*** Welcome to piglix ***

Valmet M76

RK 62 76
RK 62 76.jpg
The Valmet M76
Type Assault rifle
Place of origin Finland
Service history
Used by Finland, Indonesia, Qatar
Wars Anti-guerrilla operations in Indonesia
Production history
Manufacturer Valmet
Produced 1976–1986
Variants M76W (Wooden Buttstock), M76F (Folding Stock, 7.62 Soviet and 5.56 NATO)
Specifications
Weight 3.6 kg (7lb 15oz)
Length 950 mm (37.4 in) stock extended
710 mm (29.13 in) stock folded
Barrel length 418 mm (16.46 in)
(4 grooves, right hand twist)

Cartridge 5.56×45mm NATO, 7.62×39mm
Action Gas-operated, rotating bolt
Rate of fire 700 rounds/min
Effective firing range 300–400
Feed system 15-, 20-, or 30-round detachable box magazine
Sights Iron sights

The RK 62 76, also known as the Valmet M76 is a gas operated assault rifle of Finnish origin, which was also made in semi-automatic version for civilian market. It is a modified AK-47 based on the Rk 62 (Rynnäkkökivääri 62, Assault rifle 62) design. The gun was in production from 1976 to 1986. Its receiver is made from stamped and riveted sheet metal, instead of Rk 62's milled receiver.

There are eight types of M76, four of which use 7.62×39mm M43 ammunition, while the other four use 5.56×45mm NATO rounds. They use 15-, 20-, or 30-round magazines. Finland used the 7.62 mm version, while Qatar and Indonesia use the 5.56 mm version.

The Valmet M62/76 series of rifles are updates of the AK-47 design. Beginning with a licensed version of the AK-47 receiver, Valmet set about upgrading the design at every point. Tolerances are tighter than the Soviet bloc AKs while still being generous enough to assure reliability in all climates. The gas piston included small “fingers” near the piston to ensure smoother functioning inside the gas tube, which helped to increase the inherent accuracy of the rifle. Another move toward increased accuracy was the upgraded sights.

The front sight is mounted on the gas block which makes for one less attachment to the barrel, adding to the mechanical accuracy. The front sight is fully adjustable in the field by the soldier. There is also a flip up tritium night sight that covers the front post for low light shooting.

The rear sight is an aperture on a sliding tangent affair adjustable to 600 meters and a “battle sight” setting of 150 meters. The rear sight is located toward the rear of the top cover. The rear sight also has tritium inserts for night shooting by flipping the sight all the way forward (upside down). Once in this position, there is a square notch arrangement with two tritium dots on either side. In this position, the rear sight is adjustable for elevation via a set screw under the sight arm.

Another feature of the Valmet M62/76 series rifles is the flash suppressor. It resembles an enlarged version of the suppressor on the original M16. Directly under the flash suppressor is a bayonet lug to accommodate the knife-style bayonet manufactured by Fiskars and Hackman. The flash suppressor has some sharp edges along its longitudinal cuts for wire cutting. A soldier slides the barbed wire into the flash suppressor and simply rotates his rifle around until it snaps the small gauge wire. For thicker wire, the soldier inserts the wire, gives a half turn and fires the rifle, which will snap the wire. On the M16 the prong type flash suppressor was abandoned for the bird cage type because the prongs tended to snag on vegetation in the field. While this is still a problem with the M62/76, the sharper edges help to cut through some of the vegetation.


...
Wikipedia

...