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Yugo AK ๐ท๐ธ M70AB2 (Zastava under-folder) to 500yds Practical Accuracy
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The Yugo M70AB2 (and the M70 family) can be said to be a symbol of the Balkan conflicts in the 90's and onwards. While the M70 family was an unlice...
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Zastava M51: A Compact Yugoslav Prototype SMG
The Zastava M51 is a prototype Yugoslav submachine gun developed before the adoption of the M56. It uses elements of the Beretta M38 (namely the captive recoil spring system) and PPSh-41 (the selector switch and magazine well) along with a collapsing stock reminiscent of the Polish PM63 machine p...
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"Dragunov" Sniper Rifles (we have at home) - ๐ท๐ด PSL ๐ท๐ธ M76 ๐ฎ๐ถ Iraqi Tabuk
Watch latest videos, sometimes even early releases! Sign up for the newsletter ๐๏ธ https://tinyurl.com/9HoleReviews or https://tinyurl.com/SlateBlack The Soviet Union under Russian leadership had developed one of the worldโs most efficient sniper doctrines using the SVD, Dragunov Sniper Rifleโฆ and...
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Yugo M76 Sniper [Zastava] to 800yds: Practical Accuracy - Yugoslav War Sniper
Watch latest videos, sometimes even early releases! Sign up for the newsletter ๐๏ธhttps://tinyurl.com/9HoleReviews or https://tinyurl.com/SlateBlack The M76 is a semi-auto sniper rifle developed by Zastava in Serbia (then Yugoslavia) that fired a potent 7.92x57mm cartridge (AKA 8mm Mauser). The M7...
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Yovanovitch Model 1931
Lazar Yovanovitch was a Serbian native of Yugoslavia, born in Belgrade. He left engineering school to design firearms, and developed a couple .22 and .380 caliber pistols. None were adopted by the Yugoslav military, but he did use his .380 in international competition at the 1933 ISSF 25m rapid f...
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Military machine pistol used by gangsters: the Agram 2000
The Croatian made Agram 2000 is a unique design featuring space-age furniture. It was used during the break up of Yugoslavia in the early 90s and saw continued use after the conflict by elements of the criminal underworld across Europe.
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Marko Vukovik's Prototype Machine Pistol: the V.M.18
Today we continue our series on the development of Croatian pistols towards the XD line. Last week we saw Marko Vukovic's first design, and today we are looking at his second. This was the V.M.18, a step towards a more proven system instead of the really unusual flapper locking of the Kordun. The...
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Shooting the Yugoslav M49/57 Submachine Gun
The Yugoslav M49/57 submachine gun looks very similar to the Soviet PPSh-41, but it constructed quite differently, and has a much larger recoil spring. The question is, how will it shoot? Will it be fast and controllable like the Papasha or slower like the Sudayev?
Thanks to Marstar for lettin...
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Yugoslavia's PPSh Lookalike: The M49/57
Shortly after the end of World War Two, Yugoslavia adopted a submachine gun that looked very much like the Soviet PPSh-41, and was obviously inspired by it. However, the manufacturing methods were completely different, with the Yugoslav gun being of all milled construction and with internal parts...
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The Yugoslav M56 Submachine Gun: Perhaps Too Simple?
The M-56 is a Yugoslav take on the MP-40 design, produced starting in 1956 to replace its previously issued M49 submachine gun (which was a copy of the Soviet PPSh-41). The M56 is simpler than the MP40, however, and chambered for the 7.62x25mm Tokarev cartridge. It is a simple gun to make, but qu...
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Yugoslav M52 Sniper: East Meets West
In 1947, Yugoslavia received about 4600 Russian M91/30 PU sniper rifles as military aid, which were basically not used, as Yugoslavia had standardized on the 8mm Mauser cartridge. In 1952, however, a new sniper rifle was requested and the 91/30s were put to use. The Zastava factory took 4,618 M48...
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An AK in 8x57mm: The Yugoslav M76 at the Range
Yesterday we looked at the history and mechanics of this Yugoslav M76; today we are taking it out to the range...
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Zastava DMR Showdown: M76 vs M91 at the Range
Edit: I said 100 yards in the video; this was all shot at 200 yards. Sorry!
Time to compare the Zastava over-sized AKs! Today I'm out at the range for a comparison shutoff between a Yugoslav M76 and a Serbian M91, both Kalashnikov-based DMRs made by the Zastava factory. The M76 is chambered fo...
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Zastava's Heavy Hitter: The Yugoslav M76 DMR
In the 1970s, the Yugoslav Army decided that it wanted a semiautomatic marksman's rifle, something akin to the Romanian PSL or Soviet Dragunov. Not having the technical data package to manufacture the SVD, the Zastava factory set about scaling up its M70 Kalashnikov to meet this requirement. The ...
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Shooting the Yugoslav M84 PKM: Arguably the Best GPMG
If I could have any one machine gun (but only one), it would be a PKM - in my experience thus far, this is the best universal machine gun that has been designed. Kalashnikov's design team took the lessons of the MG42 and created a machine gun that does an excellent job of balancing the capabiliti...
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Yugoslav M84 PKM: History, Mechanics, and Disassembly
The PK machine gun was developed by Mikhail Kalashnikov's engineering team right about the time they were putting the finishing touches on the AKM. The PK is in many ways an AK rifle action enlarged, flipped upside-down, and mated with a belt feed mechanism. It uses the same belt design as the pr...
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Book Review: Communist Bloc Handguns by George Layman
There is not really a good reference book available on Communist Bloc pistols - or at least there wasn't until now. George Layman has just released this overview of Cold War handguns from the USSR, Bulgaria, China, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, North Korea, Poland, Romania, and Yugoslavi...
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Yugoslav M57: Tito's Tokarev
Yugoslavia purchased both 1895 Nagant revolvers and TT33 Tokarev form the Soviet Union after World War Two, but this was only a holdover until domestic pistol production could begin. While Yugoslavia was formally communist, Tito was not a puppet of Moscow, and Yugoslavia did their own development...