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APS-95

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APS-95
Automatska Pulška Samokres 1995
TypeAssault rifle
Place of origin Croatia
Service history
In serviceCurrent (supposedly) in small numbers[citation needed]
Used bySee Users
Wars2011 Libyan civil war[citation needed]
Production history
Designed1972
ManufacturerKončar-Arma d.o.o
Produced1995-??
Specifications
Mass3.8 kg (8.3 lb)
Length980 mm (38.5 in) with stock unfolded; 730 mm (28.7 in) with stock folded
Barrel length450 mm (17.7 in)

Cartridge5.56×45mm NATO
Caliber5.56mm
ActionGas-driven piston
Rate of fire650 rounds/min
Feed system35-round detachable box magazine
Sights1.5× optical sight integrated in the carrying handle; fixed front sight and backup back iron sight

The APS-95 was an assault rifle manufactured in Croatia by Končar-Arma d.o.o since 1995 and offered for export up to at least 2007 (the year when the Končar-Arma website, where the APS-95 had been featured, disappeared from the web). The manufacturing company, a subsidiary of the Croatian ARMA-GRUPA Corporation, has been manufacturing the ERO and Mini-ERO submachine guns (copies of the Israeli UZI and Mini-UZI respectively) since the mid-1990s. The manufacturer tried to push the APS-95 on the international market for several years, with no success.

History

The APS-95 was developed under request of the Croatian Army, which wanted to shift as soon as possible from the then-issued Yugoslavian-made 7.62×39mm Zastava M70 assault rifles to a service rifle chambered for the NATO-standard 5.56×45mm NATO cartridge. During the Croatian War of Independence, the Croatian side had been supplied by the Croatian businessman Antun Kikaš of several batches of the Vektor R4, a South African copy of the Israeli IMI Galil assault rifle. The Croatian fighters appreciated the weapon and wanted a locally manufactured version of it as the new standard Croatian Army rifle.

Overview

The APS-95 was a conventional select-fire assault rifle operating via a gas-driven piston and employing a 35-rounds detachable magazine for 5'56mm ammunition, in all similar to the ones used in the Israeli Galil or South-African R4 assault rifles. The APS-95 was made around a stamped receiver, rather than the refined milled receiver of the Galil and R4, thus achieving reduction in cost and manufacturing time. Its fire selector was based upon two distinct commands located on both sides of the rifle, similarly to the Galil and Vektor R4 but different in operation. The lever located on the right side of the receiver, based upon the AK-47 selector, had only two positions: lowered for "Fire" and raised for "Safe" (when raised, it blocked the bolt working as a dust cover). The small switch located over the grip on the left side of the receiver, at easy thumb reach, had two positions for semi-automatic and full-automatic fire. The folding stock was made out of stamped steel, and folded on the right side of the receiver; its profile didn't caused any hindrance to the handling of the weapon nor to the operation of the bolt - as such, the APS-95 could be safely fired with the stock folded.

The most prominent features of the APS-95 over the Galil and the R4 were its distinctive handguard and front sight, and its carrying handle integrating an 1.5× optical sight and optional backup back iron sights. The pistol grip was also different, featuring finger grooves, much in the style of the M16 rifle.

Accessories

Available optionals for the APS-95 included

  • removable bipod
  • sling
  • bayonet
  • RGB-1 - a quick attach/detach undercarried single-shot grenade launcher chambered for 30mm grenades. The RGB-1 was built with simplicity in mind, and equipped with a general mounting system to allow usage on many different assault rifles; the main drawback of the RGB-1 was its very sensitive single-action trigger which had no trigger guard or protection whatsoever, thus posing risks of accidental discharges in case of snags over a soldier's equipment.

Users

  •  Croatia The APS-95 was officially adopted by the Croatian Army around 1998[citation needed], acquired and distributed in very small quantities before budgetary constraints stopped procurement. The number of rifles manufactured, and the quantity adopted by the Croatian Forces are unknown to date; so is the current status of the weapon.[citation needed]
  •  Libya - Photographs and video from the 2011 Libyan civil war show that some purchases were made by the Libyan Gaddafi regime[citation needed]

See also