in 1956, and for shooting fleeing civilians trying to cross the Iron Curtain's borders.

Once it grew beyond border and crackdown duty in Eastern Europe and became an automatic weapon for global combat service, it was instantly a groundbreaking firearm, a weapon that rearranged the rules. In the 1960s, when American Marines encountered AK-47s in urban warfare, at Hue City in Vietnam, they discovered that a single guerrilla with a Kalashnikov could slow a company's advance; they used cannon to rubble buildings in which AK-toting Viet Cong marksmen hid.

Its power, today a battlefield norm, was at first of an almost unseen sort, at least among the weapons that could be wielded by one man. Engineers in Finland and Josip Broz Tito's Yugoslavia secured early versions of the weapon and developed unlicensed knock-offs straightaway. After leading the revolution that put him atop Cuba, Fidel Castro amassed stores of Soviet assault rifles and distributed engraved Kalashnikovs as gifts. Idi Amin armed his Ugandan forces with Kalashnikovs and appointed himself president for life. Yasser Arafat procured them for the PLO and the many terrorist groups that spread from Fatah.

Its followers cross all lines. The Egyptian army outfitted itself with Kalashnikovs. Islamic Jihad used a Kalashnikov to assassinate the Egyptian president, Anwar Sadat. The great numbers of its manufacture and the multiple sellers offering it ultimately ensured that it would be turned against the army that created it, as was the case in the Soviet-Afghan war and then again in Chechnya.

By the 1980s, with several sources simultaneously arming both sides of the Afghan conflict, the country filled with AK-47s and their derivatives. A durable assault rifle can have many lives over the decades of its existence, and in Afghanistan the weapons were recycled repeatedly, passed from fighter to fighter by many means.

In the Panjshir Valley, a chasm in the mountains north of Kabul, the rifle sometimes became a family heirloom. The valley had been the scene of some of the most intense fighting in the early years of the war; its canyons became backdrops for mujahideen legend. Several times the Soviet army thrust armoured columns up the valley, sometimes enveloping the guerrillas by using helicopters to land troops on mountain passes to cut off withdrawing mujahideen. Each time the Soviet forces controlled territory briefly before being subjected to persistent attacks. The valley was never conquered, and its villages were never co-opted or tamed.

First among the Soviet army's foes was Ahmad Shah Massoud, the ethnic Tajik commander whose charisma and tactical adroitness became part of Afghan lore. After one Soviet incursion, Massoud attended the funeral of a dead guerrilla. He lifted the man's Kalashnikov and carried it to the deceased man's younger brother, Ashrat Khan. The commander's mastery of quiet ceremony, like his sense for tactics, had reached a high state of polish.

"Do you want to be a mujahid?" Massoud asked. Ashrat Khan extended his hands. He accepted the rifle. "Yes, I am going to take my brother's weapon," he said. "I am going to be with you." At moments such as these, the Kalashnikov's infiltration of the martial world was nearing completion. Afghans were using it for the same purpose that Mikhail Kalashnikov insisted had motivated him – to defend their native land.

The rifle assumed uses that were at once soldierly and ceremonial, and over the decades it reached far beyond conflicts in which the Kremlin played a primary role. When Sheik Ahmed Yassin, the founder of Hamas, was mourned in 2004 by his followers in Gaza, his casket was guarded by masked men at the ready with folding-stock AKs. The scene was a throwback. Six years earlier along the Cambodian-Thai border, the body of Pol Pot was attended by teenage gunmen carrying an Asian version of the same gun.

Mastering a Kalashnikov is one of the surest ways to become an underground fighter in our time. In Belfast, both sides used them in clashes and political art. In Afghanistan and Pakistan, student notebooks from Al-Qa'ida camps showed that the opening class in jihad curricula was a lesson on Kalashnikov's avtomat. Along with the rocket-propelled grenade, the portable mortar tube, and the makeshift bomb, the automatic Kalashnikov completes the quartet of weapons for the resistance in Afghanistan and Iraq, where insurgents rely on the local version, the Tabuk.

In his first taped message after the attacks of 11 September 2001, Osama bin Laden held a microphone near his beard and told the world that "the winds of faith and change have blown". It was his movie, he could put in it anything he wanted. Beside him was a Kalashnikov leaning against a rock. Bin Laden understood the symbolic potency of his choice.

Others keep their Kalashnikovs near for more practical tasks. By the time Saddam Hussein was pulled from a hole in Ad Dawr, in late 2003, the fugitive president had distilled his possessions to a modern outlaw's basic needs: two AK-47s and a crate of American cash. (He also had a pistol, a nine-millimetre Glock.) Kalashnikovs are not just tools for the battlefield. They guard South American cocoa plantations and cocaine-processing labs. In Los Angeles they have served bank robbers and urban gangs; in the northwestern United States, survivalists squirrel them away in anticipation of the worst. African poachers use them to thin wildlife populations and defend their illegal trade against anti-poaching patrols, which carry Kalashnikovs, too.

In the western Pacific, the aboriginal Chukti people fire Kalashnikovs at migrating grey whales. Given that the automatic Kalashnikov was conceived with the intention of shooting 160-pound capitalists, its use against 30-ton marine mammals would seem ill-advised. But Kalashnikovs are regularly at hand.

No one can say for certain how many of the weapons exist today. Their production in secrecy, often in some of the planet's harshest dictatorships, has made precise accounting impossible. One point is beyond dispute. They are the most abundant firearms on earth. Since the Soviet army chose the AK-47 for distribution to Soviet ranks, they have been made in Albania, Armenia, Bulgaria, China, East Germany, Egypt, Hungary, Iran, Iraq, North Korea, Poland, Romania, Russia, Yugoslavia (now Serbia) and the United States.

Knock-off versions, incorporating the main elements of Kalashnikov's operating system, were developed in Croatia, Finland, India, Pakistan, South Africa and Israel. More are made every year. Venezuela plans to build a new plant, which could be used to arm groups throughout the region in a new round of opaque handouts. Serious estimates put the number of Kalashnikovs and its derivatives as high as 100 million. There could be one for every 70 people alive.

During decades of influence jockeying, the Cold War saw the shipment of enormous quantities of Kalashnikovs to proxy forces, from the Viet Cong to militias in Beirut. Lists resemble tour guides to troubled lands: Russian, Chinese, and North Korean guns were carried by the North Vietnamese Army; Polish Kalashnikovs were shipped to the Contras; East German Kalashnikovs went to Yemen; Romanian AKs armed the Kurds; Russian and Bulgarian AK-47s supplied Rwanda; the United States directed Chinese and Egyptian Kalashnikovs to Afghanistan's anti-Soviet mujahideen. Chinese Kalashnikovs are abundant in Uganda and Sudan.

For people who study the universe of disorder, the AK-47 serves as a reasonably reliable unit of measure. Arms-control specialists and students of conflict look to the price of these assault rifles in a nation's open-market arms bazaar to determine both the degree to which destabilised lands are awash in small arms and the state of risk. When prices rise, public anxiety is considered high. When they sink, the decline can indicate a conflict is ebbing.

Because there is no surer sign that a country has gone sour than the appearance of Kalashnikovs in the public's grip, they can also function as an informal social indicator. Anywhere large numbers of young men in civilian clothes or mismatched uniforms carry AK-47s is a very good place not to go; when the guns turn up in the hands of mobs, it is time to leave. In the aftermath of the Cold War, the overabundance of the weapon has remained a persistent factor in terrorism, crime, ethnic cleansing, and local and regional destabilisation.

In 2001, the United Nations convened a conference by noting that small arms were principal weapons in 46 of the 49 major conflicts in the 1990s, in which four million people died. In 2004, Human Rights Watch identified 18 nations where child soldiers are still used. For most of these wars and most of these young conscripts, AK-47s are the primary arm. The available American casualty data from Iraq show that bullets fired from the Eastern bloc's family of firearms remain, injury by injury, the most lethal wounding agent on the battlefield.

Even a single gun can set a nation in motion. In 1989, after the drifter Patrick Purdy opened fire with a Kalashnikov on a schoolyard in Stockton, California, Congress began work on the assault weapon ban. Purdy did not use a true automatic Kalashnikov. But the mere appearance of a Kalashnikov in a schoolyard crowded with children – its look – was enough to put Congress in a law-making mood.

And look is important to Kalashnikovs. In their march from secrecy to ubiquity, Kalashnikovs have become more than weapons. They have become symbols—first of the industrial success of Stalin's Soviet Union and the socialist way, later of popular insurrection, armed liberation, and gangland stature, more recently of jihad.

A Kalashnikov can be appropriated for most any cause. An AK-47 with bayonet attached appears on the flag of Mozambique; it shares that flag with a hoe and a book, as if it were one of a young nation's foundational tools. Another Kalashnikov-like rifle, held aloft by a defiant fist, adorns the emblem of Hezbollah. Here its meaning is different. The flag is not about victory, not yet. It's about the fight.

In Hollywood, the Kalashnikov suggests the bad guy, the lunatic, the connoisseur tough. "AK-47 – the very best there is," the actor Samuel L Jackson said in one of his well-known roles. "When you absolutely, positively got to kill every motherfucker in the room."

These mixed meanings make a potent brew. The Kalashnikov stirs feelings, for and against, and the savvy have learnt to tap these meanings for their own purposes. In Missouri in mid-2009, Mark Muller, the owner of a car dealership, offered a voucher for an AK-47 with the purchase of every pick-up truck. The offer was a gimmick – true AK-47s cannot be legally owned by most people in the United States, and the dealership offered a coupon worth only half the price of the semiautomatic version sold in American gun shops. Once again, though, facts did not matter. A team from Al Jazeera turned up, as did another from Russian state TV news. The coverage triggered old arguments. What does this weapon mean? Muller appeared before the cameras brandishing a Kalashnikov, enjoying the free publicity. He held up his rifle for the cameras and grinned – the rascal's pose. The Kalashnikov was put to yet another use.

Enter SDM - Sino Defense Manufacturing

SDM entered the european Market in 2013 and is simply a rebrand outlet for Norinco - China North Industrial Corporation, the Chinese Peoples Liberation Army industrial colossus. 

SDM produces semi-auto only versions of all the Military PLA-made Firearms, but finished to a higher standard for the decerning and growing civilian semi-auto market. The SDM AK rifles started flooding in to continental european countries through Italy, Switzerland and then Germany. Many european countries started allowing semi auto AK rifle ownership for shooting sports. Prices range from $580 - $790 depending on version.

Commercial finish, highly robust and very affordable, just nothing speaks against this AK clone.

60 years of uninterupted AK system know-how make China the leading AK production process owner in the world.

 

The SDM AK-103 civilian version hitting the european beaches is still using the stronger 1.5mm receiver with double hook trigger and the heavier AK-47 profile barrel.

All the parts are laser serialized including the barrel but painting this rifle it would leave you with a ghost gun.

Combining the best of the AK47, Type 56, AKM, and AK-100 series into one rifle gives you maybe the most inovative, robust and cost effective AK ever.  
How cool is that!!

A quality product at a great price.

Get your SDM AK-103 today.


 

 




 

 



 

Sino Defence Manufacturing SDM AK-103 7.62x39

Intercepted AK Delivery by ship to Somalia 2016

Fresh AKs popping up in Syria 2015

Some simple economic but quality AK enhancements to consider as an armed citizen.

 

The AK is a classic and is supposed to stay rugged, reliable and simple.

With a few small thought through and non-character-changing enhancements you can get the most out of your AK47 and they will have a big influence on the battlefield, while scouting, in a home defense or survival situation.

 

Magpul MOE AK 47 Grip

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

First things first: Get a grip on things, especially your weapon.

The Magpul MOE AK47 Grip is unsurpassed and the added storage space is a plus.

Big positive difference to any factory grip and ergonomics at a value that make sense. This is a typical magpul part, well built and rock solid.

 

 

The Magpul  AK/AKM MOE Magazine 7.62x39

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 The Magpul AK/AKM MOE Magazine is a durable, lightweight, and reliable magazine, designed to fit into Kalashnikov style rifles. It features a removable floor plate and high-reliability/low-friction follower for the performance you have to come to expect from a PMAGs. The anti-tilt, self-lubricating follower increases the reliability of the magazine along with a long life stainless steel spring. The body of the magazine has a ribbed gripping surface with a flared floor plate to aid in magazine handling and disassembly. This PMAG will also fit into most pouches and has a paint pen dot matrix on the bottom to allow for identification marking. Magpul performance for your AK. Hang on to some classic steel mags at your base by all means they are proven beyond doubt and will last for eternity, which any Polymer still has to prove. (Steel mags as reliable backup reserve for tomorrow, lightweight polymer for todays fighting) The MOE AK Magazine will save weight and the ergonomics and simple disassembly are a big plus next to a great price.

Also check out the Magpul Stocks and Handguards.

Technical Information:

Fits: Kalashnikov pattern rifles (AK-47, AKM, AKS)

Caliber: 7.62x39mm

Capacity: 30-Rounds

Body Material: Polymer

Follower: 4-Way Anti-Tilt

Spring: Stainless Steel

Floorplate: Polymer, Removable

 

 

Hogue Tactical AK47 soft rubber overmolded handguard kit

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fits both milled and stamped receivers

This kit is designed to work with original cleaning rods.
Handguard includes a metal heat shield and handguard lip.
This is made in the USA and meets ATF 922(r) compliance standards. 
Kit includes 2 upper handguards: One with a fixed picatinny rail and one standard (will not fit Yugo models).
The Lower Handguard is made of soft rubber overmolded with a cobblestone texture with palm-swell.
The set has 3 adaptable picatinny rails that attach to the lower handguard.1 lower picatinny Rail with mounting hardware, and 2 side picatinny rails with mounting hardware.

This USA made part allows the AK to be mounted with new Tactical hardware.
Hogue rubber grips are molded from a durable synthetic rubber that is not spongy or tacky, but gives that soft recoil absorbing feel, without affecting accuracy.
This modern rubber requires a completely different molding process than ordinary neoprene and results in a much superior grip.
The material Hogue uses does not come apart or deteriorate and is resistant to all solvents and oils used around firearms.
The forend kit is made with several AK variants in mind, so individually the pieces seem like they will be a little loose during installation. Once the top and bottom covers are fully installed, though, both are solid and tight. The metal heat shield helps keep the grip from getting too warm, and also serves as a barrier to preclude melting/smoking the covers.

It fills the hand better and the rubberized texture is more comfortable to any factory handguard.

Hogue Grips give you a lasting precision fit and durability that will provide years of dependable service while preserving classic looks and simultaneously giving you multiple rail options for ever changing times and likes.

Every AK is different, but if you’re looking for value, then this works on all.

 

 

Meprolight AK-47 Night Sight Set

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A firearm should be ready for action 24/7, but iron sights are virtually useless in low light or dark situations. The Meprolight AK47 Tritium sight set doesn't take away from the original design or function. Pure enhancement. It is exepnsive though at around $140.

Unequaled Low Light Performance for home defense or survival scenarios.

They come in 0-1000m (Eastern European) and 0-800m (Chinese) configuration. Make sure you get the right version for your AK.

The rear sight is windage adjustable, this can counter sight post cant to some degree

The Front sight post will be a bit wider than factory ones due to luminous capsule, but this aids in aiming.

The sight picture is outstanding; the square profile of the front sight blade and the rear sight cut-out width combine to make repeatable accurate shooting.

The sight is durable and well built.

The lights glow under own power, so no switches or batteries needed.

During daylight shooting, the sights are very similar to the Glock 3 dot, white sights and speed up target acquisition also.

Brightest night sights available today, in Europe they are banning tritium night sights for private purchase. Get some while you can everywhere else!
Under any circumstances you should always simply refuse to do without iron sights on your weapon system. If you are squared away with Meprolights AK sights, you'll be set for life day and night.

 

 

Intrafuse AK RAZR Flash Hider by Tapco

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Value buy if you cant afford an expensive flash hider.

Think about TAPCO what you want, for the AK/SKS line they have come up with some classic winners over the years.

The Razr Flash Hider is certainly one.

This is one of those rare products that does EXACTLY what it's advertised and supposed to do. Virtually indestructible, the four impressive heat threated prongs go through drywall, particle board, thin sheet metal, glass, and look fierce as well so you don’t need a bayonet anymore. This flash suppressor is excellent for the money. The machine work and parkerized finish are excellent.

It's not as effective as more expensive flash hiders, but the Razr certainly does suppress a great deal of muzzle flash.

When firing your AK, you'll notice a ringing noise. Nothing but a minor nuisance, and you'll tune it out after a couple of magazines. If you have 7.62 flying around yours ears, not likely something that will be noticed and it gives your AK some more character…song of death…
For shooting in low light conditions and not wanting a large muzzle signature with an added prodding possibility thrown in, this is a great buy. Looks firece, hides flash, lessens recoil, and can poke a hole.

Better than a barrel nut any time!!

 

 

Kreb's Custom Enhanced Safety Selector

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Kreb's Custom Enhanced Safety Selector incorporates an extended shelf that allows the shooter to maintain his/her hand position in a regular firing grip while positively manipulating the selector with the trigger or ring fingers. In addition, a notch is cut into the lever that allows for the bolt to be locked to the rear with the safety engaged. Precision stamped from 1mm 1050 steel and heat treated to 50C Rockwell

 

 

AK 47 Molle Magazine Shingle by Strike Hard Gear

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Designed as an extension to the Strike Hard Gear AK 47 Chest rig, the Four Magazine Molle Shingle can also stand alone as a magazine carry solution. The generous shoulder and waist straps allow you to carry the shingle in multiple configurations, including an ad-hoc mini chest rig! Made of 1000 Denier nylon and mil-spec webbing, the shingle is double stitched throughout for years of dependable service.

Reminding one of the overpriced Bandoleer by unreliable UW Gear, the Strike Hard AK47 is 30% cheaper immediately internationally available and a great multifunctional addition to your kit, low profile and versatile.

It is basically just 4 magazine pouches with a shoulder strap and a waist strap, designed to function as a grab ‘n’ go or quick reaction rig. It is quicker to don than a chest rig and offers more concealability. This rig is designed for when the fight comes to you and you just don’t have a lot of time to react. It is the type of rig that you might want to store right next to the rifle that you use to protect your home and property.

Much of the versatility of the AK Shingle comes from the different ways that it can be worn. I can quickly throw the shoulder strap on and then go, only fastening the waist strap if there is time. It can be worn low on the support side so that it doesn’t interfere with a side arm worn on your weapon side. It can also be pulled around toward the wearer’s front where it serves as a sort of chest rig.

When pushed to the side or even slightly behind the hip, the Bandoleer conceals easily under a light jacket. This concealability really makes the Strike Hard GearAK Shingle more than just a grab ‘n’ go rig. One can see a lot of value in having a way to very discreetly and securely carry rifle magazines in certain situations that an armed citizen may encounter.

Push a knife in the Shingles Molle loops and you are set to go with a compact multifunctional rig.

Strike Hard also do a closable 6 Magazine shoulder bag that can take 30 and 40 round AK magazines.

 

AK-47: 20th Century´s weapon

The neocolonialism that was established in Asia and Africa in the beginning of the 20th century, began to crumble after WWII, through revolutions that demanded territorial independence from European countries such as the Netherlands, France and Portugal. But what made the African case so particular and problematic was the fact that the borders established by these European countries were not the same as the ones established by local communities and tribes, who, often times rivals, had to share the same space. Even though this is a rather simplistic explanation - after all, this isn't a History lesson - through it we can understand the consequences of the fights for independance by African countries, added to the hatred that already existed between groups that now demanded, each of them, local power. Add to the above situation large amounts of diamonds, psychotic leaders, a large, out-of-use arsenal left by the ex-USSR and ruthless, profit-seeking gun dealers. And there you have it, a recipe that guarantees AK-47 factories clients that will last them for, at least, another half-century.

 

 

Liberia, Angola, Sudan and Mozambique were the African countries that recieved more Avtomat Kalashnikov 1947. They came from factories in Albania, Egypt, Hungary, Germany, Bulgaria, among others, that supplied developping African countries. That is, they supplied every militia that fought for the government of the country. Rebel leaders armed entire populations, including children, who could easily handle this simple yet deadly rifle. So this gun became so abundant that it was sold, at one point, for US$ 10 or traded for a bunch of bananas. With diamonds in Togo and Guinea, dictator Charles Taylor sent tons of kalashnikovas to Liberia. In 1975, the ten-year war for the liberation of Mozambique was over and the country went through a civil war. By the time the Peace Agreement was signed, in 1994, their national flag was already established: it featured a powerful AK-47 as a symbol for the people and their strugle.

But they still needed to "conquer" South America. This assault rifle could adapt itself to various humidity conditions as well as to muddy terrains. What gun could be better for the Latin militias? The AK-47 reached Nicaragua in the 1970, bought along with local merchandise, cocaine, to collaborate in Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN)'s fight to overthrow, after 40 years of dictatorship, president Anastásio Somoza. The left-wing communist rebels took charge in Manágua - the country's capital - and built a statue of a warrior raising a kalashnikova. In the base of the statue you can read: "In the end, there will only be left workers and peasants". Actually, there were also quite a lot of AK-47 rifles that were then sold to their neighbooring countries, such as Honduras and El Salvador and, afterwards, re-sold to drug dealers and rebels in Peru, Colombia and Brasil, where it is sold at low cost and is considered a basic weapon in the hands of the Red Comand, in Rio de Janeiro or the Capital's First comand, in São Paulo. They're cheerfully sung in local funk and rap parties.

They still reach Latin America legally these days. In 2005, Hugo Chávez bought from Russia 100 000 AKs and has already announced his intentions of building an AK-103 factory in his country, just outside Caracas. In a nutshell, the AK-47 has stepped into the 21st century with enviable health, in spite of all the blood it has shed over the years - it is estimated that it has killed, at least, 7 million people with its 100 million units produced. Its creator isn't doing too bad either, Mikail Kalashnikov lived a quiet life in a house in the woods in the South Urals, in Russia and died 2013.

 

 

 

 

IDENTIFYING & COLLECTING THE 7.62×39 AK-47/AKM MAGAZINES

by Edward T. McLean on 19 August, 2011

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Russian magazines (from left): Russian Slab-Side, Early Izhmash Spine Stamped, Ishmash Side-Stamped, Aluminum Waffle, Izhmash AG4.

 

Identifying all magazines, for all AK variants, would be of such a large magnitude that it would be completely impractical to attempt.  As such, this effort is limited to 7.62x39mm magazines with a capacity of 30 rounds or less, and which don’t need to be modified to work in a standard AK-47.  Even with this seemingly narrow scope the project proved dauntingly large, and continued to grow as new variations showed up.

 

Soviet Union
When the Soviet Union started production of the AK-47 in late 1948 at the Izhevsk Machine Plant, also known as Izhmash, it came with a 30-round magazine that has come to be called the “Russian Slab-Side.”  It gets its name from its smooth stamped sides and was produced only by the Izhmash factory.  They are relatively rare as the design was replaced before AK production was started at another factory.

The Russian Slab-Side magazines are generally covered in inspector stamps, but the Izhmash factory mark (feathered arrow in triangle) will be found stamped low on the back of the mag’s body.  Made from thick 1 mm steel, it is without doubt extremely durable, but heavy.  They originally had a blued finish, but many appear to have been later refinished with a black enamel coating.

About the time that the Type III AK-47 was adopted in 1954, a new lighter 30-round steel magazine was introduced.  Stamped from thinner steel (.75 mm) this design featured ribs in the body for added strength.  The body, as with the earlier Slab-Side version, was formed from two stamped metal halves that are spot welded together along the front and along the rear flanges (referred to as the mag spine).  The body features three outward and one inward facing longitudinal ribs, as well as five outward facing horizontal ribs along the bottom of the magazine.  Three of these horizontal ribs are noticeably short, and basically just wrap around the bottom rear of the mag.  The first ribbed mags had the inward facing rib at the rear of the mag’s body going strait up and under the plates that reinforce the feed lips.  This type of mag was produced by many other countries, and I will refer to it in the future as the “First European Ribbed Type.”

The earliest Soviet ribbed mag, the “Izhmash Back-Stamped Ribbed Mag”, has the Ishmash factory mark stamped on the bottom-back of the mag like the Russian Slab-Side mag.  At first, these mags were blued, but this was eventually changed to a baked-on black enamel finish.  Izhmash reportedly switched to a baked-on enamel finish on its AKs shortly before production of the AKM model began in 1959.  The followers on these early Izhmash ribbed mags will have a large pill shaped bulge with a hole through its front left side.  This bulge does not extend to the rear of the follower.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

European Ribbed Type magazines (from bottom/right): First European Ribbed Type, Second European Ribbed Type, Late Bulgarian.

 

 

Eventually, the Izhmash factory mark was moved to the spine, and this version is generally referred to as the “Early Izhmash Spine-Stamped Mag.”  This was followed by a new follower with a longer thinner bulge on it that extends to the back of the follower.  The hole through the front left side of the earlier follower’s bulge was also eliminated.  The hole’s purpose seems to have been the prevention of a stuck follower from suction in a heavily greased mag, but this had apparently been deemed unnecessary.

At some point the dies used by Izhmash to stamp mag bodies were redesigned.  The inward facing rib at the back of the mag now stopped short of the lip reinforcement plates, and turned at a 90 degree angle toward the rear of the mag.  This rib resembles an upside down and backward “L”.  This type of mag body was also made by many other countries, and I will refer to it in the future as the “Second European Ribbed Type”.

As would be expected; these mags will be found with the Izhmash mark stamped on the spine, and with a baked-on black enamel finish.  Collectors generally refer to them as a “Late Izhmash Spine Stamped Mag.”

In 1960, the Soviet’s Tula arsenal started production of the AKM.  All Tula rifles, and steel mags, were finished with a baked-on black enamel finish.  These mags are of the Second European Ribbed Type, and will usually have a fair number of inspector stamps on both the spine and its lower sides.  Tula’s factory mark is a five pointed star that, when found, is always on the spine.  Tula steel mags are relatively rare as they were only made for a few years before production was switched to the new AG4 plastic type.

The last steel mag produced by the Soviets is referred to by collectors as the “Izhmash Side-Stamped.”  It is basically a Late Izhmash Spine Stamped mag with one very noticeable difference.  On the mag’s left side, the middle outward facing vertical rib stops well before the other two, leaving a blank area at the bottom of the mag where the Izhmash factory mark is prominently stamped.  These mags carry a black enamel finish, and as the name implies, were only made by Izhmash.

During the mid to late 1950s the Soviets also produced an aluminum 30-round magazine for the AK generally referred to as the “Aluminum Waffle” by collectors because of its very distinctive ribbed pattern.  This mag is made entirely of aluminum, except for its spring, and carries a black enamel finish.  They will be found with multiple inspector stamps on both the spine and lower sides.  Made by Izhmash, most will show its factory mark on their spine.  They were probably discontinued in favor of the steel mag’s greater strength.  Soldiers have been known to use their mags as hammers, and even bottle openers.

During the early 1960s, the Soviets introduced a new 30-round AK mag made from a glass-fiber reinforced plastic called AG4.  This mag was molded in two halves that were then joined with an epoxy adhesive with steel front and rear lugs being molded into the mag’s body.  The follower, keeper/takedown plate, and floorplate also remained steel.  These “Russian AG4 Plastic Mags” were made by both Tula and Izhmash.  The respective arsenal’s mark being molded into the bottom right side of the mag while the mold number is on the bottom left side.  Inspector marks were stamped onto the body of the mag with permanent ink.  It is interesting to note that these mags never fully replaced the steel mags in Russian service.  Reportedly, this was due in no small part to soldiers fears that, if they were injured, shards of a plastic mag would not show up in an x-ray.

Between the two manufacturers; a large number of variations of the Russian AG4 plastic mag exist.  Very early mags had a mold line that gave the impression of long top, and were brown in color.  The color was quickly changed to a much more common reddish-orange and this was then followed by a mold re-design that moved the mold line higher up on the body.  Mags will also be found with, and without, a noticeable ridge running down the back of the mag, and at least four types of floorplates are known to exist.  Izhmash also had at least two sizes of its factory mark molded into the body.

During the 1980s, the Soviets experimented with a plum colored polymer AK-47 mag at a time when they were manufacturing a similar mag for use in their 5.45x39mm AK-74 rifles.  Like the AK-74 mag, steel lugs were molded into the body and it used a steel floorplate.  Criss-crossing ribs, however, were molded into the body for added strength, and possibly for quick identification as to its caliber.  These “Russian Plum Waffle Mags” unfortunately lack any markings to indicate the arsenal that made them.  Only a handful of these 30-round mags have made their way into the U.S., and it is probably the most sought after AK-47/AKM mag.

At the present time, the Russian Izhmash factory is making a 7.62x39mm black polymer 30-round mag for export sales with its AK103/AK104 rifles.  None of these have ever been directly imported into the US, but some have reportedly made their way here through a third country.  The mag made for Izhmash’s Siaga version of the AK are often modified to work in a regular AK, and incorrectly represented as one of these.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Factory marks (from bottom): Soviet Izhmash, Soviet Tula, Chinese Factory 626.

 

 

Bulgaria
In 1958, the Bulgarians began producing the AK-47 at their Factory 10 under Russian license.  The earliest Bulgarian steel mags were of the First European Ribbed Type, and are seen stamped with either a “10” or an “E” in a double circle on the spine.  The “E” in double circle may have come about in 1964 when the Bulgarian Factory 10 was temporarily re-named as the United Industrial Plant “Friederich Engels,” but more likely represent a different factory.  All of these mags appear to have a blued finish, and have the large pill shaped bulge, with hole, on their followers.  The follower’s bulge is similar to the earliest Russian ribbed mags, but is not rounded as much.

The next Bulgarian steel mags were of the Second European Ribbed Type.  These will be found with both the earlier follower and a new follower featuring an elongated bulge without a hole in it.  All the marked ones so far observed carried the “E” in double circle stamp on the spine.  They all appear to have a phosphate finish.

The third Bulgarian steel pattern is a unique type.  The inward facing rib on the rear top-left side of the mag expands backwards in a slanted concave shape to the feed lip reinforcement plate.  On the right side it expands backwards in a slanted convex shape.  Early mags appear to have a phosphate finish while the later/majority have a black enamel finish.  Most of these “Late Bulgarian Steel Mags” are unmarked, but a few have shown up stamped with either an “E” in double  circle  or “25” in double circle stamping on the rear spine.  The “25” in double circle represents Optico Electron Inc., a well known Bulgarian manufacturer of polymer AK-74 mags. (Author’s note: In the future I will refer only to the number of outward facing ribs on a steel mag.  The inward facing rib at the rear will be considered a “given” and covered by its type description.)

Around 2000, a series of experimental 30-round polymer Waffle mags were imported by Magua Industries from Bulgaria.  Imported in only small quantities; they were advertised colored either arctic white, blue, clear, gray, hunter green, olive green, plum, or yellow.  However; only the arctic white, clear, hunter green, and olive green colored mags appear to have made it here in any quantity.  They will carry the “10” in double circle factory mark molded into the left side.  These mags were strengthened by having a thin sheet of steel, as well as steel front and rear lugs, embedded within the polymer body.  The follower and keeper/takedown plate were made of polymer, but the floorplate remained a steel stamping.  The clear polymer mags, for obvious reasons, had the steel sheets left out of the body, and have suffered badly from cracking at the lips due to this fact and the type of polymer used.

A few years later large quantities of these 30-round polymer waffle mags, now black in color, started to be imported into the US.  Interestingly, they will sometimes be found with, and without, a mold number on the right side.  These mags were designed for military sales, and have shown up in Iraq in large quantities with the new Bulgarian AKs supplied to the post Saddam army.

The 1994 Import Ban of so-called “assault rifles” led to the more politically correct thumbhole stocked AKs without bayonet lugs.  The Bulgarians produced the SA93 and SLR95 “sporting” rifles, and exported them with newly developed 5 and 10-round shortened versions of the black Bulgarian Waffle.  The bodies of these magazines are the same regardless of whether it has a 5 or 10 round capacity, but capacity is increased to 10 rounds by the use of a shortened follower and keeper.  No factory markings will be found molded into these mags.  The follower is marked with a “5” or “10” in silver paint to indicate its respective capacity.

KVAR Corp. has recently had the Bulgarian arsenal produce waffle mags for them in special colors to match the US made polymer stocks it sells.  OD green mags have been made in 5, 10, 30, and 40-rounds capacities.  Plum mags have been made in 30 and 40-rounds capacities.

In early 2007 another type of polymer 30-round mag was imported that is usually referred to as the “Bulgarian Bullet Mag.”  The name comes from the rough image of seven 7.62x39mm cartridges molded into each side.  The mag also has “Cal. 7.62×39” molded into the bottom of the left side, as well as three small stars molded into the bottom right side.  The manufacturer, ISD Bulgaria, Ltd., placed no arsenal marking on these mags to indicate that they made them.  The polymer body is reinforced with thin sheets of steel, and the floorplate remains a steel stamping.  The follower and keeper are made from polymer but, more importantly, so are the front and rear lugs.  Unfortunately, the rocking motion used to insert an AK mag in a rifle will eventually wear out plastic lugs, and one should expect only a fraction of the lifespan of a military steel mag.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Second European Ribbed Type Followers (from left): Russian Izhmash, Russian Tula, early Bulgarian, late Bulgarian, early Polish, late Polish, Rumanian.

 

 

One feature of these mags that has caused some consternation with first time users is its so-called self cleaning feature.  As the follower rises up it forces the feed lips slightly further apart, and supposedly crud up and out.  The increased width of such an empty mag sometimes prevents its insertion into a rifle; particularly those with US made receivers, but problems have been encountered when inserting empty mags into factory built AKs.  Inserting three rounds in a mag allows insertion in any AK.

The “bullet” images molded into the mag’s body have never been much of a hit with the shooting community.  In late 2007, the Bulgarian factory redesigned the molds to remove the bullet images and replaced the three stars on the bottom right side with an unknown symbol believed to represent the factory. The “CAL. 7.62X39” marking on the bottom left side was also made a little more prominent.  Otherwise, the mag remained the same and this new version is generally referred to as the “Bulgarian Slab-Side.”  In July 2008, a clear polymer version of this mag was introduced to the US market.  The “Bulgarian Clear Slab-Side” lacks the steel reinforcement sheets in its body for obvious reasons.

In mid-2008, the unique Late Bulgarian Steel Mag started showing up in the U.S. with the same black polymer follower and keeper used in the Bulgarian Bullet and Slab-Side mags.  It would seem that ISD Bulgaria is manufacturing these new hybrid mags in order to keep the price competitive with military surplus.  These mags are finished with a baked-on black enamel finish, show excellent workmanship, and work very well.

 

East Germany
East Germany received a license from the Soviet Union in 1957 to produce the AK-47, but production didn’t start until 1959.  East German 30-round mags are all of the First European Ribbed Type, and are generally known for the excellent quality of their salt blued finish.  The follower is of a unique pattern having a bulge that is flattened at its rear, but rounded at the front.  Early East German Blued Mags will almost always be found with two to six large thin block style letters stamped on the spine.  There is no apparent pattern to the letters stamped on the spines and these are believed to be just inspector stamps.  A single small number in an oval, such as “15”, “16”, and “29”, is also sometimes found stamped on the spine.

Much rarer, and largely unknown, is the Late East German 30-round mag.  The body and follower remain identical to those of an early East German mag, but have a black phosphate finish.  The thing that really makes this mag stand out is its unique floorplate.  The floorplate’s normal oval shaped stamping, at its front end, has its rear edge flattened into a slanting straight line.  The few of these mags that I have examined were unmarked.

 

Egypt
Egypt received a license to produce the AKM in 1971 and began production shortly afterwards initially using imported Russian parts.  Egyptian 30-round mags, surprisingly, are of the First European Ribbed Type.  Early commercial mags imported to the US were stamped “Made in Egypt” near the top of the mag on the left side.  The glossy black enamel finish applied to the mag’s body and floorplate is often atrocious, showing obvious paint dripping.  The follower, however, retained a blued finish.  What really makes this mag stand out from other First European Ribbed Types is their welding patterns.  The rear catch has unusual tear-dropped shaped spot welds, while the front lug and front edge of the mag’s body has round spot welds.  The welding along the spine is neither round nor oval, and while sometimes indistinct, is best described as a blob.

Later both 30 and 5-round Egyptian mags were imported with a matte black enamel finish on the mag’s body, and with blued followers and floorplates.  The follower pattern was slightly different on these mags, and the front lug was enlarged.  The welding pattern, however, remained nearly identical.  No factory markings have ever been identified on an Egyptian mag.

 

 

Finland
Large scale production of Finland’s version of the AK-47, the M62, began at both the Valmet and Sako factories in 1965.  The Finnish produced 30-round steel mags are of the First European Ribbed Type, and have a blued finish.  While at first glance they may look similar to any number of mags, they have several unique features that make them easy to pick out.  First is a folding rectangular steel ring welded to the floorplate.  This ring’s purpose has been variously described as a means of securing the mag to the soldier’s web gear or for attaching a lanyard ring; but a Finnish veteran informed me that it is simply to give a soldier something to grab onto when removing it from a magazine pouch.  Secondly, they have both a 10-round and a 30-round witness hole in the back.  All other European 30-round ribbed mags have just a 30-round witness hole.  An examination of the right side of the rear lug will most often show a “T” proof mark, which reportedly comes from the Finnish word “Taisteluväline” or War Material.  Much less common are commercial mags marked with an “S” instead – believed to represent either Sako or Sporter.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Low capacity magazines (top row from left): Bulgarian 5-round OD Green Waffle, Bulgarian 10-round Black Waffle, Chinese 5-round, Chinese NHM91 5-round, (bottom row from left) Egyptian 5-round, Romanian 5-round, Romanian 10-round, Hungarian 5-round.

 

 

A unique 15-round steel mag was developed for export sale with the semi-auto 7.62X39mm Valmet M76 rifles.  The mag’s body will show only three horizontal ribs on it.  The floorplate ring was also left off these mags.  The rear of the floorplate is thus left distinctively flat while other European ribbed mags have a round shaped stamping there.

During the early 1990s the Finnish began developing a polymer AK mag for its military.  These mags bear a strong resemblance to the Bulgarian Waffle mags in that they have crisscrossing horizontal and vertical ribs on their sides.  Likewise; steel front and rear lugs were molded into the body along with thin sheets of metal to strengthen the feed lips.  Unlike the Bulgarian Waffle mag, the Finnish Waffle design uses a polymer floorplate.

Finnish Trial Waffle Mags were dark green in color.  Shortly after trial production began a polymer loop was molded into the bottom front of the mag and the floorplate was strengthened.  When finally adopted, the color was changed to black, and a date code was molded into one side.  The few Finnish Black Waffle Mags I have seen were made during the 1994-97 time period.  A few of these black mags, made for commercial sale in Europe, were laser engraved “SAKO” on the bottom right side.

 

Hungary
Hungarian 30-round mags are all of the First European Ribbed Type.  Early mags had a blued finish and will often be found with an “02” and a smiley-faced quarter-moon stamping on the spine.  These early mags have a very distinctive bulge in the follower that is flattened at both ends.  These early follower bulges also have a noticeable large hole in the front left side.  The takedown plate’s button also stands out as it is clearly flattened when viewed through the hole in the floorplate.  At some point the finish on all the mag’s components was changed to black enamel.

Few changes will be noted in the Hungarian 30-round mag during its long production span.  The first design change was apparently to a follower with a more traditionally oval bulge shape.  This was followed by a small “M” in circle inspector stamp on the spine, and a new floorplate with a thinner oval shaped stamping at its front.  Large quantities of these late mags will also be found with takedown plates having only a gray phosphate finish, and even with no finish.

Only a few of the late Hungarian AK mags present a challenge to identify.  These mags were generally made for commercial sale in the U.S. and are unmarked.  An easy way to identify these mags, as well as any Hungarian mag, is to disassemble the mag and look at its keeper.  Hungarian AK mag keepers are unique among the European and Egyptian steel mags in that it lacks a spring guide protruding from it.

In 1965, the Hungarians adopted a compact version of the AK called the AMD-65.  It was designed for specialized troops and so that a soldier could easily exit an armored vehicles using it.  A 20-round AK mag was developed for use with the AMD-65 and featured three vertical ribs and no horizontal ribs on its side.  All of the mags that I have seen were finished in a black enamel finish.  Changes in markings, follower shape, takedown plate finish, and floorplate stamping followed the 30-round mag.

The Hungarian FEG plant produced a superb 5-round mag with a dedicated body die for its post ban SA 85M rifles.  These mags clearly show superior welding and a near flawless flat black baked-on enamel finish.  The mag’s body features three vertical ribs, but no horizontal ribs.  The inward facing rib at the rear, as on all Hungarian mags, is of the First European Ribbed Type.  The followers and floorplates on these are the same as used on late Hungarian 30-round mags.  The keeper, with its button showing through the floorplate, has just a gray phosphate finish.

 

Poland
Poland received its license to build the AK-47 in 1956 and probably started production shortly afterwards.  The earliest Polish 30-round mags are of the First European Ribbed Type and bear a strong resemblance to the earliest Russian and Bulgarian Ribbed mags.  The follower’s bulge, however, more closely resembles that of the earliest Bulgarian mag.  Unfortunately, no factory mark will be found on these, and inspector stamps vary more than other manufacturers.  Large round inspector stamps, with numbers and letters inside, are often found stamped on the spine of the very earliest mags.  I have observed “K1” over “S/59”, “PW” over “3”, “K1” over “1/055”, and even large simple numbers such as a “2” or “4” stamped within these circles.  A letter, a number, or a combination (such as “S2” or “S7”) will also often be found stamped on the spine or lower sides of the mag.  Later examples are commonly seen with an “11” or “12” in a triangle stamped on the spine.  Disassembly of one of these mags will often show inspector stamps on the side of the followers; something not found on either Russian or Bulgarian mags.  Polish mags also generally show very small weld marks (or none) on the front lug while the Russian and Bulgarian mags have large/obvious weld marks on the front lug.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Floorplates (from left): Russian Slab Side, late East German, Finnish M62 Steel, late Hungarian.

 

 

Late Polish Mags are of the Second European Ribbed Type, and have a black phosphate finish.  They feature new followers with an elongated bulge without hole.  A few of the earliest mags of this type will be found with an “11” or “12” in triangle stamped on the spine like the earlier Polish mags.

Unfortunately, the vast majority of these Late Polish Mags are unmarked, and bear a strong resemblance to those from Rumania.  Polish mags will have less evident weld marks, show generally more care in construction, and have a follower that differs slightly.  The front of the oval bulge on the follower, that cuts inward, is shorter, slants less, and generally is less noticeable than on a Rumanian.  The cutout on the floorplate’s rear for clearance of the mag’s spine is also noticeably smaller on a Polish mag.

Poland also manufactured a 30-round black polymer mag; apparently during the late 1990s.  The body, follower, and takedown plate were made from polymer while the floorplate remained a steel stamping.  The front and rear lugs on the mag were steel embedded within the polymer body.  “7.62×39” was molded into the mag’s body on the upper left side.  All the mags I have observed had a mold number of “1” or “2” on the lower left side.  Unfortunately, cracked feed lips have been a serious problem with these Polish Polymer Mags.

Rumania
Rumania appears to have started manufacturing AKs around 1963 with its MD63 variant.  All Rumanian AK-47/AKM mags, because of the late start in manufacturing, are of the Second European Ribbed Type.  Some of the earliest 30-round blued mags will be found with a Cugir factory mark of an “arrowhead with shaft within a triangle” on their spine that’s often confused with Izhmash’s complete feathered arrow in triangle.  Most of these early blued mags just have a couple of letters and numbers stamped on the spine and lower side.  After a time, the finish was changed to a black phosphate.  Then the factory seems to have adopted an “O” stamped distinctively low on the spine’s side as a standard inspector stamp.  Many of these “O’ marked mags will also be found with a large “22” stamped on the rear spine.

Rumanian mags show incredibly little change in their construction over their long production history.  New dies were clearly made to mimic earlier ones and welding patterns remained consistent.  These mags are sometimes derided for their very visible welds and poor finish.  These issues are only cosmetic and they function as well, and sometimes better than, steel mags made by any other country.

Rumanian semi-auto AKs imported into the US generally came with either a 5 or 10-round shortened mag.  These mags differ in length, although slightly, according to their capacity.  Interestingly, the 5-round mags have a witness hole to show when it is fully loaded, but the 10-round mags do not.  Unfortunately, they were made simply by cutting down a regular 30-round mag and forming crude lips for the floorplate to slide onto.  Because some of the side ribs still remained on these new lips, removing or installing a floorplate generally requires a little effort.  They retain the black phosphate finish found on the larger 30-round military mags.  An examination of these mags clearly shows that the Rumanian Cugir factory did not take special care when producing mags for the commercial market.

 

China
The Chinese started production of the AK-47 in 1956.  The earliest Chinese AK-47/Type 56 mag is generally referred to as the “Sino-Soviet Model” by collectors.  The body is of the First European Ribbed Type and has a blued floorplate that is very similar to a number of Warsaw Pact types.  The biggest difference is the use of a blued stepped-follower instead of the elongated oval bulge pattern follower found on European type mags.  The body of the mag carries a black phosphate finish.  A check of the bottom rear of the mag will almost always show a “66” in a triangle stamping that represents Factory 626 in the Hei Long Jing Province of China.

The second pattern Chinese mag, the “Spine-Back Transitional,” is a unique design.  The mag’s body is similar to the earlier mag but lacks the three short horizontal ribs that wrap around the bottom-back of the mag.  The remaining two horizontal ribs along the bottom side of the magazines are much longer than normal and go from almost the very front to the very rear.  Like the Sino-Soviet model, the body is phosphated while the follower, floorplate, and keeper are blued.  The follower remains the Chinese stepped pattern.  All the examples I have examined are unmarked, but its design is so unique that they are easy to pick out.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

European magazines (from left): Bulgarian Black Waffle, Finnish Green Trial Waffle, Polish Polymer, Yugo M70 Round Hole, Bosnian Boyscout, Bosnian Two-Rib.

 

 

A third type of Chinese mag was revealed during the Vietnam War that is called the “Chinese Spineless” by collectors.  The mags two halves simply interlock, and are then spot welded together – thus eliminating the normal spine.  The ribbing pattern stamped into the sides remains the same as the earlier Chinese Spine-Back Transitional.  I believe this design is slightly less expensive to make and offers a slight weight savings over previous steel types; both important considerations when you’re planning on making the millions of mags that the Chinese have.  Add in that they are actually easier to remove from webbing, grasp, and insert in a rifle, and you have an AK mag that has probably been seen in every post 1970 conflict featuring an AK.  These mags, however, are sometimes criticized because it is felt that the lack of a spine running down the back somehow weakens them, but in reality they have proved themselves more than durable.  Some of these mags made during the early 1990s, specifically for export to the US, will be found with “Made in China” stamped on the floorplate.  Other examples will be found with unique stamped rear lugs instead of the normal milled type.

The Chinese Poly Tech Corporation made special high grade 30-round versions of the Chinese Spineless mag for commercial sale in the US.  These “Poly Tech Mags” show superior quality control when it comes to welding and blueing, have “Poly” and “China” stamped on their floorplates, and will have three witness holes in the back to show when 10, 20, and 30 rounds are loaded.  At an additional cost they were also available with a chromed follower for easier cleaning and smoother function.

The Chinese continued to seek ways to cut cost while arming its huge and expanding military forces.  Sometime, probably during the 1970s, they modified the Chinese Spineless mag to make it even faster and cheaper to produce.  Called the “Chinese All-Stamped” by collectors, it eliminated the re-enforcement plates welded to the top of the mag and uses a stamped rear lug.  This mag eliminated the need for the feed lip reinforcement plates, usually welded to the top of the mag, by stamping a pattern at the top of the mag that added both strength and tightened its fit in a rifle’s magazine well.  Only a few made it in directly from China before President Clinton sent a letter to the BATF in May of 1994 outlawing imports of Chinese ammo and guns.  However, large numbers of these once rare mags were imported from the former Yugoslavia in 2007.

The Chinese Norinco Corporation also produced a 30-round brown polymer mag for the US commercial market that was designed to take advantage of the popularity of the Russian AG4 plastic mag that it clearly resembles.  These mags were strengthened by having thin sheets of steel, as well as steel front and rear lugs, embedded within the polymer body.  The follower, floorplate, and takedown plate remained of steel construction.  These “Chinese Phenolic” mags will be found with the Norinco trademark molded into the bottom left side, and the “66” in triangle factory marking on the bottom right side.

The Chinese, always eager to fill a perceived need, developed a 20-round AK mag for the US market.  Stamped from special dies, it features three vertical ribs that stop just short of the bottom and no horizontal ribs.  Both 10 and 20-round witness holes are drilled into its back.  Other than the above changes; the Chinese 20-round AK mag characteristics are the same as the Chinese Spineless 30-round mag.

China produced a special 5-round mag for sale with its post ban AKs meant for the US market.  Stamped with special dies, it has two vertical ribs and one horizontal rib at the bottom.  The Chinese 5-round AK mag uses the Chinese stepped follower, are blued, lack a witness hole, and have “China” stamped on the floorplate.  “China” will be found stamped in two different sizes on the floorplate.  Huge numbers of these mags were imported before the ban, and many dealers still have these new-in-wrapper for sale.

The Chinese Norinco Corporation also attempted to make a more politically correct semi-auto AK for the US market called the NHM91.  They put a rivet in the rifle’s receiver, just behind the magazine well, that would only allow the insertion of a special 5-round mag with a milled cutout in its rear catch.  This rivet was not required by any US import restriction or law, and most rifle owners simply ground it down so any AK mag would fit.

The NHM91 5 Round is an easy mag to pick out.  It has just three vertical ribs, has the rectangular milled cutout on top of the rear catch, lacks a spine, is blued, and has the Chinese stepped follower.  Interestingly; none of these that I have examined have “China” stamped on the floorplate.

In the early 1960s the Chinese developed a select fire carbine that combined features of both the AK and SKS, and was adopted by their military as the Type 63.  Although little known in the West, it was made in large quantities by several factories.  It was fed by a detachable 20-round mag clearly developed from the AK’s mag, but featured a special projection at the rear of the follower.  This projection travels within a channel built into the rear of the mag, and activates the Type 63’s bolt hold open mechanism when the mag is empty.  For some reason, probably due to the BHO mechanism, the stepped follower is reversed on a Type 63 mag – the depression from which the last round is fed is on the left side.  Because of this, the witness holes, indicating when 10 and 20-rounds are loaded into a Type 63 mag, are also reversed to the rear left side.  These Type 63 mags were not designed for use in full-auto AKs as they lack a milled clearance for the AK’s disconnector on the upper right side feed lip reinforcement plate.  However, these mags work just fine in semi-auto AKs, but will block the bolt from closing after the last round is fired.

An impressive little collection can be made up solely of Type 63 mags.  At least five steel versions, and one black plastic version have been identified.  The steel mags are centered around three basic body stamping types – two vertical ribs with one horizontal rib at bottom (2+1), two vertical ribs with two horizontal ribs at bottom (2+2), and a very large star interrupting two vertical ribs with two horizontal ribs at the bottom.  All three body types were made with the normal feed lip re-enforcement plates (as on a traditional AK mag), but the last two types were also made with just ribs stamped to reinforce the feed lips (similar to the Chinese All-Stamped mag).

North Korea

North Korea began manufacturing the AK-47 during the late 1950s as the Type 58.  Little is known about their mags as they have never been directly imported to this country.  The few 30-round mags that have made it here are clearly copies of the Chinese Sino-Soviet mag right down to the finish applied to them, and I have little doubt that they were manufactured with Chinese tooling and assistance.  These can be identified by the North Korean arsenal’s mark of a five-pointed star within a circle stamped on the mags spine.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

20-round magazines (from left): Chinese AK, Chinese Type 63 2+2, Chinese Type 63 2+2 Stamped Lips, Hungarian, Pro-Mag Coyote Tan.

Yugoslavia


Yugoslavia’s first AK, the M64, had a couple of unique features.  They were built with a grenade launcher, and a last shot bolt hold open (BHO) mechanism.  A notch cut into the upper left side of the M64 mag activated the rifle’s BHO mechanism with its follower, and a button on the left side of the receiver would release the bolt after a fresh mag was inserted.  While the M64 corrected the AKs often criticized lack of a BHO feature; it also created a greater problem in that normal AK mags could not be used in it.  This limited foreign sales, and created possible internal supply issues.

The Yugoslavian M70 AK solved these issues in a simple way by making the mag the BHO mechanism by itself.  The Yugoslavian’s just omitted two small bumps on the inside of the mag that stops the follower from traveling all the way up.  In an empty M70 mag the follower is only stopped by the feed lips.  A bolt returning, after the last round has been fired, will be stopped by the specially designed and strengthened follower that now blocks it.  Using a Yugoslavian M70 mag in any other AK will also cause the action to remain open after the last round is fired.  I believe that earlier M64 mags were upgraded to this latter pattern by simply replacing the follower with the newer type.

The Yugoslavian M64/M70 mag is easily distinguished from all other AK mags.  Their blued bodies lacks the short horizontal ribs that wrap around the bottom rear of the magazine, as found on all ribbed mags but some Chinese, and the two remaining long horizontal ribs stop well short of the magazine’s front (unlike on the Chinese mag).  The M64 mag will also have its unique notch on the upper left side.

Examination of Yugo M70 mags coming out of the former Yugoslavia shows two distinct variants.  The two mags are quickly differentiated by the shape of the witness hole in their back – round or triangular.  Very notable differences in the follower and front catch will also be seen as well as less distinctive differences in just about every other part.  The general better condition of the Triangular Witness-Hole M70 Mags, along with the fact that the earlier M64 mags have round holes, has led to the probable conclusion that they are of newer manufacture.  The lack of any transitional mags, between the two types, would also seem to indicate production at two different factories.

There has been some speculation that the triangular witness-hole M70 mags were made in Iraq, and provided as aid to the Muslim forces of Bosnia.  However; I have yet to hear of a triangular witness-hole mag being found in Iraq.  Most likely the triangular M70 mags were simply made at a second plant in Yugoslavia set up to meet the demands of the Yugoslavian civil wars.

No short 5-round sporting type mags were produced by the Yugoslavian factory for commercial sales in the US.  Post ‘89 Ban rifles, sold by Mitchell Arms, came with full size 30-round mags that were simply blocked to accept only 5 rounds.

 

Bosnia
In 2006, in a large shipment of AK mags from the now dissolved country of Yugoslavia, came two newly discovered, but clearly related, 30-round mags produced in what is now Bosnia.  These mags were made so that the bolt would be blocked by the follower after the last round is fired and were probably made under less than desirable conditions for the cutoff Bosnian forces.  They are crudely stamped and welded, and poorly finished with what appears to be gray phosphate.  Quality control clearly suffered on these as a few of my mags are too wide to insert into my Chinese made AKs.  Disassembly of one will also show that the plant making them relied on bent flat-springs instead of the traditional coil spring.  These mags show both the ingenuity of the manufacturer, and the desperation to arm the fledgling Bosnian forces.

Both Bosnian mags are essentially the same having only one wide outward facing vertical rib running down the side.  The only real difference is the inclusion of a large stamped “fleur-de-lis” symbol on the bottom sides of one of the mags.  The fleur-de-lis has special meaning to the Bosnian people, and is included on their national flag.  This symbol is also used by the Boyscout organization and this has led to this mag being referred to by collectors as the “Bosnian Boyscout mag.”  The mag without the fleur-de-lis symbol is simply called the “Bosnian Single Rib.”

The so called “Bosnian Two-Rib” steel mag was also unknown in the US until the above 2006 shipment.  However, there is still some very reasonable speculation that these may actually be of Croatian origin.  They appear to be what they are claimed to be: a rushed expedient mag manufactured for an army cutoff from outside supply.  Most have a hastily applied blued finish, but a few also appear to have an equally poor phosphate finish.  These mags generally have rather poorly made followers, floorplates, and keepers.  There are two types of followers, unique to this mag, that are often poorly welded; one of which appears too short in length.  The floorplates generally are poorly fitted and will often wobble side-to-side on the magazine.  The keepers often are over-sized thus making disassembly of the mag difficult.  Many of these also have a letter (W, X, etc.) and a number (2, 3, 5, 6, etc.) stamped on the bottom rear of the mag.

There has been some speculation that the Bosnian Two-Rib was designed as a bolt hold-open mag because it lacks the normal dimples on its inside that prevent a follower from traveling all the way up.  Pulling an AK’s bolt backwards and releasing it on an empty mag will usually result in the bolt being stopped by the follower.  However, when firing the last round in a mag, the greater returning force of the bolt invariably pushes the follower down so that the action will close.  The traditional rounded end of the follower’s bulge allows this to happen and also generally results in damage to the follower over time.  The reasons for making a mag in such a way, other than to simplify production, escapes me.

 

United States
In order to convert an imported rifle to a banned configuration, or build such a rifle from an imported parts kit, a certain number of U.S. made parts must be used.  A U.S. made mag is an easy way to provide three such compliance parts – the mag body, the follower, and the floorplate. This fact has spurred the U.S. development and production of AK mags.

A US manufacturer, National Magazine, has been producing metal AK mags since the ban was lifted.  Taking the Chinese All-Stamped as a model, they stamp out the tops separately and then weld mag bodies of various lengths to these.  Using this production model, they are able to produce mags in an incredible variety of capacities.  They produce mags in 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 75, and even 100-round capacities.  As mentioned earlier; the end product strongly resembles a Chinese All-Stamped mag, but the use of a green plastic follower and the welded joining of the upper and lower halves clearly differentiates them.  No markings are found on these mags and they carry a glossy black enamel finish.  Unfortunately, my experiences with these mags have not been good and I can not recommend them.

When Pro-Mag first introduced its U.S. made polymer AK mags, they only made a 30-round black version.  These early mags had thin gauged 19 coil mag springs that were noticeable shorter than a Russian AG4 mag’s 22 coil mag spring.  Failure to feed properly was a common problem with these early mags.  Pro-Mag increased the gauge and length of latter springs, still with just 19 coil springs, on latter production mags and this has apparently solved feeding problems.  These mags are also sometimes found too long to fit in AKs, but the careful removal of a little material from the rear lug will solve this problem.  Construction is entirely of polymer except for the steel spring.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bulgarian Arsenal 10 mark.

Pro-Mag significantly increased their offerings in 2007.  They now make Black, Coyote Tan, and O.D. Green mags with capacities of 5, 10, 20, and 30 rounds.  They also make clear and smoke colored transparent mags with a 30-round capacity.  “PRO MAG” is prominently molded into the bottom left side of the mag as well as the floorplate.  In a sign of the times, the company’s internet address is also molded into the floorplate.

An unexpected black synthetic 30-round mag from Thermold Design & Development showed up on the market in 2007.  These Thermold Mags are marked “Master Molder” on both the right side and floorplate, and carry the “Law & Gov’t Use Only” warning on the left side from the high capacity mag ban period.  They are made from a durable Nylon resin called Zytel and have three large horizontal ribs wrapping around both the sides and front of the mag.  A very prominent and strong floorplate sticks out on the bottom.  I would not consider them an “attractive” mag.  Thermold’s web site shows that it also offers a 10-round version of its Zytel mag, but I have been unable to find any distributors with them.

A quick examination reveals that they lack an anti-tilt follower.  Disassembly will show they use a spring not interchangeable with those from military AK mags.  On the plus side, the Zytel lugs look better designed, and more substantial, then those of a Pro Mag.  I have had no problem inserting these in any of my rifles, and so far functioning has been 100%.

Tapco introduced a U.S. made polymer 30-round mag in the fall of 2008.  These mags have a very distinctive ribbed pattern and an unusual flared-out bottom. “Tapco USA” is molded into the top left side of the mag, and the follower.  The steel floorplate, the only steel in the mag other than the spring, is also stamped “Tapco USA”.  “7.62x39mm” will be found molded into the upper right side.  Interestingly; a small date code, and a cage code number, are also molded into the mag.  They produce these colored in either black, dark earth, or olive drab.

I had no trouble inserting these Tapco mags into any of my AKs.  The lugs, although Polymer, appear strong and the follower is of an anti-tilt design.  It uses standard AK type springs, which actually appear to be stronger and longer then those found in many military mags.  Limited function testing showed 100% reliability.  These mags would appear to be an excellent choice for the shooter needing U.S. made mags.

 

Conclusion

What is left out there to be discovered?  Obviously there are some still unidentified types.  Hopefully, we will see some of the distinctive Rumanian 20-round mags carried by the dreaded “Securitate” in their compact AKMs from the 1989 Rumanian revolution.  Albania and Iran are reportedly making copies of the Chinese Spineless mag.  Iraq probably made a version of the Yugo M70 BHO mag, and some cut down 20-round mags.  Cuba is probably making mags that follow Russian patterns.  North Korea almost certainly has made changes to its 30-round AK mag over the years and its soldiers have clearly been seen with 20-round mags.  There is also no doubt that there are several other countries that are making, or have made, mags as well.

What are the best mags for the shooter?  It is hard to go wrong with any of the European Ribbed or Chinese steel types.  The Bulgarian Waffle and Soviet AG4 mags are excellent choices for those looking for military quality synthetic mags – but will cost you more.  I would also suggest finding some 20-round Hungarian or Chinese mags for shooting from a benchrest.  The shooter needing US made mags also has several good choices.

 

 

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