Citat:
Ursprungligen postat av Oddball
Sant, dessutom så stod han ju lite i skydd av de andra negrerna på flaket men somliga straffar Gud direkt...
Intressant dock att se deras s.k "reträtt" och den totala frånvaron av professionalism som visades under den, istället för att kontrollerat åka därifrån med M2:an matandes så slänger sig hela klasen upp på flaket och föraren trampar gasen i botten, man ser också att någon inte kom upp på flaket utan blir mer eller mindre kvarlämnad på stället...
Det blev nog helgens snackis i den umgängeskretsen. Blev nog inte bättre när killen som de lämnade kvar kommer tillbakastapplande ett par timmar senare med skottskador och utbrister, "för fan grabbar ni bara lämnade mig där, jävla negrer!"
Kulsprutan ser ut att var en
http://world.guns.ru/machine/dshkm.jpg eller alternativt en kinesisk kopia.
Citat:
In the late 1930s another famous Soviet arms designer, Shpagin, designed an add-on belt feed module, that could be easily installed on the DK instead of the magazine. This modification appeared in 1938, and in 1939 it was officially adopted by Red Army as an "12.7mm Krupnocalibernyj Pulemet Degtyareva-Shpagina, DShK" (Degtyarev-Shpagin, large caliber). DShK was used through WW2 as an anti-aircraft weapon, and also as an heavy infantry support gun. It also had been used on some heavy soviet tanks as a roof-mounted AA-gun. After the war some care had been taken to improve DShK - a rotary belt fed unit was replaced by more conventional slide-operated one, some other improvements also were made. New gun was adopted as a DShK-M, or DShK Modernised, and also is known as DShKM-38/46. It also was used as a heavy infantry support/AA-gun, and mounted on some tanks and armour vehicles (T-55, T-62, BTR-155). In the late 1960s and 1970s DShKM was gradually replaced in Soviet Army service by the more modern NSV / NSVT machine gun. DShKM was widely exported to Soviet-friendly nations and regimes. It was also manufactured in other countries, such as China, Iran, Yugoslavia and Pakistan. It was widely used in numerous "local wars", including Afghan campaigns.