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The Zastava M85 is a Yugoslavian copy of the Soviet AKSU-74 sub-machine-gun, but chambered for the western 5. 56 mm cartridge. It has a selectable single-shot or automatic rate of fire of 700 rounds per minute.
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The Kulomet 15 mm HMG ZB-60 is a Czechoslovakian 15 mm gas operated, tripod-mounted heavy machine-gun intended for infantry fire support but also employed in an anti-aircraft role. The ZB-60 takes a 40-round belt feed and fires with a muzzle velocity of 905 meters per second to a range of 2400 meters with a cyclic rate of 430 rounds per minute. The ZB-60 has a 1090 mm long barrel and is fitted with a blade foresight and an aperture rear sight.
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The ZK-383 is a Czechoslovakian sub-machine-gun used during the Second World War. It takes a 9 mm round from a 30-round box. It has a cyclic rate of 500 and 700 rounds-per-minute and is sighted to 800 meters with a muzzle velocity of 365 meters-per-second. Unusually for a sub-machine-gun it was fitted with a bipod and a long quick-change barrel.
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The ZPU-4 is a Soviet anti-aircraft defence comprised of four 14.5 mm calibre KPV heavy machine-guns mounted on a wheeled tractor. The ZPU-4 was introduced in 1949 and manually operated and optically sighted. The ZPU-4 fired the 14.5 mm calibre Soviet round at a rate of 600 rounds-per-minute from a disintegrating link belt.
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