![]() I understand that low serial numbered Husqvarna receivers are refurbished rifles and NOT one of the ones purposely built for FSR. A CG FSR rifle with a Hellqvist diopter on the right. (top two in the pic below) The bottom rifle is also a Husqvarna M/96 which had a Pramm diopter sight installed. The two without diopter sights in my collection have SM sikte AGJ-ram micrometer rear sights, which was typical for these rifles. The conversions were done by FSR approved gunsmiths.Not all Husqvarna M/96 rifles which were produced for FSR use had diopter sights installed. The FSR assigned "marks" to each approved smith.ĭid Husqvarna install the target sights or were they added later? I've seen pictures of Husqvarna M96 with no holes drilled into the ring. I think you need to define "FSR".many CG rifles were outfitted with diopter sights by FSR approved gunsmiths, and were used by FSR shooters. ![]() ![]() Do all original FSR Swedish Mausers have Husqvarna marked receivers? If so, where do the Carl Gustaf "FSR Swedish Mauser's" come from? Who did those conversions (i.e.
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![]() After this my modesty caused me to decline visiting except the Recorder was with us but through all these pleasant little outings the Recorder's daughter never said or did anything rude, and I noticed when curiously-minded ladies took these liberties with me, she looked very much displeased with them for their want of courtesy. In many of these visits, I was made aware of the fact that even the ladies of the most refined modern type of this generation were brimful of curiosity, as many that we visited, when there was no man present, came and gazed at me in a very rude way, in fact on two occasions they actually pinched me, I suppose to see if I was man or mummy. I was taken out for long walks, or rather flights and we visited a number of their lady friends. ![]() I was now for the first time left alone with the ladies. After a short stay with his family, extending in all to but a few hours, the Recorder said he could not remain longer, as he must get back to his office, having been now many days absent. MSBS rifles during the development stage in 2011 The MSBS is the first machine carbine fully designed and produced completely in Poland since World War II as well as the largest firearms sale contract taken on by the Polish arms industry since 1989. There are two basic variants of the rifle: a conventional layout assault rifle and a bullpup. ![]() The FB Radom MSBS Grot ( Polish: Modułowy System Broni Strzeleckiej „Grot”, English: Modular Firearm System "Spearhead") is a modular assault rifle developed and manufactured by FB "Łucznik" Radom. ![]() Integrated Picatinny rail for various optical sights and Picatinny attachable iron sights ![]() Adam Gawron, Bartosz Stefaniak, Grzegorz Misiołek, Maciej Sajdakĩ80 mm (39 in) (MSBS Grot C, stock extended)ģ0-round detachable STANAG magazines, 60-round casket magazine (5.56×45mm NATO) “ essentially a doctrine of attack on a narrow front by concentrated armor, trained to drive forward through the gap it forced without concern for its flanks…" The early German successes have long been closely associated with the catch-all (and catchy) blitzkrieg term-the “lightning war.” What was blitzkrieg? John Keegan’s definition of it is fairly representative of the popular conception of the German war-making style: How is Blitzkrieg or "Lightning War" defined? These victories were so stunning that they gave rise to the myth of German military supremacy-a myth that has persisted to this day. Hans von Seeckt was both the architect of the German Wehrmacht and Blitzkrieg tactics used so successfully in World War Two. Remarkably, instead of inventing a new form of warfare, Hans von Seeckt (Commander of the Reichswehr from 1920-1926) used traditional German/Prussia warfare tactics but updated them for armored/mechanized infantry and airpower to create Blitzkrieg. France's famed Maginot Line proved utterly useless in the face of German forces new approach to mechanized warfare. ![]() ![]() ![]() Poland, Norway, France, the Low Countries, the Balkans, North Africa, and the Soviet Union were quickly overwhelmed, and Germany's victories were incredibly fast and efficient. During World War Two, Germany used Blitzkrieg warfare or "Lightning War" to quickly sweep through Europe. |