A lot of new and interesting small arms at SHOT Show 2024 with some prototypes, new ideas and some weapons developed for various programmes. This definitely isn’t an exhaustive look at the interesting things from the show, that would be a big task, but these are some of the systems I got a good look at.
I will have some more detailed video on some of these weapons in the future.
Weapons Featured: FN IWS High Ground Defense 3-Barrel Minigun FN MRGG Ohio Ordnance Works REAPR Geissele MRGG Beretta NARP LMT L129A2 ILS LAW RWS Daniel Defense H9
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The war in Ukraine has seen a plethora of vintage weaponry being used by both sides. Everything from M1910 Maxims to TT pistols. One of the more surprising vintage weapons to turn up is the classic ‘Sweden K’. The Kulsprutepistol m/45 (Kpist m/45) perhaps better known as the Carl Gustaf M/45 has appeared in imagery from Ukraine numerous times over the past two years.
The most likely origin of the venerable submachine guns is either Sweden itself, whose home guard ceased using it in 2007, or Estonia, which received a number of the weapons from Sweden in the 1990s and for a time issued them to elements of thier Defence League.
Manufactured by Carl Gustafs stads gevärsfaktori from 1945 through to the mid-1960s the m/45 is a standard blowback submachine gun chambered in 9x19mm. The initial version had a detachable magazine well that enabled the weapon to feed from either a 36-round magazine or from Suomi KP/-31 (m/37-39 in Swedish service) magazines. The later m/45B variant permanently attached the magazine well limiting the weapon to feeding from the standard 36 round box magazines. The m/45B also incorporated a reinforced receiver end cap.
The earliest sighting of a ‘Swedish K’ in Ukraine I’ve found dates to early March 2022 when a member of the Krym Battalion posted a photograph of some of the weapons available to him; an AK-74, a Walther P99, an M7 bayonet and a Carl Gustaf M/45B.
Another image of a Ukrainian serviceman with an M/45 surfaced around the 23 March, but I’ve been unable to find the original source for the image so have little context for it.
In early May an photograph of an older member of the Ukrainian Armed Forces was shared on a number of sites, he’s seen sat in a vehicle holding up an M/45 with a sling attatched.
In mid-May 2022 another M/45 surfaced in a photograph from a member of Krym Battalion, which is a part of the International Legion. It’s unclear if this photograph was posted by the same member who shared a photograph of his weapons in March, but the wear marks on the gun appear quite similar.
On 10 November, a daily update post from the Ukrainian General Staff included a photograph of an individual holding an M/45 with a sling, while the unit the individual belongs to isn’t stated given the contents of the post he may have been assigned to a unit on the border with Belarus.
Throughout most of 2023 sightings of M/45s were rare but in mid-June a member of the National Guard posted a short video featuring himself holding a Swedish K as other members of his unit walk behind him, two of the passing men also carry slung M/45s.
On the 28 September, a Swedish volunteer posted a photograph of himself holding an M/45 he came across on the frontline, he captioned the post: “Photo of when I found a mint condition Swedish K with 39B ammo out close to the front. Just an awesome rare Swedish Gun to see in use by a Medic.” The unit where the M/45 was encountered was the 131st Separate Recon battalion. This suggests the photograph may have been taken earlier in the summer of 2023 and also that M/45s may be used by medics. The mention of the Swedish 39B 9mm ammunition which was specifically issued with the M/45 is also interesting. Most notably, however, is the presence of the attachment assembly for an original Swedish spent cartridge case catcher bag.
October saw the first video of a Swedish K being fired. A short clip was shared on Instagram showing an M/45B being fired at the range with what appears to be a red dot optic mounted forward on the perforated barrel shroud.
Several months later, on 11 December, a medic with the 12th Ukrainian National Guard Brigade “Azov” shared a photograph of himself holding an M/45. Later in December a member of the 78th Separate Assault Regiment ‘Herts’ shared a photo, on 21 December 2023, with the caption ‘lend lease again’, he’s holding up a behind him can be seen several DP-27 light machine guns and some AK-pattern rifles.
Interestingly, none of the M/45s have the green paint finish which was used on some of the Swedish Armed Forces’ guns but have clearly shipped with original slings and in one case a brass catcher attachment. Also none of the guns in the imagery from Ukraine appear to have the end cap reinforcement typically see on the Swedish Army’s M/45Bs. While the guns have the M/45B’s fixed magazine well they don’t seem to have the characteristic pair of rivets and hooked end cap. It’s difficult to positively identify the variant as the guns’ markings aren’t visible in any of the imagery. With little context for some of the imagery and relatively few sightings of the guns in Ukraine its difficult to pinpoint the types of unit which are receiving them but it is conceivable that the guns have been decimated amongst a number of different types of unit including frontline elements of the Ukrainian National Guard, International Legion and Army.
Update – 21/01/24: From Swedish sources I’ve spoken to these M/45s are early spec guns which may have been in storage and were refit later. Retrofitted with fixed magazine wells but not the reinforced end cap as the ammunition that necessitated this was no longer in use.
Update – 22/01/24: Another photograph posted November 2023.
— Matthew Moss | Historical Firearms (@historicfirearm) January 22, 2024
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In June 2022 Sweden announced it would provide Robot-17 (RBS-17) coastal defence missiles to Ukraine. These missiles are used by Sweden’s Amphibious Corps to interdict the movement of enemy vessels along Sweden’s coast.
RBS-17 is a Bofors Defense (now Saab Bofors Dyanmics) led development of the AGM-114 Hellfire. Work on the Swedish coastal defence missile began in the 1980s. It is man-portable with the missile weighing 48kg in addition to the launcher, firing system and laser targeting module. It is typically operated in the field by five man teams, with two operating the laser targeting system and three on the weapon itself.
RBS-17 launch October 2023 (via social media)
On launch the missile climbs to several hundred metres and seeks the laser-marked target. The system has a maximum range of around 8km and carries a 9kg high explosive warhead. While designed to engage vessels the RBS-17 can also be used against ground targets.
On 2 June 2022, the Swedish government announced the transfer of an undisclosed number of RBS-17s. They are believed to have been seen in theatre for the first time in a video published on 20 October, although it appears it may have been filmed earlier. The video was shared by a group called ‘Bigcats’, the lo-res clip shows the launch of a pair of missiles. ‘Bigcats’ haven’t shared any further imagery of the missiles since.
In September 2022 the Norwegian government also announced plans to provide Ukraine with their Hellfire-derived Norwegian Shore Defence Missile System. The transfer of 160 missiles and associated equipment was announced in response to a Ukrainian request. In late March 2023 photographs of several pieces of wreckage from one of the missiles was posted on Telegram. It was hypothesised that they were found in the area of the Kinburn Spit and had been fired across the water by an element of the 73rd Naval Center of Ukraine’s Special Operations Forces.
An RBS-17 launch, c.September 2022 (via social media)
It was over 8 months before another video of a the weapons in action was shared. In mid-August 2023 a brief clip was published showing a Hellfire-patterned missile (which may be an RBS-17) being fired and apparently detonating downrange. Several months later at the end of October perhaps the best piece of footage of one of the missiles being launched was shared. In the video we can see the missile being launched and as the camera pans the laser targeting module can also be seen.
In August 2023, Army Inform, the news agency of Ministry of Defense of Ukraine, published an article outlining how the RBS-17 is used noting that it is most frequently used against Russian defensive positions, dugouts or lightly armoured vehicles. The article included a photograph of a display showing the RBS-17 set up. In the background a Ukrainian combatant can be seen sat on a missile case, he’s wearing the patch of the Zaporizhzhia-based 27th River Fleet Division (27 ODnRK).
An RBS-17 launch in Ukraine Nov/Dec 2023 (via Swedish MoD)
On the 18 December, the Swedish government published an article about Ukraine’s use of the RBS-17 and the training the Swedish armed forces provided on the system. The article explains that Ukrainian personnel were secretly trained on the system. The training appears to have been carried out during Summer 2022 and took place in time to coincide with the delivery of the RBS-17s. Swedish personnel have also continued to be on call for answering the technical and operational queries of the Ukrainian teams using the system.
The Swedish article also included a short video of one of the missile systems in operation in Ukraine. The team appears to be in cover behind a wall. The GoPro footage shows the missile near by and the control unit as well as transport cases near by. A Polish MSBS Grot rifle can also be seen leaning on the wall next to the operator.
Update – 22/05/24:
Perhaps the best video of an RBS-17 missile being used in Ukraine I've seen. From NEMESIS, a volunteer unit made up of Armenians. Date & location unknown, posted 16/5/24
— Matthew Moss | Historical Firearms (@historicfirearm) May 22, 2024
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Remarkably, a rare prototype Colt stand-alone stock chassis for the M203 40mm grenade launcher has been spotted in Ukraine. Our friends and colleagues at StreakingDelilah received some photographs and video of the prototype stock in November. They have kindly allowed me to share them here.
The stock chassis turns the M203 into a stand-alone launcher. It belongs to a Ukrainian Combatant with the GUR’s ‘Kraken’ Unit. M203 launchers were first seen in Ukraine in January 2023, when members of the 47th Mechanised Brigade were seen equipped with M16A4s with M203 under-barrel grenade launchers.
A still from a video showing the Colt M203 chassis at a range in Ukraine (via StreakingDelilah)
The chassis were reportedly made in both fixed stock and collapsing stock configurations. The one seen in Ukraine has a CAR-15 style adjustable collapsing stock. The chassis system takes a standard M203 under-barrel grenade launcher with heat shield and provides a platform which can be shouldered. According to friends at the Colt AR-15 Resource, the chassis was reportedly developed for an undisclosed US organisation, possibly US Special Operations Command or one of the alphabet agencies. It is thought that less than 30 were manufactured.
While there is little solid information available on these chassis it has been suggested that the project dated from before the start of the so-called ‘Global War on Terror’, and perhaps as early as 1992. Some samples were also reportedly made for external customers like El Salvador. The Colt-made stand alone chassis are a concept which has been replicated more widely by other manufacturers since.
The Colt AR-15 Resource shared some video of one of the fixed stock variants from a collector’s show:
The combatant in Ukraine shared several photographs of the M203 stand alone chassis. One appears to have been taken in a frontline trench while another shows it lying next to an FN SCAR-L and a couple of 40mm LV HEDP grenades.
The sight assembly appears to be unique to the chassis and combines a a rear sight which is graduated out to 250-300 metres with a front sight. It does not appear to have a quadrant sight mounted for longer range fire. The weapon operates just as the M203 normally would with the barrel sliding forward to open the action. Unlike the M203 under-barrel configuration the stand alone launcher has a pistol grip.
Some, but not all, examples of the chassis are marked with ‘COLT’s’ on the rear of the chassis above the pistol grip on the left side. Serial number markings are found on the launcher itself, on the trigger mechanism housing.
The rare chassis has also turned up in Afghanistan with StreakingDelilah sharing this photograph of a member of the Taliban with one.
It is unclear how the rare chassis came to see service on Ukraine’s frontline but StreakingDelilah believe it may have been privately acquired through a surplus dealer, though they stress this is unconfirmed. It has been interesting to see the proliferation of stand alone grenade launchers in use with both sides during the war in Ukraine, but I never expected to see this rare Colt-made stand alone chassis.
Updated – 15/11/24: Another image featuring the launcher recently appeared in a Kraken fund-raising post. [H/t – Larry]
Another standalone M203 has appeared in Berdin, Kursk, captured by personnel of Russia’s Kachtan battalion. StreakingDelilah have confirmed that it is not the same M203 seen in use with a Kraken member. This indicates that more than one of these rare grenade launchers has found it’s way to Ukraine.
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There are a significant number of different large calibre anti-materiel rifles in use in Ukraine. One of the largest is the Monomakh, a 14.5×114mm semi-automatic, box magazine-fed anti-materiel rifle from the Ukrainian company Snipex. Snipex is a subsidiary of the XADO Chemical Group.
Snipex are well known for their series of precision anti-materiel rifles which includes the M100, T-Rex and Alligator. The Monomakh, introduced in 2021, is the company’s first semi-automatic rifle. It is recoil operated and feeds from a 5-round box magazine. It has a barrel 1,200mm [47.2in] long and an overall length of 2,050mm [6.7 feet], Snipex list its weight without a magazine as 25kg [55lbs]. The rifle has a listed muzzle velocity of 950 to 980 m/s and an effective range of just under 2,000 metres [1.2 miles]. The weapon is fired from a bipod with a monopod supporting the butt of the rifle. It’s key feature is its reciprocating barrel which helps soak up the recoil from the 14.5mm cartridge.
A scopeless Monomakh at the range (via social media)
The Monomakh appears in imagery from Ukraine fairly infrequently, the earliest sighting of one of the rifles I could find was a photograph posted by a GUR member in late April 2022. Subsequently a number of videos of the weapon being fired at ranges by Ukrainian combatants was published in the Summer of 2022. The first posted on 7 August, shows a magazine being loaded into the rifle and the weapon chambering a round. Later that month a short video of a Monomakh firing at a range was published.
Snipex Monomakh (Snipex)
The earliest photograph of one of the guns I could find in 2023 was shared by a Ukrainian combatant in mid-July. Several months later, in September 2023, another Ukrainian combatant shared a photograph of himself holding up a Monomakh at a range. The same combatant also shared a short clip of himself firing the rifle, again at the range. In the clip he appears to be firing the rifle without sights or an optic. He is also seen helping the bolt into battery after each shot, the bushing which guides the barrel as it recoils into the receiver appears to have come loose. The rifles are typically paired with substantial optics, Snipex offer two of their own 6–24×56 scopes, the Jove 50 and the Galaxy G50. In late October, a female sniper with the 3rd Shock Brigade, posted several photographs and a video of herself firing a Monomakh from a position inside a building.
A Ukrainian combatant holds up a Monomakh (via social media)
The large size and hefty weight of the Monomakh limits it applications somewhat but the 14.5mm round is useful against light armoured vehicles, buildings and field fortifications – the main limitation is getting it in, and out, of position to engage targets. There are videos of it taking two men to move the similarly heavy T-Rex and Alligator rifles. From the limited sample of imagery of the Monomakh in theatre it is difficult to gauge how widespread its use actually is. The simpler to manufacture bolt action Snipex rifles are seen more frequently.
My thanks to Cloooud and AbraxasSpa for help sourcing some of the imagery used in this article/video.
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A dozen different types of light and general purpose machine guns are in use in Ukraine, one of the newest is the Heckler & Koch MG5.
In May 2023, the German government announced a package of aid which would include 100 HK MG5 7.62x51mm general purpose machine guns. In September, evidence of their arrival in theatre began to surface with Ukrainian combatants sharing imagery of the brand new weapons.
The transfer of MG5s by the German government is interesting as the Bundeswehr themselves have only recently begun to receive the guns. The MG5 officially entered German service in 2015 but procurement has only recently ramped up with around 10,000 currently estimated to be in inventory. The MG5 is a gas-operated 7.62x51mm general purpose machine gun with a variable rate of fire and is intended to replace the MG3. It fires from an open bolt and it’s action is locked by a rotating bolt head. The guns themselves are listed on the German government’s aid-tracking page as “being deliveries from industry stocks financed by German funds for security capacity building.” This indicates that the transfer was probably not made direct from Bundeswehr stores.
Jurado posted the first photo of an MG5 in Ukraine (via Social Media)
On 20 September, Jurado – a Spanish member of the International Legion, shared the first photograph of an MG5 in Ukraine. Several days later on 22 September, omega_team_gurshared another photograph of the MG5 at the range. According to Jurado his unit received three of the guns.
A week later Greek International Legion members shared the first video of one of the guns mounted on a Lafette tripod. Through discussions with some of the combatants whose units have received the MG5s not all the guns came with tripods. A member of a Ukrainian Military Intelligence Directorate, the GUR, team told us that the guns came in bags with accessories including an optic, bipod, cleaning kit, manual and spare barrel.
An MG5 in its transport bag (via Social Media)
A member of the GUR, callsign Shock, shared a photo with an MG5 on 28 September, and several more the next day. Shock told TAB that his unit had received two of the MG5s and that while they’re cool pieces of kit the are heavy “13+ kg without ammunition” [HK lists the MG5A2’s weight as 11.5kg or 25lbs]. Shock’s team appears to be one of the few GUR teams not made up of international volunteers to receive the guns. He also shared a photograph of two MG5s sat in their transport bags.
On the 30th September Omega Team shared another group photograph featuring an MG5 and several days later on 2 October, a member of the GUR’s Shaman battalion, shared a photograph of himself holding a new MG5. Another member of the Shaman battalion also shared a photograph of an MG5 in its transit case/bag. It can seen fitted with a Hensoldt 4x30i optic and a cleaning kit and a number of belt pouches can be seen in the case. Knights, another GUR team, shared a photograph featuring an MG5 on 6 October. This was followed on the 10 October by a unit photograph with an MG5 seen at the back of the group. During the same week, another SOF group made up of international volunteers, Black Maple, also shared a photograph featuring an MG5.
An MG5 mounted in a Lafette tripod at the range (via Social Media)
Another team, Operation 21 Group, posted a photograph on 16 October of an MG5 mounted on a Lafette tripod at the range. The gun is again paired with the Hensoldt optic. On around the 17 October, a member of the Kraken Regiment, also part of the GUR, posted a photograph holding one of the MG5s. Several days later the first glimpse of an MG5 being used in combat was shared by a GUR team, the MG5 can be heard firing and is just visible though the foliage.
On the 22 October the GUR’s Stugna Battalion also shared a promotional video featuring one of the MG5s. On 24 October imagery from a number of photographers showed members of the International Legion’s new Siberian Battalion training. Amongst an interesting array of small arms the battalion’s trainees also appeared to have a single MG5.
The team at GRaft, a Ukrainian company which fabricates ammunition boxes for machine guns, shared some video of testing of one of their boxes with an MG5 in late October. At the beginning of November Tactical Group Athena, another GUR team, shared a team photograph featuring not one but two MG5s.
Later in November, the Knights shared a series of photographs and clips featuring the MG5. The first was posted on 4 November, showing the gun in a fighting position. This was followed on the 13 November, by a short video of an MG5 firing from its bipod in a frontline position in the trenches feeding from a British 7.62x51mm ammunition box. I spoke to one of the members of Knights about the MG5 and they described it as ‘a fantastic weapon’ and while “a bit on the heavy side [it’s] still a good weapon system and we love to use it!”
A member of Rogue Team holds an MG5 in a frontline trench (via Social Media)
Omega team shared another group photo featuring an MG5 on 12 November. Later that week Rogue Team posted a photograph of two combatants in a frontline trench, one is seated holding an MG5. A week later the GUR shared a video on their YouTube channel about their amphibious operations in Crimea, on 16 November, with an MG5 briefly appearing in part of the sequence. Towards the end of November a video from the Knights team thanking people for kit donations also featured an MG5. On the 14 November, an element of the Kraken Regiment, Special Assault Company, shared a promotional video featuring a drive by with an MG5 being fired out the window of a vehicle at a range. On the 19 November Rogue Team shared a team photograph, with one combatant holding an MG5, a day later a member of the team shared a short clip from the range showing the MG5 in action with the caption ‘I love MG5’. Finally, on the 26 November another MG5 was seen in a photograph of members of Kraken.
All of the guns appear to have HK’s RAL 8000 (FDE-ish) finish and are of the MG5 A2 configuration with the shorter 460mm (18in) barrel. The guns also appear to have been provided with Hensoldt 4x30i ‘intermediate range targeting optics’. From the imagery which has surfaced so far we can see that the MG5s have predominantly been issued to special operations forces including teams from the GUR and possibly the SSO. Despite the small number of guns officially confirmed to have been transferred they have been widely photographed in theatre and when asked by TAB comments from combatants using them have largely been positive. It is unknown what quantity of spares were provided with the guns or if more may be provided by Germany in the future.
Thank you to friends at Cloooud and at StreakingDelilah for their help gathering imagery for this video.
Update – 2/12/23:
Ukrainian combatant, Valgear, shared a photo of an MG5 in a Lafette tripod fitted with a thermal optic. Both the gun and optic have apparently been damaged by shrapnel.
Update – 03/12/23:
Machine gun training (Bundeswehr/KSK)
The Bundeswehr issued a statement on training Ukrainians SOF members and shared a photograph of Ukrainians training on MG3 and MG5 machine guns. Unlike the guns seen in Ukraine the MG5s have 550mm (22in) barrels.
Update – 9/12/23:
Another GUR team, Stugna, have shared photos of an HK MG5 in recent weeks.
Stugna, another GUR team, have shared a few photos of their HK MG5. One in a group photo (h/T @war_noir) and a second from a range day when volunteer fundraiser group Peace For The Future visited the to present a vehicle.
— Matthew Moss | Historical Firearms (@historicfirearm) December 9, 2023
Update – 13/12/23: The recently formed Sibir Battalion were photographed again training with an MG5.
Very recent training with German-delivered MG5s by the Sibir Battalion, which consists only of Russian nationals, who want to fight against the Russian armed forces. pic.twitter.com/SQGI5os4HJ
— Matthew Moss | Historical Firearms (@historicfirearm) April 16, 2024
Update – 7/6/24: Rogue, a GUR direct action team, shared some video of their machine gun team in action near Kupyansk in November 2023. It gives a great look at the MG5 in action and also features a brief glimpse of the gun’s spare barrel and it’s reload drills.
Some stills from a video filmed by Rogue, a GUR direct action team, operating in Kupyansk in Nov. 2023. Great look at the HK MG5 in action, reloading and it's spare barrel.
— Matthew Moss | Historical Firearms (@historicfirearm) June 7, 2024
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Bibliography:
Military Support for Ukraine, Bundesregierung, (source)
On the 5th May 1980, the world was spectacularly introduced to the Special Air Service and their Browning Hi-Power’s with extended magazines.
22 SAS formed the Counter-Revolutionary Warfare Wing in the 1970s, after the 1972 Munich Massacre, and quickly took a lead in developing counter-terrorism tactics. They gained worldwide notoriety in 1980, during Operation Nimrod, the assault ended the Iranian Embassy Siege. It was during Nimrod that the SAS’ CRW squadron was seen in action for the first time.
I began to notice the extended Hi-Power magazines while examining photographs from the operation for another upcoming video. As I looked closely I began to notice more and more holstered Browning Hi-Powers with extended magazines. The Hi-Power’s standard double-stack, single-feed magazine holds 13 rounds, decent for the period, however, SAS troopers evidently saw the benefit of having more ammunition ready to go on their secondary weapon.
Members of B Squadron’s Red Team prepare to rappel and breach the rear of the embassy (via Woolley & Wallis)
The best photographs are of part of Red Team as they breach the rear balcony of the embassy. In the first photograph a four man team prepare to rappel/abseil down the rear of the embassy to enter via the balcony. You can see the trooper with his back to the camera about to rappel has a Hi-Power with an extended magazine. Subsequent photographs of the four man team on the rear balcony show that several of the troopers have extended magazines. In another photograph Rusty Firmin and a breech team with Blue Team enter the rear of the embassy at the ground floor. On his right leg Firmin is carrying a Browning Hi-Power with an extended magazine.
The last photograph shows members of the SAS in the garden behind the embassy securing the hostages so they can be safely identified. As one of the troopers is zip-tying a man he has laid his Hi-Power on the grass next to him.
SAS troopers secure hostages for IDing, note the pistol and extended magazine on the left (via Woolley & Wallis)
The British Army adopted the Hi-Power in 1954, it remained in service through to 2013. It was the SAS’ primary sidearm until the SIG Sauer P226 gained favour in the early 1990s. As seen in the photographs from the Iranian Embassy Siege the CRW squadron carrier their Hi-Powers in custom-made leather drop leg holsters which were made by Len Dixon and Paul Evers.
The extended magazines can be seen in photographs dating from throughout the 1980s. Theundated photograph below shows an SAS team during training to assault a train carriage, the trooper in the centre has a Hi-Power with an extended magazine. A photograph of Princess Diana during a visit to Hereford in 1983, features an SAS trooper with an extended magazine visible. This undated photograph, probably from the mid-1980s, of a trooper kicking in a door during training also features one of the magazines. A similar training photograph shows a 4-man team stacking up for an entry – the lead trooper has a Hi-Power loaded with an extended magazine.
SAS team during training to assault a train carriage, note the extended magazine in the central trooper’s Hi-Power and the DIY vertical front grip on the right
Initially, I was unsure who manufactured the extended magazines used by the SAS as very little has previously been written about them and the resolution of the available imagery makes identifying them difficult. A look through contemporary issues of Soldier of Fortune magazine shows a quite few variations were available. With manufacturers like Mec-Gar, SILE and Pachmayr all producing variations though they may also have been offered by FN themselves. However, according to a member of the SAS active in the 1970s and early 1980s the magazines were made in-house by the Regiment’s armourers. They apparently worked well. Judging from the imagery available the magazines probably held between 20 and 25 rounds, with the lower end of the scale more likely.
I spoke to Robert Lancaster, another member of the SAS who served in the 1980s, who explained:
“I nearly always used a 20 round mag unless I was doing door entry, when you had a slung Remington [870] and the 5 [MP5], in that case I used the standard mag in case the mag got caught on the shotty!”
A wrist magazine holder seen in a 1984 British Army film about the SAS (British Army/SSVC via IWM)
One other notable thing to point out are the wrist magazine holders used by some members of the assault teams. This is essentially a ready-to-go magazine attached to the operator’s pistol arm. This would in theory allow the operator to execute a faster reload, the idea being that taking the fresh magazine from the wrist, nearer to the pistol, rather than from the holster pouches on the thigh .
We get a good look at one of these in the British Army’s 1984 video about the SAS. We can see the magazine holder on the operator’s left wrist. Later in the film a trooper climbing through a window can also be clearly seen equipped with a Browning Hi-Power loaded with an extended magazine. The tradition continued with extended magazines also being regularly used with the later SIG P226s.
Special thanks to British SAS Photos on Instagram for their help and to Robert Lancaster for answering my questions.We’ll have more articles/videos looking at SAS weapon set ups from this period in the future so stay tuned.
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In recent weeks imagery from Ukrainian social media accounts has emerged to suggest that Swedish G3-pattern, Ak4B, rifles may have begun to be issued to units in Ukraine. Several photographs and videos have been shared via social media by Ukrainian combatants featuring the distinctive rifles. Further investigation, however, suggests the rifles may not be in use in Ukraine.
Still from a video of a Ukrainian sniper firing an Ak4B at the range, 17 November (via social media)
The initial imagery posted by two accounts appear to feature three of the rifles, all of the rifles seen appear to have tape on their butts. They are all fitted with scopes with at least one optic appearing to be a Schmidt & Bender PM II 3-12×50.
Photograph posted by a Ukrainian showing an Ak4B at the range fitted with a PMII optic, 20 November (via social media)
The Swedish Ak4 is license-manufactured version of the 7.62×51mm Heckler & Koch G3. Produced by Carl Gustafs stads gevärsfaktori and Husqvarna Vapenfabrik, the Ak4 entered Swedish service in 1965. It was replaced by the 5.56×45mm Ak5 in the mid-1980s but today remains in service with Sweden’s Hemvärnet (home guard).
In 2002, Sweden upgraded the first Ak4s to the Ak4B standard. Removing both front and rear iron sights and adding a length of Picatinny rail for mounting an optic. The rifles seen in the recent photographs have also been outfitted with a tri-rail forend, these are produced by a number of manufacturers, including Swedish Ordnance, and an adjustable bipod.
Photo of a Ukrainian sniper firing an Ak4B at the range, 17 Nov., note the railed forend and bipod (via social media)
Notably in January 2023, Sweden announced a major aid package for Ukraine which was said to include ‘assault rifles’ it is unclear if these rifles were Ak4s or another weapon. I reached out to the Swedish government about whether the recently sighted rifles had been provided to Ukraine but no comment was provided at the time of publication.
Photo showing a pair of Ak4Bs with optics c.19 November (via War_Noir)
Subsequent social media posts and conversations with Ukrainian personnel who shared imagery suggests that the rifles are Ak4s. However, they aren’t in Ukraine but Latvia.
Latvia received a number of Swedish Ak4s and they are currently used by the Latvian National Guard. The Latvians are in the process of replacing the rifles with G36s, however, some may continue in the designated marksman role. It appears that the imagery posted by the Ukrainian combatants which features the rifles was taken during training in Latvia. Latvia has so far trained 3,000 Ukrainian personnel. From posts on their social media it appears that elements of Ukraine’s 3rd Shock Brigade are currently in Latvia.
The author of this photograph (featuring another Ak4B in the same configuration) confirmed that it was not taken in Ukraine (via social media)
Another Ukrainian combatant who shared another photograph of the muzzle end of an Ak4, notable for its ground off front sight, seemingly taken in the back of a truck also confirmed that his photograph was not taken in Ukraine but Latvia.
There has previously been confusion around whether a weapon is in use in Ukraine or whether Ukrainian troops are simply using the weapon while training abroad. This has been seen with the SA80 in the UK and the HK G36 in Spain and Lithuania.
In addition to Latvia, Sweden also provided Lithuania with Ak4 pattern rifles, these are now in service with the Lithuanian National Defence Volunteer Forces. Similarly, Sweden also provided the Estonian Defence Forces with Ak4s. These countries have also provided training. Given the levels aid provided by Sweden and the three Baltic states it is possible we may eventually see Ak4 pattern rifles in Ukrainian service. Despite anticipation of seeing G3s in Ukrainian service, these rifles do not represent the first G3-pattern rifles to be seen in Ukraine.
Update – 19/2/24: Several G3s in the same configuration as those seen in earlier Latvia training photos recently surfaced.
The 3rd Assault Brigade has shared a detailed album of photos showing marksmen from the brigade training with what appear to be AK4Bs. The location the photographs were taken is not disclosed but there is nothing to confirm that the training was undertaken in Ukraine and no information in the original post’s caption. It is possible that, like earlier AK4B photos, these were taken during training outside of Ukraine, likely in one of the Baltic states. The photographs appear to have been taken at the same time (and possibly by) those shared earlier by Yara.sva.
Update 1/10/24: Additional photos by Yara.sva featuring an AK4.
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A Ukrainian engineer and fabricator, Іван Савельєв/Ivan Saveliev, has designed and built an interesting wheeled mount for the Mk19 automatic grenade launcher. The mount was recently seen in a video posted to TikTok by a member of 4th Rapid Reaction Rubizh Brigade’s 3rd Battalion Svoboda. The video was posted on the 10 November and shows the mount being demonstrated in camp. There’s a long history of Russian machine guns like the Maxim PM1910, SG-43 and DShK having wheeled mounts or carriages. The new mount for the Mk19 could be seen as a descendent of these.
A Mk19 on the wheeled mount (via social media)
The first MK19 Mod IIIs arrived from the US in late January 2022, as it looked increasingly likely that Russia would invade. Since then they have proliferated and are widely used by the Ukrainian armed forces.
A Mk19 on the mount with wheels removed (via social media)
Saveliev has developed a range of mounts for various support weapons including machine guns, auto-cannons and mortars. He first shared imagery of the wheeled mount for the Mk19 in mid-June posting a photograph showing a Mk19 elevated on one of the mounts. Five months later, on 23 October, Saveliev shared a series of detailed photos of the mount. He noted that the mount could allow the Mk19 to be fired at ‘increased vertical angles’. This is very useful for long range, indirect fire. The M2 heavy machine gun could also be used with the wheeled mount as the mount mimics the mounting points of the M3 tripod, which both the Mk19 and M2 are used with.
Above & Below: Close-ups of the mount (via social media)
The mount has a pair of handles at the muzzle end to allow the weapon to be pulled by two men. The elevation of the Mk19 can be adjusted by an elevation wheel which uses a long threaded bar (or worm pinion/screw) to move the mounting arm forward and back, lowering and raising the weapon. In the video posted by members of the 3rd Battalion Svoboda it is suggested that elevations of 60 or more degrees is possible. Windage can be adjusted by a pair of wheels either side of the rear of the mount.
The mount has a pair of wheels with pneumatic tires which can be removed allowing the weapon to be grounded in the mount. However, this looks to be a fairly unstable firing platform due to the narrow base the mount offers compared to the Mk19’s standard tripod. Despite the Mk19’s relatively low recoil the mount would probably have to be well bedded in to achieve accurate fire and prevent it from potentially toppling. There is no mount for the weapon’s belt box.
According to various comments on Saveliev’s posts about the mount individuals from a number of Ukrainian brigades including the 47th Mechanised and 5th Assault brigades are reportedly interested in the mount.
I haven’t yet been able to find any imagery of the mount being used in the field or of a Mk19 being fired from one so its difficult to know how useful it is in battlefield conditions. The major benefit, however, is increasing the Mk19’s portability. Weighing in at 77.6 lbs (35.2 kg) the Mk19 (without the M3 tripod which adds 44 lbs (20 kg)) is heavier than its Russian counter-part, the AGS-17. This makes moving it across broken terrain a difficult task, the wheels might help
Special thanks to Weapons Illustrated who has been tracking this mount and assisted with this video/article.
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