Pușcă Automată model 1986

Pușcă Automată model 1986

The Pmd. 86 with AG-40 grenade launcher.
Type Assault rifle
Place of origin Socialist Republic of Romania
Service history
In service 1986–present
Used by Romania, Socialist Republic of Romania
Wars Peacekeeping missions in Bosnia, Kosovo, Iraq, Afghanistan.
Production history
Designer Romtechnica
Designed 1986
Manufacturer ROMARM via Regia Autonomă pentru producţia de Tehnică Militară (RATMIL), Cugir
Produced 1986–present
Specifications
Weight 3.69 kg (8.14 lb)
Length 943 mm (37.1 in) stock extended / 748 mm (29.4 in) stock folded
Barrel length 432 mm (17.0 in)

Cartridge 5.45×39mm
Caliber 5.45 mm
Action Gas-actuated, rotating bolt
Rate of fire 700 rounds/min
Muzzle velocity 880 m/s (2,887 ft/s)
Effective firing range 100 to 1,000 m sight adjustments
Feed system 30-round detachable box magazine
Sights Rear sight notch sight on sliding tangent, front post

The Pușcă Automată model 1986 (Automatic Rifle Model 1986, abbreviated PA md. 86 or simply md. 86) is the standard assault rifle used by the Romanian Military Forces and manufactured in Cugir, Romania by the ROMARM firm, located in Bucharest. The export name for this variant is the AIMS-74.[1]

History

As the Soviet Union switched from the 7.62×39mm caliber AKM to the 5.45×39mm caliber AK-74, it encouraged other nations of the Warsaw Pact to follow suit.

By the mid 80s, Romania decided to switch calibers, however it was decided that the new rifle would be developed independently, and not represent a clone of the Soviet AK-74. In doing so, the PA md. 86 has several anachronistic AKM elements that were found only on the prototype Soviet AK-74.

Features

The most easily recognized AKM feature is the gas block design (45 degree versus 90 degree). Incidentally, although the gas block is purely AKM, the gas vent in the barrel did change to a 90-degree design to minimize bullet shearing (a problem with early Soviet AK-74s with 45-degree gas blocks). This means the Romanian PA md. 86 has a double-angle gas port, which makes it much harder to clean the gas vent. This variant also uses the AK-47 rear trunnion, and thus the siderail is lengthened.

It uses either a "bird cage" flash suppressor, or a flash hider (designed for Special Forces). The design also incorporates an upward-curved charging handle, a wire side-folding stock (based on the East German design, but offset slightly to the left), and a traditional vertical handgrip. The md. 86 use laminated wood lower handguards, and Bakelite pistol grips and upper handguards. None of the components have had any polymer versions.

The AG-40 grenade launcher can be attached as a lower handguard after removing the standard one. Lasers/lights can also be clamped to the barrel in two ways. The rifle is one of only a few AK versions that have a 3-round burst option. The selector markings are as follows, from top to bottom: ∞, 1, 3. Only ribbed steel magazines are used.

Combat divers also use a version with straight handguards, as the forward grip is considered to be cumbersome for amphibious operations.

Variants

Carbine version

This rifle also has a rarely seen short-barrel version, PM md. 94 (model 94 submachine gun), where the front sight is placed on the gas block, with the gas tube being shortened. This version uses straight laminated wood handguards.[2]

Civilian variants

The 5.45×39mm civilian export versions are: Romak 992, Romak 2, Intrac Mk II, CUR-2, WUM-2, SAR 2, and the WASR 2 which is the current production rifle. The WASR 2 does not have a dimpled receiver, unlike previous models.

5.45 mm RPK

The RPK version of the md. 86 is called the md. 93. It features a long reinforced receiver, a carry handle, and a bipod. An earlier, short-lived version used a fire control group similar to the 7.62 mm md. 64, "Safe – Auto – Single". The md. 93 changed this to the md. 86 style "Safe – Auto – Single – Burst".

See also

References

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