NSV

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NSV also stands for Nullsoft Streaming Video and Non-Specific Vaginitis (now termed Bacterial vaginosis)
NSV

NSVT mounted on a Finnish APC
Type Heavy machine gun
Place of origin Flag of the Soviet Union Soviet Union
Service history
In service 1971-present
Used by See users
Wars Soviet war in Afghanistan, Nagorno-Karabakh War, Gulf War,Iraq War
Production history
Designer G.I. Nikitin, Y.S. Sokolov, V.I. Volkov
Designed 1969
Variants NSVT
Specifications
Weight 25 kg (gun only)
41 kg on tripod
11 kg (50-round belt)
Length 1560 mm

Cartridge 12.7x108mm
Action Gas operated
Rate of fire 700-800 rounds/min
Muzzle velocity 845 m/s
Effective range 1.5 km vs. air (maximum)
2 km vs. ground targets
Feed system belt 50 rounds

The NSV (Russian НСВ Никитина-Соколова-Волкова) is a 12.7 mm caliber heavy machine gun of Soviet origin, named after the designers, G. I. Nikitin (Г. И. Никитин), Y. S. Sokolov (Ю. М. Соколов) and V. I. Volkov (В. И. Волков). It was designed to replace the DShK machine gun and was adopted by the Soviet Army in 1971. In Russian service it is being phased out by the Kord machine gun and it is no longer being manufactured in Russia as the manufacturing license for the NSV ended up in Kazakhstan after the break-up of the Soviet Union. It has been manufactured in Bulgaria, India, Poland and Yugoslavia under license.

The NSV weighs 55 kg, has a rate of fire of 13 shots per second, and an effective range of 1 500 meters. A fully-loaded ammunition belt with 50 rounds weighs 11 kg.

The NSV is used on the T-72 tank, while the NSVT variant is used on the T-64 and T-80 tanks.

Contents

[edit] History

The Soviet Army was looking for a new heavy machine gun to replace its older SGM and RPD machine guns in the early 1950s. The Soviet Army liked the idea behind the German MG-42, which could change roles by changing the mount, and two Soviet weapon designers were asked to design one weapon each, utilizing the same principle.

The tests showed that Mikhail Kalashnikov's solution was better, more reliable and cheaper to manufacture, than the one designed by Grigory Nikitin and Yuri Sokolov. Kalashnikov's machine gun became the new standard machine gun, and was named PK. Nikitin's and Sokolov's was however not forgotten and was to be developed into the heavy NSV machine gun about 10 years later.

The NSV was developed in 1969, as a successor to the DShK/DShKM machine gun, and was taken into service use by the Red Army in 1971. The machine gun was also manufactured on license in Bulgaria, India, Yugoslavia and Poland. The Yugoslavian version of the NSVT is called M87.

The production of the NSV has ended in Russia, and it is currently being replaced by the Kord heavy machine gun. The Russian Army needed a more accurate heavy machine gun, and it has also been increasingly difficult to get hold of spares, as the NSV factories were located in Ukraine and in Kazakhstan, after the end of the Soviet Union.

[edit] Use in Finland

The NSV is called 12,7 Itkk or 12,7 ilmatorjunta-konekivääri NSV-12.7 in Finland. It is often used as a vehicle mounted machine gun, and can be seen on Pasis and Nasus.

Due to its high rate of fire, it is used as a close-range anti-aircraft weapon, to be used against helicopters, UAVs and aircraft. When used in ground battles, the machine gun is placed on a special mount.

The Finnish Navy also uses the NSV in the anti-aircraft role, where it complements other unguided anti-aircraft weapons, like the 23 ITK 95, Bofors 40 Mk3 or Bofors 57 Mk2 and Mk3.

[edit] Variants

NSVT
The NSVT (tank) version is primarily used in vehicle mountings, such as main battle tanks. Serbia's Zastava Arms produces the NSVT as the M87 under license, and it has been used by the militaries of the former Yugoslav states.
An Armenian fighter firing an NSV heavy machine gun in the summer of 1992 during the Nagorno-Karabakh war.
An Armenian fighter firing an NSV heavy machine gun in the summer of 1992 during the Nagorno-Karabakh war.

[edit] Operators

[edit] See also

[edit] External links