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DispatchAccountMilitary

by The Holy Empire of The united american-isreali empire. . 13 reads.

UAIE sales to Langenia

(ooc this for for rp only, no ic knolage unless you find it or something lol)

second aid package:

(wip)

(ooc this for for rp only, no ic knolage unless you find it or something lol)

ammunition:

7.62x39:

M43 (1,000,000,000 innital) with 1,000,000 monthly)
M67 (1,000,000,000 innital) with 1,000,000 monthly)
57-N-231 (1,000,000,000 innital) with 1,000,000 monthly)
7N23 (1,000,000,000 innital) with 1,000,000 monthly)
57-N-231P (1,000,000,000 innital) with 1,000,000 monthly)
57-T-231PM1 (1,000,000,000 innital) with 1,000,000 monthly)

5.45x39

7N6 (1,000,000,000 innital) with 1,000,000 monthly)
7N6M (1,000,000,000 innital) with 1,000,000 monthly)
7N10 (1,000,000,000 innital) with 1,000,000 monthly)
7N22 (1,000,000,000 innital) with 1,000,000 monthly)
7N24 (1,000,000,000 innital) with 1,000,000 monthly)
7N39 (1,000,000,000 innital) with 1,000,000 monthly)
7T3 (1,000,000,000 innital) with 1,000,000 monthly)
7T3M (1,000,000,000 innital) with 1,000,000 monthly)
7H3 (1,000,000,000 innital) with 1,000,000 monthly)
7H3M (1,000,000,000 innital) with 1,000,000 monthly)
7Kh3 (1,000,000,000 innital) with 1,000,000 monthly)
7U1 (1,000,000,000 innital) with 1,000,000 monthly)

(to put in)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/7.62%C3%9754mmR
http://7.62x54r.net/MosinID/MosinAmmoID.htm

*wip
1908 Cupro-nickel Type L
Tombac Type L
1930 Type D
LPS
SN sniper
T-30 Tracer
T-46 Tracer
T-46M Tracer, stepped bullet
B-30 Armor Piercing
B-32 Armor Piercing/Incendiary
PZ Incendiary Bullet
Blank
U.S. Cartridge Co. Bronze Tip
Remington-UMC Bronze Tip
Winchester Bronze Tip
Remington Type L nickel
Winchester Finnish Contract light ball
Winchester Finnish Contract heavy ball
Copper Type S light ball
Nickel Type S light ball
D166 heavy ball
Type D lead core
Type L lead core
LPS steel core
Type L lead core
Type 53 steel core light ball
Armor Piercing/Incendiary (china)
Tz lead core heavy ball (Czechoslovakia)
Type 59 steel core light ball (Czechoslovakia)
Tracer (Czechoslovakia)
Hollow core short range practice (Czechoslovakia)
Blank (Czechoslovakia)

(stopped at hungary, will put in more as i can: http://7.62x54r.net/MosinID/MosinAmmoID.htm)

assault rifles:

Type 56 (100,000 initial with 1,000 monthly)
Type 56-1 (100,000 initial with 1,000 monthly)
Type 56-2 (100,000 initial with 1,000 monthly)
Type 56-3 (100,000 initial with 1,000 monthly)
Type 56-4 (100,000 initial with 1,000 monthly)
Type 56C (QBZ-56C) (100,000 initial with 1,000 monthly)

Type 56M or Type 56-5 (a rpk style) (100,000 initial with 1,000 monthly)

Type 84 line

Type 84 (100,000 initial with 1,000 monthly)
Type 84-1 (100,000 initial with 1,000 monthly)
Type 84-2 (100,000 initial with 1,000 monthly)
Type 84-3 (100,000 initial with 1,000 monthly)
Type 84-4 (100,000 initial with 1,000 monthly)
Type 84-5 (100,000 initial with 1,000 monthly)

ak-47 type 2 assault rifle (100,000 inital) with 1,000 monthly)
ak-47 type 3 assault rifle (100,000 inital) with 1,000 monthly)
AKS-47 (100,000 inital) with 1,000 monthly)

AKM (Russian: Автома́т Кала́шникова модернизи́рованный, tr. Avtomát Kalášnikova modernizírovannyj, lit. 'Kalashnikov's Automatic Rifle Modernised') (100,000 inital) with 1,000 monthly)
AKMS (S – Skladnoy – Folding) (100,000 inital) with 1,000 monthly)

KR-101 (100,000 initial) with 2,000 monthly.

rocket launchers

Type 69 85mm rocket propelled grenade (RPG) -200,000 (with 20,000 monthly)
Type 69-I 85mm rocket propelled grenade (RPG) -200,000 (with 20,000 monthly)

(ammo for rpgs in general but listed on the type 69 rpg wikipage)

ammo for it:

Type 69 high-explosive anti-tank (HEAT): basic grenade introduced in the PLA during the 1970s with the Type 69. Phased out of PLA service. 2,000,000,000,with 100,000 per month

Type 69-I hollow charge high-explosive anti-tank: standard HEAT grenade developed for the PLA in the 1980s. The hollow warhead was created with improved armour-piercing capabilities. 2,000,000,000,with 100,000 per month

Type 69-II HEAT: the same as the Type 69-I HEAT grenade, except that it is improved to defeat modern armoured vehicles that are equipped with anti-tank missile plating. 2,000,000,000,with 100,000 per month

Type 69-III HEAT: the same as the Type 69-II, increased range and further improved armour-piercing abilities. 2,000,000,000,with 100,000 per month

Type 84 HEAT: made in the 1980s as a lighter warhead with the ability to be fired from long range with claims that the rocket is not affected by side winds. Usable with both Type 69 and 69-I rocket launchers. 2,000,000,000,with 100,000 per month

Type 69 75mm airburst anti-personnel high-explosive (HE): created for anti-personnel purposes. This is mostly meant to combat against entrenched forces since the rocket, after gaining impact on the ground, bounces to a height of around 2m then airbursts over the target area, scattering about 800 anti-personnel steel balls over a lethal radius of 15m. 2,000,000,000,with 100,000 per month

HE/HEAT: used for anti-armour and anti-personnel combat. Even though it has 1,500 prefabricated fragments which scatter over a 20m radius on detonation, the rocket retains its anti-tank capabilities. 2,000,000,000,with 100,000 per month

Anti-personnel high-explosive incendiary (HEI): created for use in certain environments such as jungles and mountains, it has 900 steel balls and 2,000 to 3,000 incendiary pellets that scatter over a 15m radius on detonation. 2,000,000,000,with 100,000 per month

Tandem-warhead anti-tank grenade: thought to have been used in the 1990s, it is meant to penetrate vehicles with explosive reaction armour or ERA. Even though it can not defeat most modern vehicles, lighter vehicles such as APCs and AFVs can be destroyed with this rocket. 2,000,000,000,with 100,000 per month

Illumination grenade: equipped with a small parachute to suspend it in mid air while being used, its effective range is 600m with the braking ring and 1,500m without it. 2,000,000,000,with 100,000 per month

machine guns

heavy/medium machine guns:

SG-43 Goryunov (Russian: Станковый пулемет системы Горюнова, Stankovyy pulemet sistemi Goryunova, meaning "Mounted machinegun, Goryunov design") -100,000 inital with 2,000 per month
SGM ("M" for modernized) -100,000 inital with 2,000 per month
Pulemyot Maxima PM1910 (PM M1910) (Russian: Пулемёт Максима образца 1910 года, Pulemyot Maxima obraztsa 1910 goda - "Maxim's machine gun Model 1910") -100,000 inital with 2,000 per month
Maxim's machine gun model 1915 on a wheeled Kolesnikov's mount (Пулемёт Максима обр. 1910 года на колёсном станке Колесникова обр. 1915 года) -100,000 inital with 2,000 per month
Maxim's machine gun model 1910/30 on a wheeled Vladimirov's mount (Пулемёт Максима образца 1910/30 года на колёсном станке С.В. Владимирова обр. 1931 года) -100,000 inital with 2,000 per month

DShK 1938 (ДШК, for Дегтярёва-Шпагина Крупнокалиберный, Degtyaryova-Shpagina Krupnokaliberny, "Degtyaryov-Shpagin Large-Calibre") line:

DShK 1938 (ДШК, for Дегтярёва-Шпагина Крупнокалиберный, Degtyaryova-Shpagina Krupnokaliberny, "Degtyaryov-Shpagin Large-Calibre") -500,000 with 10,000 per month
DShKM -500,000 with 10,000 per month
Type 54 -1,000,000 with 20,000 per month

Light machine guns

RPD machine gun line:

RPD machine gun -100,000 initial with 5,000 per month
RPDM -100,000 initial with 5,000 per month
Type 62 -100,000 initial with 5,000 per month
Type 56-1 -100,000 initial with 5,000 per month

vehicles

tanks:

Lion of Babylon or Asad Babil (Arabic: أسد بابل)

10,000 (with 1,000 monthly) (1)

st33 main battle tank (a t-90 version useing a 110mm gun) -30 per month) (nation=southern_xenickese_military_factbooks/detail=factbook/id=1493103)

references:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/7.62%c3%9739mm
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/5.45%C3%9739mm
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lion_of_Babylon_(tank)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P9MODeo5TWQ (on the iraqi t-72)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type_56_assault_rifle
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AK-47
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AKM
nation=southern_xenickese_military_factbooks/detail=factbook/id=1493083
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SG-43_Goryunov
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PM_M1910
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/RPD_machine_gun
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DShK

notes to buyer:

(1) look we understand these tanks are not the best. however we have production lines ready and these where on hand.

Read dispatch

proposals (not accepted yet):

manpeds:

9K38 Igla (Russian: Игла́, "needle", NATO reporting name SA-18 Grouse) -100,000 with 500 per month

9K310 Igla-1, or SA-16 Gimlet -100,000 with 500 per month

9K338 Igla-S (SA-24 Grinch) -100,000 with 500 per month

9K333 Verba (Russian: Верба, "Willow") / SA-25 -100,000 with 500 per month

bolt action rifles:

M1903 Springfield, formally the United States Rifle, Caliber .30-06, Model 1903 saries

1903 (1906): modified again to specifically fire the new M1906 .30-06 cartridge ("Ball Cartridge, caliber 30, Model of 1906").: 100,000 with 2,000 per month

M1903 NRA (1915–1917): sold to National Rifle Association members and stamped NRA on the forward tang of the trigger guard.: 100,000 with 2,000 per month

M1903 Air Service (1918): issued to aircrew with permanent 25-round magazine and modified Type S stock forend designed as backup for if a plane's machine gun jammed in combat.: 100,000 with 2,000 per month

M1903 Mark I (1918–1920): modified for specific use with the Pedersen device.: 100,000 with 2,000 per month

M1903 NM (1921–1940): selected rifles produced at Springfield Armory for National Match shooting competition. Production barrels were measured with star-gauges, and those meeting specified tolerances were stamped with an asterisk shaped star on the muzzle crown. These barrels were fitted to selected receivers with hand-fitted and polished parts. The bolt was left unblued while the receiver and barrel were finished with a black Parkerizing process. Some bolts have the safety direction reversed to prevent it from striking the nose of a right-handed shooter, and those made from 1924 to 1929 have the knurled cocking piece removed to decrease lock time. Early rifles used the type S stock until the type C stock became standard in 1929. Rifles made for sale to NRA members (priced at $40.44) were drilled and tapped for a Lyman 48 receiver sight and had either a type B (or NB) stock with no grasping grooves and a noticeable drop at the heel for a long pistol grip, or a special National Match stock with a high comb and pistol grip. Total production was 28,907. Most were issued to service teams and 25,377 were reconditioned at Springfield armory after one year of match use. Reconditioned rifles have a large gas-escape port drilled into the left side of the receiver. : 100,000 with 2,000 per month

M1903 Bushmaster carbine (1940s): the barrel and stock were cut down to 18 inches (460 mm) for easier use in Panama; 4,725 such rifles were made. It was a training rifle and saw no action. After World War II most were dumped into the ocean and surviving pieces are rare.: 100,000 with 2,000 per month

M1903 with 'scant' stock (1942): in late 1941, before the 1903A3 was standardized, Army Ordnance wanted to standardize on a pistol-grip stock for all M1903 rifles. There were thousands of stock blanks that had been sized for the old straight stock. They weren't deep enough for the full pistol grip of the Type C stock, so they were modified to allow a "scant" grip that was the largest grip they could form. These "scant" stocks would only fit on a 1903, and would not fit an 03A3. Springfield only rebuilt existing M1903 rifles using this stock in 1942 and marked the cut-off seat with a small "s".: 100,000 with 2,000 per month

M1903A1 (1929–1939): changed from a straight stock to a pistol grip type stock (Type C stock). The pistol grip stock was conducive to improved marksmanship and was fitted to National Match rifles until World War II. Pistol grip stocks became standard for later M1903 production and were subsequently fitted to older rifles. The Army considered any rifle with a pistol grip stock an M1903A1, but M1903 receiver markings were unchanged. : 100,000 with 2,000 per month

M1903A2 (1930s–1940s): basically a stripped A1 or A3 used as a subcaliber rifle with artillery pieces.: 100,000 with 2,000 per month

M1903A3 (1942–1944): sights were changed to an aperture (peep) system mounted on the receiver, and the rifle was modified for easier production with stamped metal parts and somewhat different grip and stock (late model Type S stock; no finger grooves).: 100,000 with 2,000 per month

M1903 (Modified) (1941–1942): Transition production of M1903 rifles by Remington Arms until the M1903A3 design was implemented involved modification of various parts creating a hybrid between the M1903 and M1903A3.: 100,000 with 2,000 per month

M1903A4 (1942): an M1903A3 modified to be a sniper rifle using an M73 or M73B1 2.5× Weaver telescopic sight and different stock, and omitting the iron sights. USMC versions instead used the 8x Unertl scope.: 100,000 with 2,000 per month

mosin-nagant line

Model 1891 Infantry Rifle (Russian: пехотная винтовка образца 1891–го года): 100,000 with 2,000 per month

Dragoon Rifle (Russian: драгунская): 100,000 with 2,000 per month

Cossack Rifle (казачья): 100,000 with 2,000 per month

Model 1907 Carbine: 100,000 with 2,000 per month

Model 1891/30 (винтовка образца 1891/30-го года, винтовка Мосина): 1,000,000 with 10,000 per month

Model 1938 Carbine: 100,000 with 2,000 per month

Model 1944 Carbine: 100,000 with 2,000 per month

Model 1891/59 Carbine: 100,000 with 2,000 per month

OTs-48: 100,000 with 2,000 per month

OTs-48K: 100,000 with 2,000 per month

Type 53: 200,000 with 5,000 per month

Russian three-line rifle, caliber 7.62mm (.30 inches): 100,000 with 2,000 per month

Model 1891/30 sniper rifle with PU 3.5×21 sight: 100,000 with 2,000 per month

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SV-98

assault rifles / pdws:

AN-94 (Russian: 5,45-мм автомат Никонова обр. 1987 г. / АН-94 «Абака́н», GRAU designation 6P33) -100,000 with 2,000 per month

AK-12 saries:

AK-12 -100,000 with 2,000 per month
AK-15 -100,000 with 2,000 per month
AK-19 -100,000 with 2,000 per month
AK-12K -100,000 with 2,000 per month
AK-15K -100,000 with 2,000 per month

AK-63 (also known in Hungarian military service as the AMM) saries:

AK-63F (AMM in Hungarian service): The basic fixed-stock copy of the Soviet AKM. : -100,000 with 2,000 per month
AK-63D (AMMS in Hungarian service): An AKMS copy with an under-folding steel stock. : -100,000 with 2,000 per month
AK-63MF: Modernised AK-63D with telescopic stock and MIL-STD-1913 Swan rail. : -100,000 with 2,000 per month

AMD-65 (Hungarian: Automata Módosított Deszant[fegyver] 1965; Automatic Modified Paratrooper [weapon]) saries:

AMD-65 (Hungarian: Automata Módosított Deszant[fegyver] 1965; Automatic Modified Paratrooper [weapon]): -100,000 with 2,000 per month
AKM-63: -100,000 with 2,000 per month
AMD-65M: -100,000 with 2,000 per month

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kbkg_wz._1960
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pu%C8%99c%C4%83_Automat%C4%83_model_1986
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pistol_Mitralier%C4%83_model_1963/1965
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AK-104
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AK-105
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AK-103
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AK-102
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AK-101
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AK-107
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AEK-971
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OTs-14_Groza
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AS_Val

Type 81 (Chinese: 81式自动步枪; literally; "Type 81 Automatic Rifle") saries:

Type 81 (Chinese: 81式自动步枪; literally; "Type 81 Automatic Rifle") - 100,000 with 2,000 per month
Type 81-1 7.62×39mm rifle with a foldable buttstock. Originally intended for paratrooper use, the Type 81-1 replaced the Type 81 with its fixed wooden buttstock as the standard issue rifle for the PLA. - 100,000 with 2,000 per month
Type 81 LMG 7.62×39mm squad machine gun - 100,000 with 2,000 per month
Type 81 MGS Semi-automatic only version of the Type 81 LMG. - 100,000 with 2,000 per month
Type 81S Early semi-automatic only model intended for the U.S. market. Only 20 were imported in January 1989 before further importation was blocked by executive order. - 100,000 with 2,000 per month
EM356 5.56×45mm variant of the Type 81S, intended for the U.S. market. Only 3 Tool room prototypes were completed and imported for the 1989 SHOT show before importation was banned along with the Type 81S by executive order. No magazines were ever made for them so modified 5.56×45mm AK magazines must be used instead. - 100,000 with 2,000 per month
T81SA Semi-automatic variant in 7.62×39mm. - 100,000 with 2,000 per month
T81-1SA Same as above, but with folding buttstock. - 100,000 with 2,000 per month
Type 81 Tactical Tactical variant used by the PAP - 100,000 with 2,000 per month
CS/LR14 7.62×51mm battle rifle. Newest tactical upgrade with modifications, such as tactical rails, foregrip, additional mountings, etc. - 100,000 with 2,000 per month
NAR-10 Tactical variant made for export. - 100,000 with 2,000 per month
NR-81S semi-automatic made primarily for the European and Canadian markets. - 100,000 with 2,000 per month
Type 81A Upgraded variant with new stock and Picatinny rails shown at the 2018 Zhuhai Airshow. - 100,000 with 2,000 per month

AK-74 (Russian: Автомат Калашникова образца 1974 года or "Kalashnikov automatic rifle model 1974") saries:

AK-74 (Russian: Автомат Калашникова образца 1974 года or "Kalashnikov automatic rifle model 1974"): 200,000 with 2,000 per month
AK-74N: 200,000 with 2,000 per month
AKS-74N : 200,000 with 2,000 per month
AKS-74UN can be used in conjunction with NSPU and NSPU-3 (1PN51): 200,000 with 2,000 per month
AK-74N2 : 200,000 with 2,000 per month
AKS-74N2: 200,000 with 2,000 per month
AKS-74 ("S"—Russian: складной; Skladnoy, or "folding") : 200,000 with 2,000 per month
AK-74M ("М"—Russian: Модернизи́рованный, tr. Modernizírovanny, lit. 'modernised') :100,000 with 1,000 per month
AK-74MR UUK (Universal Upgrade Kit) :100,000 with 1,000 per month
AKS-74U :100,000 with 1,000 per month
AKS-74UB ("B"—Russian: бесшумный; Besshumniy or "silent") :100,000 with 1,000 per month
karabinek wzór 1988 (Carbine Model 1988) Tantal : 200,000 with 2,000 per month

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FN_SCAR

AAC Honey Badger PDW -100,000 with 1,000 per month

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remington_ACR
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M14_rifle

sniper rifles:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VSS_Vintorez
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PSL_(rifle)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dragunov_sniper_rifle
Tabuk Sniper Rifle -100,000 initial with 2,000 per month
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VSK-94

shotguns:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saiga-12
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atchisson_AA-12
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vepr-12
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armsel_Striker
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ithaca_37
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Browning_Auto-5
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remington_Model_31
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KS-23

carbines:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M1_carbine

rpgs

RPG-7 (Russian: РПГ-7, Ручной Противотанковый Гранатомёт – Ruchnoy Protivotankoviy Granatomyot) -200,000 with 4,000 per month

*ammo*

PG-7VL [c.1977] Improved 93 mm HEAT warhead effective against most vehicles and fortified targets. :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
PG-7VR [c.1988] Dual 64 mm/105 mm HEAT warhead for defeating modern armored vehicles equipped with reactive armor blocks. The first warhead (64 mm HEAT) detonates the reactive armor block prematurely and the second warhead (105 mm HEAT) passes through the gap to hit the exposed armor underneath.[citation needed] :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
TBG-7V Tanin [c.1988] 105 mm Thermobaric warhead for anti-personnel and urban warfare.[citation needed] :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
OG-7V [c.1999] 40 mm Fragmentation warhead for anti-personnel warfare. Has no sustainer motor.[citation needed] :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
PG-7V [c.1961] Baseline 85 mm HEAT warhead capable of penetrating 260 mm RHA. :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
PG-7VM [c.1969] Improved 70 mm HEAT warhead capable of penetrating 300 mm RHA. :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
PG-7VS [c.1972] Improved 73 mm HEAT warhead capable of penetrating 400 mm RHA. :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
PG-7VS1 [c.mid-1970s] Cheaper PG-7VS version capable of penetrating 360 mm RHA. :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
GSh-7VT [c.2013] Anti-bunker warhead with cylindrical follow-through blast-fragmentation munition followed by explosively formed penetrator. :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month

*start of wip*

Precision Shoulder-Fired Rocket Launcher-1 (PSRL-1) -200,000 with 4,000 per month

ammo included they can use (along with other rpg ammo) -

Other than all types of Soviet RPG-7 compatible rockets, Airtronic developed AirTronic Shoulder-Fired Rocket Ammunition as a modernized RPG-7 rocket type of shoulder-fired ammunition. All ammunition is manufactured in the United States and the Intellectual Property is fully owned by the company. The ammunition is recommended for use in AirTronic rocket launchers such as the PSRL and GS-777 in order to achieve the highest level of performance. The legacy external configuration of the RPG rocket has been maintained such that AirTronic ammunition is backwards compatible with existing RPG-7 type launchers.

While the external configuration of the legacy RPG rocket has been maintained, improvements have been made focusing on the fuzing, reliability, robustness, and manufacturing quality per US Department of Defense standards. The warhead fuze features a dual safe and arm arrangement for improved handling safety. Also, the rocket motor ignitor fuze has been redesigned to improve motor ignition reliability.

Inert training variants are also available which match the ballistics of the live ammunition. This allows for safe training at a reduced cost. Training variants inert warheads are filled with marking compound so that the impact of the round can be observed.

There are three variants of this ammunition:

SR-H1 is suitable for PSRLs + RPG-7s. It is a 3.82 kg 93 mm high-explosive anti-tank (HEAT) warhead that is able to penetrate 500 mm rolled homogeneous armour (RHA) and has tracer ability. Its effective range is at 500 m, while maximum range can reach up to 800 m. The fire rate is between 4 to 6 rounds per minute. :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
SR-T1 is suitable for PSRLs + RPG-7s. It is a 3.82 kg 93 mm Inert warhead that can't penetrate armor because its for training only but has tracer ability. Its effective range is at 500 m, while maximum range can reach up to 800 m. The fire rate is between 4 to 6 rpm. :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
SR-T2 is suitable for PSRLs + RPG-7s. It is a 2.12 kg 70 mm Inert warhead that can't penetrate armor because its for training only but has tracer ability. Its effective range is at 800 m, while maximum range can reach up to 1,200 m. The fire rate is between 4 to 6 rpm. :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month

*end of wip*

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RPG-2
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RPG-1

FGM-148 Javelin saries:

reusable Command Launch Unit (in addition to the Launch Tube Assembly) more commonly referred to as a CLU (pronounced "clue") : 10,000

FGM-148F -100,000 with 1,000 per month
(others im trying to locate)

AT4 (also AT-4) saries:

M136 AT4
American version with modified launch tube bumpers, sights and slings. :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
AT8 (Bunker-Busting)
A version of the AT4 where the standard HEAT projectile is replaced with the bunker-busting warhead developed for the SMAW. No orders were ever placed. :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
AT12-T
In the early 1990s, there were tests of a tandem charge 120-mm version (Bofors AT 12-T) that would be able to penetrate the front armour of any modern main battle tank. However, the project was cancelled due to the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the subsequent cuts in Western defence budgets. :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
AT4-CS :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month

Ammo for the at-4:

HEAT (High Explosive Anti-Tank)
The HEAT projectile can penetrate up to 420 mm (16.5 inches) of RHA with beyond-armour effect. :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
HEDP 502 (High Explosive Dual Purpose)
For use against bunkers, buildings, enemy personnel in the open and light armour. The projectile can be set to detonate on impact or with a slightly delayed detonation. The heavier nose cap allows for the HEDP projectile to either penetrate light walls or windows and then explode, or be "skipped" off the ground for an airburst. For use against light armour, there is a smaller cone HEAT warhead with 150 mm (5.9 inches) of penetration against RHA. :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
HP (High Penetration)
Extra high penetration ability (up to 500 mm to 600 mm (19.7 inches to 23.6 inches) of RHA.) :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
AST (Anti Structure Tandem-warheads)
Designed for urban warfare where a projectile heavier than the HEDP AT4 is needed. This projectile combines a HEAT warhead with a shallow cone, which results in low penetration but produces a wide hole, with a follow-through high-blast warhead. It has two settings: one for destroying bunkers and one for mouse-holing a building wall for combat entry. :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
ER (Extended Range)
Anti-armor version with HEAT warhead that extends range from 300 m to 600 m. :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
HE (High Explosive)
High explosive anti-personnel weapon that can be set for impact or airburst detonation, with an effective range of up to 1,000 m. :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month

M72 LAW (Light Anti-Tank Weapon, also referred to as the Light Anti-Armor Weapon or LAW as well as LAWS: Light Anti-Armor Weapons System) saries:

M72 66-mm Talley single-shot disposable rocket launcher; pre-loaded with HEAT rocket M72 :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
M72A1 Improved rocket motor M72A1 :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
M72A2 Improved rocket motor, higher penetration M72A2 :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
M72A3 M72A2 variant; safety upgrades M72A3 :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
M72A4 Rocket optimized for high penetration; uses improved launcher assembly M72A4 :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
M72A5 M72A3 variant; uses improved launcher assembly M72A5 :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
M72A6 Warhead modified for lower penetration but increased blast effect; uses improved launcher assembly :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month M72A6
M72A7 M72A6 variant, insensitive-explosive (PBXN-9) version for US Navy M72A7 :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
M72A7 Graze[29] A7 variant with super-sensitive Graze fuze, restricted from training use (combat-only) M72A7 w/ Graze :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
M72A9 Blast-optimized HE warhead, DPX-6 explosive :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
M72E8 M72A7 variant; Fire-From-Enclosure (FFE) capable rocket motor; uses improved launcher assembly :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
M72E9 M72 variant; rocket with improved anti-armor capability; uses improved launcher assembly :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
M72E10 M72 variant; HE-Frag rocket; uses improved launcher assembly :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
M72E11[30] Airburst M72 :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
M72 EC Enhanced Capacity, increased anti-armor performance. 315grams PBXW-11 explosive :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
M72 ASM RC Reduced-caliber 45mm anti-structure rocket, 0.4 kg DPX-6 explosive :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
M247 2.75" rocket warhead using M72A2 warhead components, 2.0 lb Composition B explosive M247 :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
HAR-66 Turkish variant, mix of A2 and A3 features :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
M72AS 21-mm reusable trainer M72AS :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
M190[32] 35mm training variant, fires M73 practice rocket M190 :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bazooka
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RL-83_Blindicide
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RPG-29
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RPG-22
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RPG-27
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RPG-26
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RPG-28
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RPG-32
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RPG-30
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MRO-A
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RPG-27#RMG_variant
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RPG-26
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RPG-18
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RPG-16
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RPG-75
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RPG-76_Komar

recoiless rifles:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M67_recoilless_rifle
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Gustaf_8.4cm_recoilless_rifle

SPG-82 (transliterated Russian: Stankovyi Protivotankovyi Granatomet - heavy antitank grenade launcher) -100,000 with 1,000 per month

ammo:

Round
name Warhead
name Type Weight Warhead
weight Length Armour
penetration
PG-82 GK-662 HEAT 4.4 kg 0.69 kg 694 mm 230 mm to 175 mm :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
OG-82 GO-662 HE-FRAG 4.7 kg 0.41 kg 626 mm N/A :100,000,000 with 5,000 per month

rifle grenade launchers:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M7_grenade_launcher

semiautomatic pistols:

TT-33

TT-30: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
TT-33: 1,000,000 with 4,000 per month
Type 54 (simplified Chinese: 54式手枪; traditional Chinese: 54式手槍): 100,000 with 2,000 per month
Type 51: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
M20: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
TU-90: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
Model 213 pistols: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
Zastava M57: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
Zastava M57A: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
Zastava M70: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
M70A (9mm version of the M57A): 100,000 with 2,000 per month
Zastava M88: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
M88A: 100,000 with 2,000 per month

Makarov pistol or PM (Russian: Пистоле́т Мака́рова, tr. Pistolét Makárova, IPA: [pʲɪstɐˈlʲet mɐˈkarəvə], lit. 'Makarov's Pistol'):

Makarov pistol or PM (Russian: Пистоле́т Мака́рова, tr. Pistolét Makárova, IPA: [pʲɪstɐˈlʲet mɐˈkarəvə], lit. 'Makarov's Pistol'): 100,000 with 2,000 per month
PMM (Pistolet Makarova Modernizirovannyy or Modernised Makarov pistol): 100,000 with 2,000 per month
TKB-023: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
Baikal-442: 100,000 with 2,000 per month

Korovin pistol (Пистолет Коровина, Тульский Коровин (ТК), GAU Index 56-A-112) -50,000 with 1,000 per month

Beretta M9—officially the Pistol, Semiautomatic, 9mm, M9 saries:

Beretta M9—officially the Pistol, Semiautomatic, 9mm, M9: 100,000 with 500 per month
M9A1:100,000 with 500 per month
M9A2: 100,000 with 500 per month
M9A3: 100,000 with 500 per month
M9 22LR: 100,000 with 500 per month

SIG Sauer M17 -100,000 with 500 per month
SIG Sauer M18 -100,000 with 500 per month

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M1911_pistol

Beretta 92 saries:

Beretta 92: 200,000 with 1,000 per month
Beretta 92s: 200,000 with 1,000 per month
Beretta 92SB: 200,000 with 1,000 per month
Beretta 92SB Compact: 200,000 with 1,000 per month
Beretta 92SB-F: 200,000 with 1,000 per month
Beretta 92FS: 200,000 with 1,000 per month

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Springfield_Armory_XD
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MP-443_Grach
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GSh-18
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SR-1_Vektor

revolvers:

MP-412 REX (Revolver for Export; Russian: MP-412 РЕКС) : 200,000 initial with 5,000 per month

Smith & Wesson Model 10, previously known as the Smith & Wesson .38 Hand Ejector Model of 1899, the Smith & Wesson Military & Police or the Smith & Wesson Victory Model saries:

Smith & Wesson Model 10: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
Smith & Wesson .38 Hand Ejector Model of 1899 : 100,000 with 2,000 per month
Smith & Wesson Military & Police or the Smith & Wesson Victory Model: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
10 1957 Introduction: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
10-1 1959 Heavy barrel introduced: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
10-2 1961 Change extractor rod thread for standard barrel: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
10-3 1961 Change extractor rod thread for heavy barrel, change front sight width from 1/10" to 1/8": 100,000 with 2,000 per month
10-4 1962 Eliminate trigger-guard screw on standard barrel frame: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
10-5 1962 Change sight width from 1/10" to 1/8" on standard barrel: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
10-6 1962 Eliminate trigger-guard screw on heavy-barrel frame: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
10-7 1977 Change gas ring from yoke to cylinder for standard barrel: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
10-8 1977 Change gas ring from yoke to cylinder for heavy barrel: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
10-9 1988 Replace yoke retention system, radius stud package, floating hand hammer nose bushing for standard barrel: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
10-10 1988 Replace yoke retention system, radius stud package, floating hand hammer nose bushing for heavy barrel: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
10-11 1997 MIM hammer/trigger and floating firing pin for standard barrel and HB heavy barrel Model M10 Park police model. : 100,000 with 2,000 per month
10-12 1997 MIM hammer/trigger + floating firing pin for heavy barrel: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
10-13 2002 Limited production 1899 commemorative edition: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
10-14 2002 Internal lock added: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
10-14 2010 Discontinued: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
10-14 2012 Reintroduced as part of the Classic Line: 100,000 with 2,000 per month

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smith_%26_Wesson_Model_64
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smith_%26_Wesson_Model_22
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smith_%26_Wesson_Triple_Lock
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smith_%26_Wesson_.38/44
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smith_%26_Wesson_Model_13
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smith_%26_Wesson_Model_19
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smith_%26_Wesson_Model_27
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruger_SP101
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smith_%26_Wesson_Model_15
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smith_%26_Wesson_Bodyguard
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smith_%26_Wesson_Model_36
Rock Island Armory M206 Revolver -1,000,000 with 5,000 per month
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colt_Official_Police
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colt_New_Service
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smith_%26_Wesson_Model_1905

submachine guns

PPSh-41 (Russian: Пистоле́т-пулемёт Шпа́гина, tr. Pistolét-pulemyót Shpágina, lit. 'Shpagin's machine pistol') line:

PPSh-41 (Russian: Пистоле́т-пулемёт Шпа́гина, tr. Pistolét-pulemyót Shpágina, lit. 'Shpagin's machine pistol'): 100,000 with 2,000 per month

Type 50: A Chinese-made version of the PPSh-41. Unlike its Soviet counterpart, it only accepts column-type box magazines. Although new reports have suggested that due to various drum magazine dimensions used, some can be used while others cannot be used at all. :100,000 with 2,000 per month

PPD (Pistolet-Pulemyot Degtyaryova, Russian: Пистолет-пулемёт Дегтярёва, Degtyaryov machine pistol) saries:

PPD-34: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
PPD-34/38: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
PPD-40: 100,000 with 2,000 per month

PPS (Russian: ППС – "Пистолет-пулемёт Судаева" or "Pistolet-pulemyot Sudayeva", in English: "Sudayev's submachine-gun") line:

PPS-42 (Russian: Пистолет-пулемёт Судаева—ППС or Pistolet Pulemyot Sudayeva model of 1942): 400,000 with 2,000 per month
PPS-43: 400,000 with 4,000 per month
Type 54: 400,000 with 4,000 per month

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PP-19_Bizon
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PP-19_Vityaz
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PP-90

Borz submachine gun - 200,000 with 5,000 per month

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thompson_submachine_gun

M50 Reising saries:

Model 50 -100,000 initial with 1,000 per month
folding stock Model 55 -100,000 initial with 1,000 per month
semiautomatic Model 60 rifle -100,000 initial with 1,000 per month

United Defense M42 (sometimes known as the Marlin) -100,000 initial with 1,000 per month

Škorpion vz. 61 machine pistol:

vz. 64 in .380 ACP (9×17mm Short) - 200,000 with 5,000 per month
vz. 65 in 9×18mm Makarov - 200,000 with 5,000 per month
vz. 68 in 9×19mm Parabellum - 200,000 with 5,000 per month

In the 1990s Česká zbrojovka offered the following submachine guns:

vz. 61 E (.32 ACP version with a plastic pistol grip), the vz. 82 (chambered in 9×18mm Makarov and featuring a 113 mm barrel) - 200,000 with 5,000 per month
vz. 83 (for the .380 ACP cartridge). A semi-automatic only variant known as the CZ-91S was developed for the civilian market, available in the aforementioned calibers. - 200,000 with 5,000 per month
vz. 82 - 200,000 with 5,000 per month
vz. 83 - 200,000 with 5,000 per month
CZ-91S pistols chambered in 9 mm use straight box magazines. - 200,000 with 5,000 per month

M84 "ŠKORPION" (М84 "ШКОРПИОН"), licensed and produced by Yugoslavia between 1984 and 1992, then Serbia. - 200,000 with 5,000 per month

22LR conversion kit is also sold commercially. - 200,000 with 5,000 per month

Smith & Wesson M76 submachine gun (SMG) saries:

Smith & Wesson M76 submachine gun (SMG) - 100,000 initial with 1,000 per month

MK760
In 1983, Mike Ruplinger and Kenneth Dominick started a company called MK Arms and acquired the rights to the Smith & Wesson M76. They began producing copies of it with the designation MK Arms MK760, and the US Navy, which still had some original M76s in its inventory, began purchasing replacement parts from MK Arms. MK Arms also produced carbine and pistol configurations of the MK760. In 1986, due to the Firearm Owners Protection Act, which banned any newly manufactured automatic weapons from being registered for civilian ownership, MK Arms went out of business. - 100,000 initial with 1,000 per month

M76A1
In 1984, Dominick separated from Ruplinger and began producing his own copy of the M76 under the trade name Global Arms with a designation of M76A1. - 100,000 initial with 1,000 per month

SW 76
The SW 76 was manufactured by JMB Distribution in Ohio from virgin tubes that were originally registered by John Stemple in 1986. All of the parts of the SW 76 will interchange with an original Smith & Wesson M76 except for the bolt. The bolt is not interchangeable due to the reorientation of the extractor and the Stemple receiver tubes have an inside diameter that is slightly larger than that of an original S&W M76, requiring two sleeves that act as bearing surfaces to be placed on the bolt to take up the extra space inside the receiver. - 100,000 initial with 1,000 per month

Omega 760 Carbine
During 2001 the Tactical Weapons Company of Arizona was engaged to manufacture the parts and receivers for a weapon that would be marketed as the Omega 760 carbine, a semiautomatic-only copy of the Smith & Wesson Model 76. Initial sales of the Omega 760 were brisk but quickly dropped off. The disappointing sales of the Omega ultimately drove the decision to cease production and the decision left a number of parts that were never assembled into guns. - 100,000 initial with 1,000 per month

machine guns:

NSVS-12.7 (Russian > Nikitina-Sokolova-Volkova Stankovy 12.7 = "NSV-designed mounted 12.7mm machinegun"): Used on tripod mount. 200,000 with 1,000 per month

Kord-12.7 mm heavy machine gun saries:

6P50: Basic infantry version. -200,000 with 1,000 per month
6P50-1 (6P57): 6T19 Bipod-mounted infantry version. Bipod provides ±15° range of traverse. -200,000 with 1,000 per month6P50-2 (6P58): Infantry variant. -200,000 with 1,000 per month
6P50-3 (6P59): Infantry version on a 6U16 multipurpose mount. Casing ejection is to the right side. -200,000 with 1,000 per month

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kord_machine_gun
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KPV_heavy_machine_gun
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ZPU

DS-39 (Russian: Дегтярёва Станковый образца 1939 года, romanized: Degtyaryova Stankovyy obraztsa 1939 goda) - 100,000 inital with 1,000 per month

light machine guns:

RPK (Ruchnoy Pulemyot Kalashnikova, Russian: РПК Ручной пулемёт Калашникова or "Kalashnikov hand-held machine gun") saries:

RPK (Ruchnoy Pulemyot Kalashnikova, Russian: РПК Ручной пулемёт Калашникова or "Kalashnikov hand-held machine gun") -200,000 with 2,000 per month
RPKS ("S" — Skladnoy (Russian: складной) means "folding" [stock]) -200,000 with 2,000 per month
RPK-74 -200,000 with 2,000 per month
RPKS-74 -200,000 with 2,000 per month
RPK-74M (Modefitsyrovannyj "Modernized") -200,000 with 2,000 per month
RPK-201 -200,000 with 2,000 per month
RPKM (A.K.A. RPK-203) -200,000 with 2,000 per month
RPKN -200,000 with 2,000 per month
RPKSN -200,000 with 2,000 per month
RPK-74N -200,000 with 2,000 per month
RPKS-74N -200,000 with 2,000 per month
RPK-16 squad automatic weapon (the number 16 indicates the year 2016, when the development first started) -200,000 with 2,000 per month

Degtyaryov machine gun (Russian: Пулемёт Дегтярёвa Пехотный, romanized: Pulemyot Degtyaryova Pekhotny literally: "Degtyaryov's infantry machine gun") or DP-27 saries

Degtyaryov machine gun (Russian: Пулемёт Дегтярёвa Пехотный, romanized: Pulemyot Degtyaryova Pekhotny literally: "Degtyaryov's infantry machine gun") or DP-27 - 200,000 with 4,000 per month
DPM - 200,000 with 4,000 per month
Type 53 - 200,000 with 4,000 per month
RP-46 (Ротный пулемет - company machine gun) - 200,000 with 4,000 per month
Type 58 - 200,000 with 4,000 per month
Type 64 - 200,000 with 4,000 per month

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M249_light_machine_gun
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M1919_Browning_machine_gun

M1917 Lewis. Savage produced a version of the Lewis Mk I for US forces, rechambered for the .30-06 round and with a modified gas operation due to the greater power of the US ammunition. A few of these were modified for aircraft use, when intended for non-synchronized emplacements on an airframe. The US Navy designation was Lewis Mark IV. - 200,000 with 2,000 per month

M1918 Lewis. A purpose built aircraft version of the M1917. (turret mounted) - 200,000 with 2,000 per month

M1941 Johnson machine gun - 200,000 with 2,000 per month

LSAT light machine gun 100,000 with 1,000 per month

general purpose machine guns

PK (Russian: Пулемёт Калашникова, transliterated as Pulemyot Kalashnikova, or "Kalashnikov's machine gun") saries:

PK (Russian: Пулемёт Калашникова, transliterated as Pulemyot Kalashnikova, or "Kalashnikov's machine gun") - 200,000 with 4,000 per month

PKS ("PK Mounted") - 200,000 with 4,000 per month

PKM (ПК Модернизированный: "Kalashnikov's Machine-gun Modernized") - 100,000 with 1,000 per month

PKMN (ПКМ Ночной: "PKM Night-Vision") - 100,000 with 1,000 per month

PKMS (ПКМ Станковый: "PKM Mounted") - 100,000 with 1,000 per month

PKMSN (ПКМС Ночной: "PKMS Night-Vision") - 100,000 with 1,000 per month

PKB - 100,000 with 1,000 per month

PKBM - 100,000 with 1,000 per month

PKM-NATO - 100,000 with 1,000 per month

UKM-2000 - 100,000 with 1,000 per month

Type 80 (Chinese: 80式通用机枪) - 100,000 with 1,000 per month

CF06 - 100,000 with 1,000 per month

(references: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PK_machine_gun) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type_80_machine_gun) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UKM-2000)

PKP Pecheneg (Pulemyot Kalashnikova Pekhotny "Pecheneg", Russian: Печенег) saries:

PKP Pecheneg: is a further modernisation of the PK machine gun, chambered for the 7.62×54mmR cartridge. It has been adopted by the Russian armed forces, Russian Ministry of Interior and other military agencies around the world. - 100,000 with 1,000 per month

PKP Pecheneg-N: is similar to the PKP Pecheneg but features a mounting rail for night vision sights. - 100,000 with 1,000 per month

Pecheneg-SP: is an improved variant of the PKP Pecheneg, its GRAU index is "6P69". It has two main versions; a standard version and a special forces version. Titanium is now used for its construction. It was also reported that it now features a Picatinny rail for mounting the 1P89-3 unified optical sight and other optical sights, a telescopic folding stock and at the request of the Russian military, an additional tactical handle for convenience when firing. According to the manufacturers, during transportation the gun can be folded, making it 30 mm (3 cm) shorter than the regular Kalashnikov rifle. It uses a shortened barrel and a suppressor for noiseless and flameless fire. Its serial production started in February 2017. - 100,000 with 1,000 per month

Pecheneg bullpup: is a bullpup conversion of the PKP Pecheneg developed by the Degtyarev plant. - 100,000 with 1,000 per month

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M60_machine_gun

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M240_machine_gun

heavy:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mk_19_grenade_launcher
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mk_47_Striker
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AGS-17
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AGS-30
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AGS-40_Balkan
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XM174_grenade_launcher
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mk_18_Mod_0_grenade_launcher

lighter:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XM148_grenade_launcher
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M203_grenade_launcher
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M320_Grenade_Launcher_Module
Launcher, Grenade, 40 mm, M79 -100,000 with 1,000 per month

(ammo here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M79_grenade_launcher)

T148E1 grenade launcher -100,000 with 1,000 per month (ammo- 40mm High Explosive, 3 round magazine : 100,000,000 inital with 10,000 per month)

China Lake Model (or China Lake pump-action grenade launcher) pump-action grenade launcher -100,000 with 500 per month

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milkor_MGL
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GM-94
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EX_41_grenade_launcher

anti tank guns

100 mm field gun M1944 (BS-3) (Russian: 100-мм полевая пушка обр. 1944 г. (БС-3)) anti tank gun - 2,000 with 100 per month

2A19 or T-12 anti tank gun - 2,000 with 100 per month

(for ammo: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D-10_tank_gun)

85-mm antitank gun D-48 (Russian: 85-мм противотанковая пушка Д-48) - 2,000 with 100 per month

2A45 and 2A45M are the respective GRAU designations of the Sprut-A and Sprut-B (Russian for octopus or kraken[1]) saries:

2A45 Sprut-A (Russian for octopus or kraken) -1,000 with 100 per month
2A45M Sprut-B (Russian for octopus or kraken) -1,000 with 100 per month

85-mm divisional gun D-44 (Russian: 85-мм дивизионная пушка Д-44): 2,000 with 100 per month
Type 56 variant: 2,000 with 100 per month
SD-44: 2,000 with 100 per month
D-44N: 2,000 with 100 per month
D-44M: 2,000 with 100 per month
D-44MN: 2,000 with 100 per month

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/76_mm_divisional_gun_M1942_(ZiS-3)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/57_mm_anti-tank_gun_M1943_(ZiS-2)

flamethowers:

M2 flamethrower saries:

M2 :50,000 with 500 per month
M2-2 (M2 for the tank groups and -2 for the wand type.) :50,000 with 500 per month
M2A1-2 :50,000 with 500 per month
M2A1-7 :50,000 with 500 per month
M9A1-7 :50,000 with 500 per month

M202 FLASH (FLame Assault SHoulder) saries:

M202 FLASH (FLame Assault SHoulder): 50,000 with 500 per month
M202A1: 50,000 with 500 per month

ROKS flamethrower saries:

ROKS-2 :50,000 with 500 per month
ROKS-3 :50,000 with 500 per month

LPO-50 (Lyogkiy Pyekhotnyy Ognyemyot (Легкий Пехотный Огнемет), "Light Infantry Flamethrower") :50,000 with 500 per month

M1 flamethrower:

M1:50,000 with 500 per month
M1A1 :50,000 with 500 per month

RPO "Rys" [1][2][3] (Russian: реактивный пехотный огнемёт «Рысь» (РПО «Рысь»), Rocket-propelled Infantry Flamethrower "Lynx") (single shot): 100,000,000 with 2,000 per month

RPO-A Shmel[4][5] (Russian: реактивный пехотный огнемёт-А Шмель (РПО-А Шмель), Rocket-propelled Infantry Flamethrower-A Bumblebee) line:

RPO-A: 100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
RPO-Z: 100,000,000 with 5,000 per month
RPO-D: 100,000,000 with 5,000 per month

machine guns:

M1917 Browning machine gun saries

M1917: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
M1917A1: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
M1918: 100,000 with 2,000 per month
M1918M1: 100,000 with 2,000 per month

Browning Machine Gun, Cal. .50, M2 line:

Browning Machine Gun, Cal. .50, M2 -2,000,000 initial with 2,000 per month
(M2A1) M2A1 heavy machine gun- 500,000 with 1,000 per month

XM806 Lightweight .50 Caliber Machine Gun (LW50MG) -500,000 with 500 per month

XM307 Advanced Crew Served Weapon (ACSW)/XM307 Advanced Crew Served Weapon (ACSW) -500,000 with 500 per month

misc rifles:

AVS-36 (from Avtomaticheskaya Vintovka Simonova 1936 model; Russian: Автоматическая винтовка Симонова образца 1936 года (АВС-36)) - 100,000 with 1,000 per month

SKS-45, is an initialism for Samozaryadny Karabin sistemy Simonova, 1945 (Russian: Самозарядный карабин системы Симонова, 1945; Self-loading Carbine of (the) Simonov system, 1945) saries:

sks rifles:

SKS-45, is an initialism for Samozaryadny Karabin sistemy Simonova, 1945 (Russian: Самозарядный карабин системы Симонова, 1945; Self-loading Carbine of (the) Simonov system, 1945) : 100,000 initial with 2,000 per month

Variations (1949–1958):

Early Spike-style bayonet (1949) : 100,000 initial with 2,000 per month

blade-style bayonet: 100,000 initial with 2,000 per month

*Spring-return firing pin was present on early models, and they did not have chrome bores (1949 – early 1951). The gas block had three changes: *

The first production stage gas block, used from 1949 through early 1950, was squared-off at a 90-degree angle. : 100,000 initial with 2,000 per month

The second gas block production stage was instead cut at a 45-degree angle, seen on late 1950 to 1951 rifles. : 100,000 initial with 2,000 per month

The third and final gas block stage, from 1952 through to 1956, was curved inward slightly toward the action. : 100,000 initial with 2,000 per month

Honor Guard: All-chrome metal parts, with a lighter-colored wood stock. : 100,000 initial with 2,000 per month

OP-SKS. Many military surplus Soviet SKS were converted into hunting rifles by the Molot ("Hammer") factory in Vyatskiye Polyany (Russian: Вятско-Полянский машиностроительный завод «Молот», English: Vyatskiye Polyany Machine-Building Plant). These were labeled OP (OP = охотничье-промысловый > okhotnich'ye-promyslovyy > "commercial hunting (carbine)"). The OP-SKS continued to be manufactured into the 2000s. : 200,000 initial with 4,000 per month

Type 56 (1956–today): Numerous minor tweaks, including lack of milling on the bolt carrier, partially or fully stamped (as opposed to milled) receivers, and differing types of thumb rest on the take down lever. The Chinese continually revised the SKS manufacturing process, so variation can be seen even between two examples from the same factory. All of the Type 56 carbine rifles have been removed from military service, except a few being used for ceremonial purposes and by local Chinese Militias. Type 56 carbines with serial numbers below 9,000,000 have the Russian-style blade-type folding bayonet, while those 9,000,000 and higher have a "spike" type folding bayonet. Some early examples are known as "Sino-Soviet", meaning they were produced by China, but with cooperation from Russian "advisers" who helped regulate the factories and provided the design specifications and perhaps even Soviet-manufactured parts.[22] Bangladesh Ordnance Factories produced Type 56 under license till 2006.[5] : 1,000,000 initial with 5,000 per month

Experimental stamped receiver:

(Very rare. A small number of Type 56 SKS rifles were manufactured with experimental stamped sheet metal receivers as a cost and weight saving measure but did not enter large scale production. : 100,000 initial with 2,000 per month

Honor Guard: Mostly, but not all, chromed metal parts. Does not generally have the lighter-colored stock as the Soviet Honor Guard variant. : 100,000 initial with 2,000 per month

Type 63: 100,000 initial with 2,000 per month
type 68: 100,000 initial with 2,000 per month
type 73: 100,000 initial with 2,000 per month
type 81: 100,000 initial with 2,000 per month
type 84: 100,000 initial with 2,000 per month

these rifles shared features from several East-Bloc rifles (SKS, AK-47, Dragunov). AK-47 style rotary bolt and detachable magazine. The Type 68 featured a stamped sheet-steel receiver. The Type 81 is an upgraded Type 68 with a three-round burst capability, some of which (Type 81-1) have a folding stock. The Type 84 (known as an SKK) returns to semi-auto fire only, is modified to accept AK-47 magazines, and has a shorter 16" paratrooper barrel. However, Chinese Type 84s could not accept AK mags without some handfitting, and the mags were serialized. In addition, AK mags don’t work with the SKS bolt-hold-open system, so the Type 84 used a button on top of the bolt carrier to lock it into place. [23]

Commercial production: Blonde wood ("Chu wood"/"Qiu wood")[24] stock instead of dark wood, spike bayonet instead of blade, bayonet retaining bolt replaced with a rivet. -100,000 initial with 2,000 per month

*Sub-variants include the: *

M21 -100,000 initial with 2,000 per month
"Cowboy's Companion" -100,000 initial with 2,000 per month
Hunter -100,000 initial with 2,000 per month
Models D -100,000 initial with 2,000 per month
Models M -100,000 initial with 2,000 per month
Paratrooper -100,000 initial with 2,000 per month
Sharpshooter -100,000 initial with 2,000 per month
Sporter -100,000 initial with 2,000 per month

Model D rifles used military style stocks and had bayonet lugs (although some were imported eliminated bayonet, and some examples eliminated the lug in order to meet changing US import restrictions). -100,000 initial with 2,000 per month
Model M rifles had no bayonet lug and used either a thumb hole or Monte Carlo–style stock. Both Model D and M used AK-47 magazines and as a result had no bolt hold open feature on the rifle. -100,000 initial with 2,000 per month

end of wip*

Romanian M56: Produced between 1957 and 1960. Typically, they are identical or nearly identical to the late Soviet model. 100,000 initial with 2,000 per month

Zastava M59/66 PAP, also known as papovka100,000 initial with 2,000 per month

Yugoslavian PAP M59/66A1: Same as above, except with the addition of flip up phosphorus or tritium night sights.100,000 initial with 2,000 per month

Albanian "July 10 Rifle": Produced between 1967 and 1978. There were no rifles produced from 1972 to 1975. Produced by the UM GRAMSH factory located in Gramsh, Albania. Longer stock and handguard on the gas tube, and AK style charging handle. The magazine is slightly different in the shape visible from the outside. The stock has two compartments with two corresponding holes in the buttplate for cleaning implements instead of the single cleaning kit pocket. Like the Chinese Type 56 carbine, the Albanian version also features a spike bayonet fixed beneath the muzzle. 100,000 initial with 2,000 per month

East German Karabiner-S: Extremely rare. Slot cut into back of stock for pull-through sling, similar to the slot in a Karabiner 98k. No storage area in back of stock or storage for cleaning rod under barrel. 100,000 initial with 2,000 per month

PTRD-41 (Shortened from Russian, ProtivoTankovoye Ruzhyo Degtyaryova; Противотанковое однозарядное ружьё системы Дегтярёва образца 1941 года; "Degtyaryov Single Shot Anti-Tank Weapon System Model of 1941") Anti-tank rifle -200,000 with 5,000 per month

PTRS-41 or Simonov anti-tank rifle (Russian: ПротивоТанковое Ружьё Симонова) Anti-tank rifle - 100,000 with 2,500 per month

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M1_Garand
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M1941_Johnson_rifle

grenades:

Model_1914_grenade saries:

Model 1914 grenade (Ручная граната образца 1914 года > Ruchnaya granata obraztsa 1914 goda, "Hand Grenade Pattern of year 1914") -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month

M1914/30
The M1914/30 is a variant of the M1914 that uses TNT instead of Picric Acid. Otherwise, it is exactly the same as the M1914. -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month

M1917 Chemical
The M1917 is a modified and larger M1914 that expels chemical gas when it "detonates". The primary chemical agent in this grenade is 500g of Chloropicrin, which is an irritant.[3] The M1917 can be told apart from the M1914 because it is larger than the M1914 and has a skull and crossbones on it with the Russian word for chemical underneath the image. -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month

Fragmentation Sleeve
The M1914 has an optional fragmentation sleeve that turns the M1914 into a fragmentation grenade.[5] The sleeve's pattern was later used on the RGD-33 grenade's fragmentation sleeve. -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month

RGD-33 (Ручная Граната Дьяконова образца 33 года >Ruchnaya Granata Djakonova obraztsa 33 goda, "Hand Grenade, Dyakonov design, pattern year [19]33") -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month

F-1 grenade (Russia) -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month

Type 1 Grenade (F-1 grenade (Russia) chinese copy) -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month

RG-41 fragmentation grenade -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month

RG-42 (Ручная Граната образца 42 года > Ruchnaya Granata obraztsa 42 goda, "Hand Grenade pattern of [19]42 year")

RPG-40 -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month

RPG-43 (for ruchnaya protivotankovaya granata obraztca 1943 goda, meaning "hand-held anti-tank grenade") -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month

RPG-6 (Russian Ruchnaya Protivotankovaya Granata, "Handheld Anti-Tank Grenade") -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month

RGD-5 (Ruchnaya Granata Distantsionnaya, English "Hand Grenade Remote") saries

RGD-5 (Ruchnaya Granata Distantsionnaya, English "Hand Grenade Remote") -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
URG-N -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
Type-59 - Chinese built variant. -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
RGO-78 - Bulgarian 70's varint with DVM-78 fuse. Grenade weighed 450 grams and contained 85 grams charge of TNT. -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
RGN-86 - another Bulgarian modification with DVM-78 fuze. Weighed 265 grams and contained 57 grams charge of TNT. -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
RGO-88 - Polish variant with А-IX-1 filling (95% RDX and 5% Phlegmatized explosive). 60 grams of explosive mass. -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month

RGN hand grenade (Ruchnaya Granata Nastupatel'naya, "Hand Grenade Offensive") -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
RGO hand grenade (Ruchnaya Granata Oboronitel'naya, ("Hand Grenade Defensive") -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month

RKG-3 anti-tank grenade saries:

RKG-3 Penetration : 125 mm RHA. Gross Weight: 1.07 kg. (2.35 lbs.)-100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
RKG-3M (-Modernizirovannaya, "Improved") Model with liner changed from steel to copper. Penetration : 165 mm RHA. Gross Weight: 1.1 kg. (2.42 lbs.) Copies manufactured by East Germany (RKG-3Cu).-100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
RKG-3T Model with improved copper liner. Penetration: 170 mm RHA -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
RKG-3EM Model with larger warhead. Penetration: 220 mm RHA Gross Weight: 1.7 kg. (3.74 lbs.)-100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
UPG-8 (Uechebnaya Protivotankovaya Granata, "Training Anti-Tank Grenade"). Black body with white markings. The reusable warhead contains a reloadable black powder charge that mostly produces black smoke that is vented through holes in the heavy-gauge sheet-metal. A new fuze and parachute can be quickly reloaded in the handle after use by using special armorer tools. -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
M79 Copy of the RKG-3EM by Yugoimport SDPR. Copies are now manufactured by Serbia (M79) and Bosnia-Herzegovina (RKB-M79). Filling: 400g (0.88 lbs.) Hexolite, Penetration: 220 mm RHA, Gross Weight: 1.1 kg. (2.42 lbs.). -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month

Mk 2 grenade (initially known as the Mk II) saries:

Grenade, hand, fragmentation, Mk 2: EC powder filler, uses M10 series igniting fuse -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
Grenade, hand, fragmentation, high explosive, Mk 2: TNT, Trojan grenade powder, 50/50 amatol/nitrostarch, or Grenite filler, uses M5 series detonating fuse. In 1930, "high explosive" was dropped from the designation. -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
Grenade, hand, fragmentation, Mk 2A1: EC powder or TNT filler, uses M10/M11 series igniting fuse (EC powder) or M6 or M204 series detonating fuse (flaked TNT). Has no baseplug because it is filled through the fuse well. -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
Grenade, hand, practice, Mk 2: Black powder "spotting" charge in a cardboard tube connected to a M10 series igniting fuse. Has a standard body with a wooden or cork baseplug that pops out during detonation, creating a loud report and smoke to indicate ignition. The body could be reused and reloaded as long as it remained intact. -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
Grenade, hand, practice, M21: Black powder "spotting" charge, uses M10 series igniting fuse. Has a heavier body and no baseplug. Its body was embossed with the vertical letters R, D and X on the knobs in a column on one side (because it was originally designed to be for an HE grenade with a more powerful RDX filler). When detonated, it makes a loud report and smoke comes out of the fuse vents. -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month

M67 grenade saries:

M33 Fragmentation Grenade -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month

M68 Fragmentation Grenade -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month

M33A1 -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month

M59 Fragmentation Grenades -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month

M69 Practice Grenade -1,000,000 with 1,000 per month

M67 grenade -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month

M26 grenade saries:

M26 grenade -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
M26A1 -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
M26A2 -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
M30 -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
M61 -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
M62 -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
M50 -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
M56 -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
M57 -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month

armored vehicles:

Flame Thrower Tank M67 (also known as M67 "Zippo") saries:

M67: First version used in service. - 5,000 with 500 per month
M67A1: M48A2 Patton converted to use the Flamethrower Tank Turret M1. - 3,000 with 300 per month
M67A2: M48A3 Patton converted to use the Flamethrower Tank Turret M1. - 2,000 with 200 per month

page=dispatch/id=1503220

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T-72
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T-55AGM
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T-84

avre

M88 Recovery Vehicle saries:

M88 – 10,000 initial with 2,000 monthly
M88A1 – 5,000 initial with 2,000 monthly
M88A2 Hercules – 5,000 initial with 2,000 monthly
M88A3 Hercules – 5,000 initial with 2,000 monthly

M32 Tank Recovery Vehicle saries:

M32 – The original version, based on the M4 Sherman. 163 were produced by Pressed Steel Car in 1944. - 2000 inital with 200 per month
M32B1 – A M32 based on the M4A1. 1,085 were produced by Federal Machine, Baldwin Locomotive, and Pressed Steel Car.[17] Some were also shipped to Britain under Lend-Lease. It was named ARV Mark III by the British Army. - 2000 inital with 200 per month

M32B2 – A M32 based on the M4A2. 26 were produced by Lima Locomotive. - 2000 inital with 200 per month
M32B3 – A M32 based on the M4A3. 344 were produced by Lima Locomotive and Pressed Steel Car. - 2000 inital with 200 per month
M32B4 – A M32 based on the M4A4. Never entered production.[17] Had a Chrysler Multibank engine. - 2000 inital with 200 per month
M32A1 – A M32 with HVSS suspension. - 2000 inital with 200 per month
M32A1B1 – A M32B1 with HVSS suspension. 175 were converted by Baldwin Locomotive. - 2000 inital with 200 per month
M32A1B2 – A M32B2 with HVSS suspension. - 2000 inital with 200 per month
M32A1B3 – A M32B3 with HVSS suspension. - 2000 inital with 200 per month
M34 Prime Mover – M34 Prime Movers were simply M32B1 Recovery Vehicles without the towing cable and were just used for pulling towed artillery into place.[18] It was typically reserved for pulling heavy artillery, such as the 240 mm howitzer.[19] It lacked any armament and had four seats for crew. The vehicle also had tail lights, electric outlets for stopping of towed loads, and multiple stowage ports.[5] Production started in 1944 and ended in 1945. - 2000 inital with 200 per month

Additional equipment

T1E1 Mine Exploder "Earthworm" – This mine exploding equipment, which was meant to be used with the boom on the M32, was essentially the T1 mine exploder with slightly different trailing discs. Developed and produced in 1943. It saw limited use in the war. - 2000 inital with 200 per month

T2E1 Mine Exploder – This mine exploding equipment, which was meant to be used with the boom on the M32, was essentially the T2 mine exploder, but scaled up for use by the U.S. Marines. It was impractical, and the project was abandoned in October 1943. - 2000 inital with 200 per month

M74 tank recovery vehicle (M74) saries:

M74 tank recovery vehicle (M74): - 2000 inital with 200 per month

aircraft in phase 3:

page=dispatch/id=1504402

infantry fighting vehicles:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bradley_Fighting_Vehicle

apcs:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M113_armored_personnel_carrier
M59 armored personnel carrier -1,000 with 100 per month
M84 Mortar Carrier -200 with 50 per month
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M75_armored_personnel_carrier
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BTR-50
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BTR-152
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BTR-40
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MT-LB

M114 Command and Reconnaissance Carrier saries:

T114 Test versions developed in the period 1957-60 with a M40 recoilless rifle, culminating in the prototype of what became the T114 (BAT) - 1,000 with 100 per month
M114 Production version - 1,000 with 100 per month
M114A1 – new commander's weapon station allowing firing of the .50-cal machine gun from inside (manually powered cupola), reinforced trim vane - 1,000 with 100 per month
M114A2 – (1969, initially called M114A1E1) replaced main armament with a Hispano-Suiza HS.820 20 mm gun (designated M139 in U.S. service). Used a hydraulically powered cupola. - 1,000 with 100 per month
T114 (BAT) - Tank Destroyer variant equipped with an autoloading version of the M40 106mm BAT (Battalion Anti-Tank) recoilless rifle. Only procured in small numbers. Apparently did not enter full series production due to the overall failure of the M114 program. - 1,000 with 100 per month

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BTR-D
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurganets-25
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PTS_(vehicle)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BTR-3
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BTR-4
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BTR-7
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BTR-80
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BTR-90
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LAV-25
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BPM-97
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BTR-94
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SBA-60K2_Bulat
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VPK-7829_Bumerang
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BTR-90#Krymsk

half tracks (reserve):

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M3_half-track
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M2_half-track_car

90mm gun ammo:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/90_mm_gun_M1/M2/M3

shotgun ammo:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7-n4bxxn9gA (glass shotgun ammo)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MdqIeDUstlQ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6i9kpAvpunk

armor:

body armor of any type:

flak jacket / flak vest: 2,000,000 with 10,000 per month

Dragon Skin (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dragon_Skin): 1,000,000 initial with 5,000 per month

helmets:

M1 helmet -5,000,000 with 5,000 per month
M1C helmet -2,000,000 with 5,000 per month
PASGT helmet -2,000,000 with 5,000 per month

m-1917 helmets:

M1917: initially the United States purchased 400,000 British Mark I helmets to equip the American Expeditionary Forces in 1917, and those units which were to integrate with French formations were provided with Adrian helmets. The first US-made copies of the Mark I were supplied before the end of 1917 and some 2,700,000 had been made by the end of the war. The M1917 differed little from the British original; different rivets were used to secure the liner, the wire loop onto which the chinstrap was fixed was thicker and the rubber "doughnut" pad was not adopted. However, the US manufacturers were able to produce a shell with better ballistic protection than the original.[citation needed] -2,000,000 with 5,000 per month

M1917A1: a redesigned liner and a new webbing chinstrap were approved for service in 1934. This model went into full production in 1941, when 904,020 were produced. -2,000,000 with 5,000 per month

M1917 Civil Defense Helmet: this helmet was produced to equip the Civil Defense Corps at the start of the war, and differed from the standard helmet in having a simplified liner and thin webbing chinstrap. -2,000,000 with 5,000 per month

proposed armor:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personnel_Armor_System_for_Ground_Troops (vest)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interceptor_Body_Armor

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Improved_Outer_Tactical_Vest

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modular_Tactical_Vest

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scalable_Plate_Carrier

gas masks:

M40 field protective mask -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M17_gas_mask
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M50_joint_service_general_purpose_mask
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MCU-2/P_protective_mask
GP-5 gas mask kit (Russian: Гражда́нский Противога́з-5, tr. Grazhdanskiy Protivogaz-5) -200,000,000 with 10,000 per month (without asbestos filters)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GP-4u
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PMK_gas_mask

(maybe more as needed: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gas_mask)

possible put ins (future put ins):

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beehive_anti-personnel_round
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hollow-point_bullet
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Talon
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expanding_bullet
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydra-Shok
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frangible_bullet
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C-ration
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M101_howitzer
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M114_155_mm_howitzer
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2S1_Gvozdika
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meal,_Ready-to-Eat
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_chocolate_(United_States)#Logan_Bar_or_D_ration
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meal,_Combat,_Individual_ration
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B-ration
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A-ration
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K-ration
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/5-in-1_ration
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garrison_ration (check american)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Field_ration
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technical_(vehicle)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ram_pickup
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toyota_Hilux
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M110_howitzer
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M107_self-propelled_gun
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M108_howitzer
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M109_howitzer
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Otaman_6x6
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humvee
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willys_MB
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willys_M38A1
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willys_M38
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M422_Mighty_Mite
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M151_%C2%BC-ton_4%C3%974_utility_truck
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scud_missile
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cougar_(MRAP)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2K6_Luna
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2K1_Mars
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stryker
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell_Boeing_V-22_Osprey
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barrett_M82
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GP-25
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SVT-40
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MGM-31_Pershing
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M270_Multiple_Launch_Rocket_System
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BM-21_Grad
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MGM-140_ATACMS
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M142_HIMARS
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AS-44
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stoner_63
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knight%27s_Armament_Company_Masterkey
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M26_Modular_Accessory_Shotgun_System
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M84_stun_grenade
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AN-M8_smoke_grenade
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M18_smoke_grenade
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ciener_Ultimate_Over/Under

possable add-ons:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T-80
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T-90
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T-44
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T-10_tank
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IS_tank_family
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M103_(heavy_tank)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M47_Patton
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M46_Patton
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M26_Pershing
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M4_Sherman
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T-34
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M3_Lee
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M3_Stuart
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M24_Chaffee
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M41_Walker_Bulldog
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M551_Sheridan

more to put in:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spitzer_(bullet)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monolithic_bullet
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teflon-coated_bullet
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plastic_bullet
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubber_bullet
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dragon%27s_breath_(ammunition)
https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/marines-want-taser-bullet-30102
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/pork-laced-bullets-designed-to-send-muslims-straight-to-hell_n_3480150
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expanding_bullet
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soft-point_bullet
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BGM-71_TOW
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_AH-64_Apache
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS.10
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ENTAC
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SU-100
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/9M14_Malyutka
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M20_recoilless_rifle
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M18_recoilless_rifle
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M40_recoilless_rifle
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SPG-9
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B-10_recoilless_rifle
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B-11_recoilless_rifle
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PT-76
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type_59_tank
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ZU-23-2
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FN_P90
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heckler_&_Koch_MP5
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heckler_%26_Koch_UMP
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heckler_%26_Koch_MP7
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AN/PVS-4
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Night-vision_device
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stielhandgranate
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stechkin_automatic_pistol
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PB_(pistol)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FB_PM-63
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ASP_pistol

troop carriers:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BMP-1
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BMP-2
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BMP-3
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BMD-1
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BMD-2
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BTR-60

aircraft:

page=dispatch/id=1504399

troop corps:

page=dispatch/id=1498917

page=dispatch/id=1498918

page=dispatch/id=1498920

covert:

page=dispatch/id=1506308

offered as well:

200,000 death corp troopers:

page=dispatch/id=1252072

"ruckus units" of the death corp: 50,000

wip units:

references:

page=dispatch/id=1343653

home for it:

page=dispatch/id=1496043

notes from client:

Yes, please send everything listed on this to us. Once you do I am pleased to say that what you have provided us is sufficient.

2/15/21:

we have ceased all imports. the client was supplied enough to be good now.

Read dispatch

the following is being sold to them:

manpeds:

Block I FIM-43/XFIM-43A/XMIM-43A :5,000 (with 500 per month)
Block II FIM-43B/XFIM-43B/XMIM-43B – Fitted with a gas cooled seeker and improved warhead and fuse and modified launcher. :5,000 (with 500 per month)
XFEM-43B – Experimental missile, with data logging capability :5,000 (with 500 per month)
Block III FIM-43C/XFIM-43C – Production version; improved warhead and fuse section, and a new launcher.
XFEM-43C – Experimental missile, with data logging capability :5,000 (with 500 per month)
FIM-43D – Upgraded missile, with unknown capabilities. :5,000 (with 500 per month)

9K32 Strela-2 (Russian: Cтрела, "arrow"; NATO reporting name SA-7 Grail) :5,000 (with 500 per month)
9K32M Strela-2M: "SA-7b Grail" :5,000 (with 500 per month)

FIM-92A, Stinger Basic: The basic model. 2,000 (with 100 per month)
FIM-92B, Stinger POST: In this version, the infrared seeker head was replaced by a combined IR/UV seeker that utilized rosette scanning. This resulted in achieving significantly higher resistance to enemy countermeasures (flares) and natural disturbances. Production ran from 1981 to 1987; a total of 600 missiles were produced.[5] 2,000 (with 100 per month)
FIM-92C, Stinger RMP: The resistance to interference was increased again by adding more powerful digital computer components. Moreover, the software of the missile could now be reconfigured in a short time in order to respond quickly and efficiently to new types of countermeasures. Until 1991, some 20,000 units were produced for the U.S. Army alone.[5] 2,000 (with 100 per month)
FIM-92D: Various modifications were continued with this version in order to increase the resistance to interference.[5] 2,000 (with 100 per month)
FIM-92E: Stinger—RMP Block I: By adding a new rollover sensor and revised control software, the flight behavior was significantly improved. Additionally, the performance against small targets such as drones, cruise missiles and light reconnaissance helicopters was improved. The first deliveries began in 1995. Almost the entire stock of U.S. Stinger missiles was replaced by this version. 2,000 (with 100 per month)
FIM-92F: A further improvement of the E version and the current production version. 2,000 (with 100 per month)
FIM-92G: An unspecified upgrade for the D variant. 2,000 (with 100 per month)
FIM-92H: Indicates a D variant that has been upgraded to the E standard. 2,000 (with 100 per month)
Stinger—RMP Block II: This variant was a planned developed based on the E version. The improvements included an imaging infrared seeker head from the AIM-9X. With this modification, the detection distance and the resistance to jamming was to be greatly increased. Changes to the airframe would furthermore enable a significant increase in range. Although the missile reached the testing phase, the program was dropped in 2002 for budgetary reasons.[5] 2,000 (with 100 per month)
FIM-92J, Block 1 missile upgrade to replace aging components to extend service life an additional 10 years. Upgrades include a proximity fuse warhead section, equipped with a target detection device to increase effectiveness against unmanned aerial vehicles, a new flight motor and gas generator cartridge, as well as new designs for the o-rings and integral desiccant cartridge. 2,000 (with 100 per month)

9K34 Strela-3 (Russian: 9К34 «Стрела-3», 'arrow', NATO reporting name: SA-14 Gremlin) -5,000 (with 200 per month)

Shorts Blowpipe man-portable (MANPADS) surface-to-air missile -1,000,000 initial with 100,000 per month (1) read here for the situation why so many)

HN-5 (Chinese: 红缨-5; pinyin: Hóng Yīng-5; lit. 'Red Tassel-5') saries:

HN-5 -1,000,000 initial with 100,000 per month (1) read here for the situation why so many)
HN-5A :5,000 (with 500 per month)
HN-5B :5,000 (with 500 per month)
HQ-5C :5,000 (with 500 per month)
HN-5C (vehicle mounted) :5,000 (with 500 per month)

infantry rifles:

SABR (Selectable Assault Battle Rifle):

XM29 OICW (Objective Individual Combat Weapon) -1,000 with 100 per month

assault rifles:

ArmaLite AR-15 -10,000 (with 1,000 per month)
Colt ArmaLite AR-15 (Model 601) -10,000 (with 1,000 per month)
Colt ArmaLite AR-15 (Model 602) -10,000 (with 1,000 per month)
xm-16 assault rifle -30,000 (with 2,000 per month)
m-16 assault rifle -30,000 (with 2,000 per month)
m-16A1 assault rifle -30,000 (with 1,000 per month)
m-16A2 assault rifle -20,000 (with 1,000 per month)
m-16A3 assault rifle -5,000 (with 200 per month)
m-16A4 assault rifle -5,000 (with 500 per month)
m-16A5 assault rifle -5,000 (with 500 per month)

bolt action rifles:

Ishapore 2A -100,000 (with 5,000 per month)
Ishapore 2A1 -100,000 (with 5,000 per month)

M1917 Enfield, the "American Enfield", formally named "United States Rifle, cal .30, Model of 1917" (100,000 initial with 5,000 per month)

lever action rifles:

Winchester Model 1895 russian contract -100,000 (with 10,000 monthly) (2) read there to see why so many monthly)

Winchester Model 1894 (357 magnum) -100,000 initial with 5,000 monthly
Winchester Model 1892 (.44-40 Winchester) -100,000 initial with 5,000 monthly
Winchester Model 1886 (.45-70) -100,000 initial with 5,000 monthly

battle rifles:

ArmaLite AR-10 battle rifle (100,000 innital) with 1,000 monthly) 20-round detachable box magazine (10,000,000 magazines innital) with 100,000 monthly)

carbines

M4 carbine (10,000) (with 500 per month)
M4A1 carbine (8,000) (with 200 per month)
Colt Model 925 carbines -5,000 (with 100 per month)
Enhanced M4 (5,000) with 100 per month)
CAR-15 XM177 / CAR-15 Commando 20,000 (with 1,000 per month)
Close Quarter Battle Receiver (CQBR) 5,000 (with 100 per month)
Bushmaster M4 / M4A3 (.223 Remington) (10,000) (with 500 per month)
Bushmaster M4 / M4A3 (5.56×45mm NATO) (10,000) (with 500 per month)
Bushmaster M4 / M4A3 (6.8mm Remington SPC) (10,000) (with 500 per month)
Bushmaster M4 / M4A3 (7.62×39mm) (10,000) (with 500 per month)

shotguns
pump action shotguns

Stevens Model 520 (10,000) with 500 per month)
Stevens Model 620 (10,000) with 500 per month)
Winchester Model 1897 shotgun (10,000) with 200 per month)
Remington Model 10 (10,000) with 500 per month)
Remington Model 10A shotgun (10,000) with 500 per month)
Model 1200: Standard capacity model with four-shell tubular magazine (10,000) with 500 per month)
Model 1200 Defender: Increased capacity model with six-shell tubular magazine (Six 3" Shells or seven 2&3/4" Shells) (10,000) with 500 per month)
Model 1200 Police: Increased capacity variant of the Model 1200 Defender with an electrolysis nickel-plated satin barrel and magazine tube. (10,000) with 500 per month)
Model 1200 Marine: Increased capacity variant of the Model 1200 Defender with an electrolysis nickel-plated polished barrel and magazine tube. (10,000) with 500 per month)
Model 1200 Riot: Standard capacity model with 18.5" barrel and rifle sights. Blued steel barrel and magazine. Marked "Riot" on barrel. (10,000) with 500 per month)
Ted Williams Model 200: Standard Model 1200 marketed by Sears (10,000) with 500 per month)
Model 1200 Hunting: 28-inch barrel with a built-in choke and a five-shell tubular magazine. (10,000) with 500 per month)
Model 1300: Slightly updated version with up to six-shell tubular magazine (10,000) with 500 per month)
Model 1300 Defender: Increased capacity variants of the Model 1300 with a seven-shell tubular magazine. (10,000) with 500 per month)
Model 1300 Marine: Increased capacity variant of the Model 1300 with an electroless nickel-plated barrel and magazine tube. (10,000) with 500 per month)
Model 2200: Model 1200 with full length stock and barrel, produced for the Canadian firearms market. (10,000) with 500 per month)
Model 120: Budget hardwood stock version marketed at various department stores, such as K-Mart. Birch stock, fixed choke, etc. (10,000) with 500 per month)
Ranger Model 120: Budget hardwood stock version marketed at sporting goods stores, such as Cabelas & K-Mart. Plain stock, Winchoke, etc. (10,000) with 500 per month)
Winchester Model 1912 (also commonly known as the Model 12, or M12) (10,000) with 500 per month)

Bullets:

5.56×45mm NATO M193 10,000,000,000 (initial with 2 million monthly)
5.56×45mm NATO SS109/M855 10,000,000,000 (initial with 2 million monthly)
M855A1 Enhanced Performance Round (EPR) 10,000,000,000 (initial with 2 million monthly)
.223 Remington 10,000,000,000 (initial with 2 million monthly)

7.62×51mm NATO (official NATO nomenclature 7.62 NATO)

Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, ball, M59 (United States): 150.5-grain (9.8 g) 7.62×51mm NATO ball cartridge. A further development of the initial T65 cartridge. It has a long heavy bullet with a semi-armor-piercing iron or mild steel core and a gilded steel jacket. After the Vietnam War it was replaced by the M80 ball cartridge as the standard round. Data contained in TM 9-1005-298-12 mentions the approximate maximum range of 3,820-metre (4,180 yd) at 856.2-metre-per-second (2,809 ft/s) muzzle velocity.[33] (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, high pressure test, M60 (United States): 7.62×51mm NATO test cartridge. The cartridge is not for field issue, but is used for proof firing of weapons during manufacture, test, or repair. The cartridge is identified by a stannic-stained (silvered) case. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, armor piercing, M61 (United States): 150.5-grain (9.8 g) 7.62×51mm NATO armor-piercing round, black cartridge tip. Data contained in TM 9-1005-298-12 mentions an approximate maximum range of 3,820-metre (4,180 yd) at 854.6-metre-per-second (2,804 ft/s) muzzle velocity.[34] (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, tracer, M62 (United States): 142-grain (9.2 g) tracer cartridge, orange cartridge tip. Data contained in TM 9-1005-298-12 mentions an approximate maximum range of 2,340-metre (2,560 yd) at 856.2-metre-per-second (2,809 ft/s) muzzle velocity.[35] (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, dummy, M63 (United States): The cartridge is used for practice in loading 7.62mm weapons for simulated firing to detect flinching of personnel during firing and for inspecting and testing the weapon mechanism. The cartridge is identified by six longitudinal corrugations (flutings) on the cartridge case. There is no primer and no vent hole in the primer pocket. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, grenade, M64 (United States): 7.62×51mm NATO grenade launching blank. The cartridge is identified by a rose-petal (rosette-crimp) closure of the cartridge case mouth and sealed with red lacquer. The cartridge provides pressure upon functioning to project rifle grenade to a desired target when using a grenade projectile adapter and dragon missile launch effect trainer (LET). (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, ball, M80 (United States): 147-grain (9.5 g) 7.62×51mm NATO ball cartridge. The U.S. Army's Ballistic Research Laboratory measured a ballistic coefficient (G7 BC) of 0.200 and form factor (G7 i) of 1.105 for the M80 ball projectile.[36] Another source mentions a slightly higher ballistic coefficient (G7 BC) of 0.209.[37] Data contained in TM 9-1005-298-12 mentions the approximate maximum range of 3,930-metre (4,300 yd) at 856.2-metre-per-second (2,809 ft/s) muzzle velocity.[38] (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, ball, enhanced projectile round, M80A1 (United States): 130-grain (8.4 g)[39] M80 lead free (LF) 7.62×51mm NATO ball cartridge.[40] 114.5-grain (7.4 g) of lead eliminated per M80A1 projectile.[10] (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, blank, M82 (United States): 7.62×51mm NATO cartridge is used in rifles and machine guns equipped with blank firing attachments to simulate firing in training exercises and for saluting purposes. The cartridge is identified by its double tapered (bottle nose) neck and absence of a bullet. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, ball, silent, XM115 (United States): Little is known of this round, but it was an attempt to quiet the round. Never adopted. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, match, M118 (United States): 173-grain (11.2 g) 7.62×51mm NATO full metal jacket boat-tail round specifically designed for Match purposes. The round was introduced as the XM118 match in 1963 and was produced at both Frankford Arsenal and Lake City Army Ammunition Plant. It was standardized as M118 match in mid-1965. It used the same bullet as the .30-06 Springfield M72 match ball round, match-grade brass cartridges, and used fitted No. 43 primers. Production ceased at Frankford in 1965 but continued at Lake City until the early 1980s. Lake City used dedicated equipment to produce the ammo up until the mid-1970s and during that time the quality of the ammunition was quite good. When they ceased using dedicated machinery the quality of the ammo had a very noticeable decline.[41] (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, ball, special, M118 (United States): 173-grain (11.2 g) 7.62×51mm NATO full metal jacket boat-tail round specifically designed for match purposes. Produced by Lake City Army Ammunition Plant. This is an interim match round which utilized standard M80 ball brass cartridges with the 173-grain (11.2 g) full-metal jacketed ball boat-tailed (FMJBT) bullet and staked No. 34 or No. 36 primers. During this period in the early to late 1980s the performance of the round declined. Powder, primers, and brass were the same as standard ball rounds; bullets and powder charges varied in weight due to worn machinery and poor quality control. Since it could not be called "match" due to its erratic trajectory, it was renamed "special ball". Snipers used to test shoot batches of ammo, find a batch that shot well (or at least consistently), then zeroed their weapon to that batch and tried to procure as much of that ammo as possible.[41] (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)

Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, ball, special, M118LR (United States): 175-grain (11.3 g) 7.62×51mm NATO match-grade round specifically designed for long-range sniping. It uses a 175-grain (11.3 g) Sierra Match King hollow point boat-tail bullet. Produced at Lake City Army Ammunition Plant. The propellant's noticeable muzzle flash and temperature sensitivity led to the development of the MK 316 MOD 0 for special operations use. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, frangible, M160 (United States): 108.5-grain (7.0 g) 7.62×51mm NATO frangible bullet, upon striking a target, disintegrates, leaving a mark at the point of impact. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, dummy, M172 (United States): 7.62×51mm NATO cartridge is inert and is used to test the mechanism and metallic link belts of 7.62mm weapons. The cartridge is identified by a black oxide finish over the entire round and has no primer. There is no vent hole in the primer pocket. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, ball, overhead fire, XM178 (United States): 7.62×51mm NATO overhead fire application (OFA) cartridge using a solid turned gilding metal (GM) bullet. These were developed to make the OFA cartridges safer since there would be no small pieces of bullet that could separate and fall on the troops. Never adopted. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, tracer, overhead fire, XM179 (United States): 7.62×51mm NATO overhead fire application (OFA) cartridge using a solid, turned GM bullet. These were developed to make the OFA cartridges safer since there would be no small pieces of bullet that could separate and fall on the troops. XM179/XM180 difference is the amount of trace mixture. Never adopted. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, tracer, overhead fire, XM180 (United States): 7.62×51mm NATO overhead fire application (OFA) cartridge using a solid, turned GM bullet. These were developed to make the OFA cartridges safer since there would be no small pieces of bullet that could separate and fall on the troops. XM179/XM180 difference is the amount of trace mixture. Never adopted. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, blank, XM192 (United States): 7.62×51mm short-case rose-crimped blank. Never adopted. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, duplex, M198 (green tip) (United States): 7.62×51mm NATO duplex ball round with two 84-grain (5.4 g) bullets. The developmental designation was T314E3. It was meant to increase the M14's volume of fire by doubling the number of bullets it could fire per minute. Green cartridge tip. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, ball, low recoil, XM256 (United States): 7.62×51mm NATO single 82-grain (5.3 g) bullet from M198 round. Another attempt to control the M14 in full auto mode or for small stature troops. White cartridge tip. Never adopted. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, tracer, M276 (United States): 7.62×51mm NATO so-called "dim tracer" with reduced effect primarily for use with night vision devices, violet bullet tip. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, match, M852 (United States): 168-grain (10.9 g) 7.62×51mm NATO hollow-point boat-tail cartridge, specifically designed for use in national match competitions. It was dubbed "Mexican match" because it was based on the international match loading used at the Pan-Am Games in Mexico. It used standard brass, primer, and propellant, but used a match-grade bullet. It was later approved by U.S. Army JAG in the 1990s for combat use by snipers. It replaced the M118SB as the standard match round. The bullet was very accurate at around 300 meters (competition match ranges) but suffered at longer ranges. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, saboted light armor penetrator, M948 (United States): 7.62×51mm NATO saboted light armor penetrator cartridge. Adopted in limited quantities only by U.S. Army.[42] (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, saboted light armor penetrator tracer, M959 (United States): 7.62×51mm NATO saboted light armor penetrator cartridge with tracer element. Adopted in limited quantities only by U.S. Army.[42] (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, ball, training, M973 (United States): 7.62×51mm NATO SRTA ball training round. Has air brake to reduce the range the bullet will fly[43] (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, tracer, training, M974 (United States): 7.62×51mm NATO SRTA tracer training round. Has air brake to reduce the range the bullet will fly[43] (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, armor piercing, M993 (United States): 126.6 grains (8.2 g) 7.62×51mm NATO armor-piercing round, black cartridge tip. Can penetrate 18 mm of RHA at 100 meters.[44] (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm special ball, long range, MK 316 MOD 0 (United States): A 175-grain (11.3 g) round specifically designed for long-range sniping consisting of Sierra MatchKing hollow-point boat-tail projectiles, Federal Cartridge Company match cartridge cases and Gold Medal match primers. The propellant has been verified as IMR 4064 (per NSN 1305-01-567-6944 and Federal Cartridge Company Contract/Order Number N0016408DJN28 and has a charge weight per the specs of 41.745-grain (2.7 g).[45] (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Cartridge, caliber 7.62mm, NATO, ball, barrier, T762TNB1 MK319 MOD 0 (United States): 7.62×51mm NATO enhance behind barrier performance enhance function and casualty and muzzle flash requirements in short barrel carbines, 130 grains (8.4 g).[45] (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)

5.56x45mm nato magazines:

STANAG magazine
20-round detachable box magazine:
0.211 lb (96 g) empty / 0.738 lb (335 g) full (10,000,000 magazines) with 1,000,000 monthly)
30-round detachable box magazine:
0.257 lb (117 g) empty / 1.06 lb (480 g) full) (5,000,000 magazines) with 200,000 monthly)
Beta C-Mag 100-round double-lobed drum:
2.20 lb (1,000 g) empty / 4.81 lb (2,180 g) full) (2,000,000 magazines) with 80,000 monthly)

12 gage

Birdshot (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
#9 Shot (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
#8 1/2 Shot (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
#8 Shot (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
#7 1/2 Shot (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
#7 Shot (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
#6 Shot (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
#5 Shot (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
#5-6-7 Shot Mix (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
#4 Shot (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
#3 Shot (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
#2 Shot (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
#1 Shot (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
BB Shot: 12-Gauge Ammo Shot Patterns (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)

to be contuined:

https://www.wideners.com/blog/shotgun-load-types/

30-06 ammo types:

Armor-piercing, M1917: The M1917 was the first service-issue armor-piercing rifle ammunition used by the US Army. It had a steel core in a lead envelope with a partial cupro-nickel jacket which had an exposed soft tip. The exposed tip was designed to aid in the envelope peeling away on impact to allow the core to strike the target. It had the unintended effect of making the thin lead envelope an expanding bullet. Since expanding bullets were seen as violating the Hague Convention it did not see service in World War I. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Armor-piercing, M1918: The M1918 was similar to the armor-piercing M1917 round except it had a smooth cannelure near the case-mouth and had a full-metal-jacketed bullet. It replaced the AP M1917 round in service. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Armor-piercing, M1922 (1922–1934): This was a redesigned armor-piercing round with a heavier steel core. It was the first armor-piercing round to have a black-painted bullet tip. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Armor-piercing, M1 (1934–1939): This was a higher-velocity (3,180 fps) AP round that was under development throughout its service. It was replaced in 1939 by the AP M2, a redesign of the AP M1922. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Armor piercing, M2 (1939–1954): This cartridge is used against lightly armored vehicles, protective shelters, and personnel, and can be identified by its black bullet tip. Bullet is flat base, weight 163–168 grains. Defense against the M2 projectile by name is one of the performance standards for Type IV body armor.[38] (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Armor piercing incendiary, T15/M14 (1943–?) and M14A1: This cartridge may be substituted for the M2 armor-piercing round and is normally employed against flammable targets. The tip of the M14 bullet is colored with a blue tip over a black ring. The M14A1 featured an improved core design and incendiary charge. The M14A1 bullet is colored with aluminum paint. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Ball, M1906 (1906–1925): This cartridge is used against personnel and unarmored targets, and can be identified by its silver-colored bullet. The M1906 has a 9.7 g (150-grain) projectile and flat base. Its jacket is a cupro-nickel alloy which was found to quickly foul the bore. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Ball, M1 (1925–1937): The M1 has an 11.2 g (173-grain), nine-degree boat-tailed projectile designed for aerodynamic efficiency. Though it had a lower initial velocity, velocity and energy were greater at longer ranges due to its efficient shape. The harder bullet was made of seven parts lead to one part antimony. The jacket material was changed to gilding metal (an alloy of 95% copper and 5% zinc) to reduce fouling. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Ball, M2 (1937–1954): With a 9.7 g (150-grain) bullet based on the profile of the M1906, this cartridge incorporated the gilding-metal jacket of the M1 projectile combined with a slightly heavier, pure-lead core. It had a higher muzzle velocity than either of the earlier cartridges. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Ball, M2 alternate (1943–1945): A wartime economy variant of the ball M2 that used a steel full metal jacket coated with gilding metal to conserve copper and tin. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Blank, M1906: This cartridge is used to simulate rifle fire. It is derived from the M1903 blank, but with a resized neck. It has a paper bullet that contains a tiny black powder charge to aid in breaking it up. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Blank, M1909: This cartridge is used to simulate rifle fire. The cartridge is identified by having no bullet, having a cannelure in the neck of the case, and the crimp is sealed by red lacquer. This is still a current cartridge for ceremonial M1 Garands. Modern M1909 blanks are rose crimped, but they have the same designation.[39] (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)

Dummy, M40: This cartridge is used for training. The cartridge has six longitudinal corrugations and there is no primer.
Explosive, T99: Development of a cartridge that contained a small explosive charge which more effectively marked its impact. Often referred to as an "observation explosive" cartridge, it was meant to designate line-of-sight targets for cannon. The T99 was never adopted. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Frangible, T44/M22 (April 1945): The bullet disintegrates upon striking a hard or armored target, leaving a pencil-like mark to indicate a hit during bomber aerial gunnery practice. The cartridge is identified by a green bullet tip with a white ring to the rear of the green color. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Gallery practice M1919: A reduced-charge Ball cartridge with a 140-gr. wax-coated lead round-nosed bullet used for target shooting at indoor facilities or near built-up areas. It was later renamed the Guard M1 in 1933 and was used for guard and sentry duty at defense plants and military installations during World War II. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Guard M1906 (1907–1918): A reduced-charge ball cartridge with a 150-gr. FMJ pointed-nose bullet used for guard and sentry duty in built-up areas. The cartridge was originally marked with six cannelures in the middle, but this weakened the case and caused it to burst in a dirty rifle. It was later marked by six dents or flutes on the shoulder of the cartridge. Although production stopped in 1918, there were plenty of stocks of the oddball round left until the 1920s. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
High pressure test, M1: The cartridge is used to proof test 30-06 rifles and machine guns after manufacture, test, or repair. The cartridge is identified by stannic-stained (silvered) cartridge case loaded to a pressure of 60,000–70,000 psi (413.7–482.6 MPa).[41] (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Incendiary, M1917: Early incendiary cartridge, bullet had a large cavity in the nose to allow the material to more easily shoot forward on impact. As a result, the M1917 had a tendency to expand on impact. The M1917 had a blackened tip. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Incendiary, M1918: Variant of the M1917 with a normal bullet profile to comply with international laws regarding open-tipped expanding bullets. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Incendiary, M1: This cartridge is used against unarmored, flammable targets. The tip of the bullet is painted blue. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Match, M72: This cartridge is used in marksmanship competition firing, and can be identified by the word MATCH on the head stamp. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Tracer, M1: Tracer for observing fire, signaling, target designation, and incendiary purposes. The M1 has a red tip. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Tracer, M2: Tracer for observing fire, signaling, target designation, and incendiary purposes. Has a short burn time. The M2 originally had a white tip, but then switched to a red tip like the M1. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Tracer, M2 alternate (1943–1945): A wartime economy variant of the tracer M2 that used a steel full metal jacket coated with gilding metal. It was ballistically matched to the ball M2 alternate. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Tracer, T10/M25: Improved tracer over M1/M2. Designed to be less intense in terms of brightness than either the M1 or M2 tracers. The M25 had an orange tip. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
Blank cartridges, M1 (1933–1945) ( (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly), M2 (1941) (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly), M3 (1941–1953) (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly), and M3E1 (1953–present) (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly): These cartridges are used in training, as well as in conjunction with the M7 series of rifle grenade launchers to propel rifle grenades. Blank cartridges utilize a full-size brass case and carry only a powder charge. M1, M2 and M3 blanks are sealed at the case-mouth with a red wad and the M3E1 is crimped.[42] The differences between the three cartridges have to do with the powder charge and the range of grenade launchers. The M1 was a universal blank and rifle grenade cartridge that replaced the specialized rifle grenade (RG), chemical rifle grenade (CRG), and chemical warfare grenade (CWG) cartridges and was used with cup-discharger rifle grenade launchers. The M2 was an experimental cartridge used as a testbed; it used a propellant mixture of black powder and smokeless powder because it was feared that the smokeless powder would not reliably ignite by itself. The M3 was designed to be used with the M1 series (for the M1903 Springfield rifle), M2 series (for the M1917 Enfield rifle), and M7 series (for the M1 Garand rifle) spigot grenade launchers and used a propellant that was a mixture of five grains of FFFG black powder and 40 grains of IMR-4898 smokeless powder. The M3E1 featured an extended case neck, a rosepetal crimp, and a full smokeless powder loading and was designed for use with the M7A3 spigot rifle grenade launcher and larger ENERGA rifle grenade.[43][44] The grenade blanks were issued in double-rowed 10-round cartons, usually as part of a set with the M13 metal grenade launcher assortment ammo can.

7.62mm Modele 1949 Cartouche à Balle Ordinaire: This cartridge was based on the USGI .30-06 ball M2 (alternate) round. It had a cupro-nickel- or gilding-metal-clad steel jacket with either a brass or lacquered Parkerized steel case with a Berdan primer. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
7.62mm Modele 1951 Cartouche à blanc pour Fusil: This blank cartridge has a papier-mâché bullet for training use in rifles. The bullet is painted green to tell it apart from regular ammo. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
7.62mm Modele 1951 Cartouche à blanc pour Fusil-Mitrailleur: This blank cartridge has a wooden bullet for training use in machineguns. The bullet is painted or tinted blue to tell it apart from regular ammo. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
7.62mm Modele 1952 Cartouche à blanc: This blank cartridge has a lacquered Parkerized steel case and is sealed by a blue cardboard disc at the case mouth. (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)

for XM29 OICW (Objective Individual Combat Weapon) :

KE Module: 5.56×45mm NATO (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)
HE Module: 20×28mm (500,000,000 innital) with 500,000 monthly)

Caliber
KE Module: 5.56 mm
HE Module: 20 mm

anti tank weapons

M47 Dragon, known as the FGM-77 (launchers) - 100,000 (with 1,000 per month) (tubes (one shot per tube) -1,000,000 (with 5,000 per month)
M47 Dragon, known as the FGM-77 (launchers) - 50,000 (with 500 per month) (tubes (one shot per tube) (Dragon II version) -200,000 (with 3,000 per month)
M47 Dragon, known as the FGM-77 (launchers) 20,000 (with 300 per month (tubes (one shot per tube) (Super-Dragon version) - 100,000 (with 1,500 being produced per month)

pistols:

revolvers:

M1917 Revolver - 50,000 (with 2,000 per month to start out)

Nagant M1895 Revolver line -

Nagant “Private's model” («солдатский» наган) - a single-action version for non-commissioned officers and soldiers - 5--1,000,000 (with 10,000 per month to start out)
Nagant “Officer’s model” («офицерский» наган) - a double-action version for officers -200,000 (with 5,000 per month to start out)
suppressed Nagant with sound suppressor known as the "BRAMIT device" (BRAtya MITiny - "Mitin Brothers") - produced since 1931 for Soviet reconnaissance and scout troops 100,000 (with 2,000 per month to start out)
Ng wz. 30 (Nagant wz. 30) -500,000 (with 10,000 per month to start out)

semiautomatic pistols:

Automatic Pistol, Caliber .45, M1911 (2,000,000 initial) with 1,000 monthly) (ww1 model) 7-round magazine (10,000,000 initial) with 5,000 monthly)

submachine guns

United States Submachine Gun, Cal. .45, M3 (20,000) with 1,000 per month)
United States Submachine Gun, Cal. .45, M3A1 (20,000) with 1,000 per month)

machine guns:

M1918 Browning Automatic Rifle line:

Rifle, Caliber .30, Automatic, Browning, M1918 - (100,000 inital with 1,000 monthly)
M1918A1 - (100,000 inital with 1,000 monthly)
M1918A2 - (100,000 inital with 1,000 monthly)
M1922 machine rifle - (100,000 inital with 1,000 monthly)

(20 round magazines) 10,000,000 magazines initial with 5,000 per month)

Vehicles

armored vehicles:

M60-2000 Main Battle Tank -5,000 (with 120 per month)

T-64A -2,000 inital with 200 per month
T-64B -2,000 inital with 120 per month
T-64BM2 -2,000 inital with 120 per month
T-64U -2,000 inital with 120 per month
T-64BM BULAT -2,000 inital with 120 per month
T-64BV model 2017 -2,000 inital with 120 per month

t-62 line:

T-62 Obr.1960 (Ob'yekt 166) – Original production model equipped with the 115 mm U-5TS "Molot" (2A20) Rapira smoothbore tank gun with a "Meteor" two-plane stabiliser. It has a TKN-3 commander's day/night sight, TSh-2B-41 gunner day sight with 3.5/7x magnification and TPN1–41–11 night sight. It carries 40 rounds for the main gun and 2500 rounds for the PKT coaxial general-purpose machine gun. The V-55V engine produces 581 hp (433 kW). It has a commander's cupola welded to turret. -5,000 (with 120 monthly)
T-62K (Ob'yekt 166K) (K stands for komandirskaya ["command"]) (1964) – T-62 command variant. It is fitted with an R-112 (or R-130) radio, an AB-1 APU and an antenna base on top of the turret. The ammunition load was decreased to 36 for the main gun and 1,750 rounds for the coaxial general-purpose machine gun. It was mainly used by company and battalion commanders. -2500 with 60 per month
T-62KN (Ob'yekt 166KN) – T-62K fitted with additional TNA-2 navigation aids. -2500 with 60 per month
Ob'yekt 167 – T-62 fitted with a V-26 engine which with a use of charger develops 700 hp (522 kW). It has a 9M14 Malyutka (NATO: AT-3 Sagger) ATGM launcher on the rear of turret and a new chassis with return rollers and smaller road wheels. Not produced. Only two prototypes were made. -2500 with 60 per month
T-62 Obr.1967 – T-62 Obr.1960 with a slightly modified engine deck and an OPVT deep wading system -5,000 (with 120 monthly)
T-62 Obr.1972 – T-62 Obr.1967 with a DShK 1938/46 machine gun installed on the loader's hatch.[22] The tank is fitted with an improved fording attachment.[23] It is sometimes incorrectly called T-62A and T-62M. -5,000 (with 120 monthly)
T-62 Obr.1975 – T-62 Obr.1972 equipped with a KTD-1 or KTD-2 laser rangefinder in an armoured box over the main armament. It has concealed bolts around the commander's cupola. -5,000 (with 120 monthly)
T-62D (Ob'yekt 166D) (D stands for Drozd [thrush]) (1983) – T-62 Obr.1975 equipped with KAZ 1030M "Drozd" active protection system (APS), BDD appliqué armour on the glacis plate only and new V-55U diesel engine. -5,000 (with 120 monthly)
T-62D-1 (Objekt 166D-1) – T-62D fitted with a new V-46–5M diesel engine. -5,000 (with 120 monthly)
T-62M (Ob'yekt 166M) (1983) – Extensive modernization of the T-62 with protection and mobility improvements and the "Volna" fire control system. It is fitted with a BDD appliqué armour package, an additional belly armour plate for anti-mine protection, 10 mm thick reinforced rubber side skirts and 10 mm thick anti-neutron liner. The BDD appliqué armour package brings the frontal armour to nearly equivalent to the early T-64A and T-72 Ural and consists of an appliqué plate on the glacis and two horseshoe shaped blocks fitted to the front of the turret. This armour should be proof against all 84mm and 90mm tank gun rounds at all ranges, 105mm APDS and HEAT, 84mm and 106mm recoilless rifle HEAT rounds and many 1st generation anti-tank missiles as well as the M72A3 LAW and RPG-7. The handrails around the turret have been removed to make space for the bra appliqué armour. Fastenings for four spare track chain links have been added on the side of the turret. The tank is fitted with RhKM tracks from the T-72 main battle tank and two additional shock absorbers on the first pair of road wheels. The "Volna" fire control system was improved by fitting the KTD-2 (or KTD-1) laser rangefinder in an armoured box over the main armament. There is a new TShSM-41U gunner's sight, new commander's sight, "Meteor-M1" stabiliser, BV-62 ballistic computer and 9K116-2 "Sheksna" (NATO: AT-10 Stabber) guided missile unit with 1K13-BOM sight (it is both a night sight and ATGM launcher sight. However, it cannot be used for both functions simultaneously) which allows the tank to fire 9M117 Bastion ATGMs through its gun tube.[16] The tank was fitted with a gun thermal sleeve, new radios, the R-173 radio set instead of R-123M and a new V-55U diesel engine developing 620 hp (462 kW). The ammunition load was increased by two rounds. Some are fitted with two clusters of four smoke grenade launchers each on the right rear of the turret. The US intelligence saw T-62M main battle tanks for the first time during the Soviet–Afghan War and they gave it the designation T-62E.[2][3][16][22] There are a number of sub-variants of the T-62M, depending on how much of the modernization package the vehicle has installed. -10,000 (with 320 monthly)
T-62M-1 (Ob'yekt 166M-1) – T-62M fitted with a V-46–5M diesel engine. -5,000 (with 120 monthly)
T-62M1 (Ob'yekt 166M1) – T-62M fitted with a revised frontal armour layout on the hull and a normal night sight. It does not have ATGM capability. -5,000 (with 120 monthly)
T-62M1–1 (Ob'yekt 166M1–1) – T-62M1 fitted with the V-46–5M diesel engine. -5,000 (with 120 monthly)
T-62M1–2 (Ob'yekt 166M1–2) – T-62M1 without belly armour or the BDD armour package. -5,000 (with 120 monthly)
T-62M1–2–1 (Ob'yekt 166M1–2–1) – T-62M1–2 fitted with the V-46–5M diesel engine. -5,000 (with 120 monthly)
T-62MD (Ob'yekt 166MD) (D stands for Drozd ["thrush"]) – T-62M fitted with KAZ 1030M "Drozd" active protection system (APS). -5,000 (with 120 monthly)
T-62MD-1 (Ob'yekt 166MD-1) – T-62MD fitted with V-46–5M diesel engine. -5,000 (with 120 monthly)
T-62MK (Ob'yekt 166MK) (K stands for komandirskaya ["command"]) – T-62M command variant. It does not have ATGM capability but has TNA-2 navigation aids, additional R-112 and R-113 radio sets and an AB-1 auxiliary engine to power the additional radios. The tank has a lower ammunition load for both the main gun and the coaxial general-purpose machine gun. -5,000 (with 120 monthly)
T-62MK-1 (Ob'yekt 166MK-1) – T-62MK fitted with the V-46–5M diesel engine. -5,000 (with 120 monthly)
T-62MV (Ob'yekt 166MV) (1985) (V stands for vzryvnoi – ["explosive"]) – Fitted with "Kontakt-1" explosive reactive armour (ERA) on the sides of the hull, the glacis plate, and in the front of the turret (where it replaces the appliqué bra armour). -5,000 (with 120 monthly)
T-62MV-1 (Ob'yekt 166MV-1) – T-62MV fitted with the V-46–5M diesel engine. -5,000 (with 120 monthly)
T-62M1V (Ob'yekt 166M1V) – T-62MV without ATGM capability. -5,000 (with 120 monthly)
T-62M1V-1 (Ob'yekt 166M1V-1) – T-62M1V fitted with a V-46–5M diesel engine. -5,000 (with 120 monthly)
T-62 fitted with a box on the rear of the turret containing anti-aircraft missiles.[22] (wip)

T-62 fitted with the ZET-1 (ZET stands for Zaschtschita Ekrannaja Tankowaja) vehicle protection system. The system was developed in 1964 and was specially designed to protect the tank's front and sides up to an angle of 25° against shaped-charge projectiles with of a maximum caliber of 115 mm. It consisted of a stretchable screen with net structure centered on the vehicle's main armament and lateral flipper-type sideskirts. It was intended for T-54, T-55 and T-62 main battle tanks. The diameter of the screens was different for each tank type. The individual screen sections could be replaced in two minutes. While it was successful in wide open spaces, it was an impractical in wooded areas. Because of that the development was not heavily used, although the flipper-type sideskirts were later used in the initial T-72 models.[22] (wip)

T-62/122 – T-62 based combat engineering vehicle rearmed with 122 mm howitzer. -5,000 (with 120 monthly)
T-62/160 – T-62 based combat engineer vehicle fitted with BTU and armed with a shortened 160 mm mortar. -5,000 (with 120 monthly)
T-67 – T-62 armed with a 125 mm tank gun and fitted with a drive train from the T-72 main battle tank. -5,000 (with 120 monthly)

TO-62 – T-62 converted into a flamethrower tank. The flamethrower has an effective range of 100 meters and is mounted coaxially with the 115 mm gun. -10,000 (with 120 monthly)
IT-1 (Ob'yekt 150) – T-62 converted into a tank destroyer (istrebitel' tankov). It was developed between 1957 and 1962. It utilised the chassis and the hull of the T-62 main battle tank and was fitted with a new low 'flattened dome' turret with a stabilised 2K8 ATGM system instead of the tank gun. The IT-1 was the only one of several "rocket tank" ('raketniy tank') designs that actually entered service. It could launch radio-guided semi-automatic PTUR 3M7 "Drakon" ATGMs with a range between 300 m and 3,300 m. It carried 15 PTUR 3M7 "Drakon" ATGMs on board (3 in reserve and 12 in the autoloader). The ATGM was launched from an arm rising through the roof of the turret. The secondary armament consisted of a 7.62 mm PKT general-purpose machine gun for which it carried 2,000 rounds. The turret was fitted with T2-PD and UPN-S day/night sights. About 60 IT-1 tank destroyers were built between 1968 and 1970 by various companies including 20 built by the Uralvagonzavod factory in 1970. Only two battalions operated them, one with artillery personnel and one with tank personnel, with one battalion in Belarus MD and the other one in the Carpathian MD. The units were disbanded after the withdrawal of the IT-1 and all the vehicles were converted to armored recovery vehicles (ARVs). -5,000 (with 120 monthly)

IT-1T (T after IT-1 stands for tyagach ["tractor"]) – After the withdrawal of the IT-1 from front-line service many of the vehicles were partially converted to ARVs. The only differences from the standard IT-1 was that the turret was fixed in position after all the ATGM gear was removed. They were not very successful and were soon converted into the BTS-4V armoured recovery vehicles. -5,000 (with 120 monthly)

BTS-4V (BTS stands for bronirovannij tyagach, srednij ["medium armoured tractor"]) – Conversion of T-62 main battle tanks and IT-1 tank destroyers into a turretless ARV. They are similar to the much more common T-54 -based BTS-4. The vehicle was fitted with a stowage basket, a hoist and a small folding crane with a capacity of 3 tonnes, a winch, and a snorkel. It is also known as BTS-4U. -5,000 (with 120 monthly)

DShK 1938/46 antiaircraft heavy machine gun. It was limited to basic towing operations and most were disposed of by giving them away as foreign aid. They were also known as BTS-4VZ.[22] (wip)

Impuls-2M – Decommissioned T-62 main battle tank converted into a fire fighting vehicle fitted with a 50-round launch system for flame-retarding projectiles on a rotatable mount in the turret ring and a dozer blade on the front. -5,000 (with 120 monthly)

RO-115 Mark I: developed in the early 1980s. While retaining the Soviet 115 mm gun, more powerful ammunition allows engaging a target at greater range. Some main guns were replaced with the Royal Ordnance L7 105 mm gun as offered by the Austrian firm NORICUM. Other modifications included a British diesel engine developing 750 hp (559 kW), a two-plane stabiliser, ballistic computer, laser rangefinder in an armoured box over the main armament, a cluster of six smoke grenade launchers on the right side of the turret, a fire control system from BMP-3 IFV and additional armour including reactive armour. The upgrades resulted in an increase of weight to 43 tons. -5,000 (with 120 monthly)

T-62E Mark II: Mid 1990s Egyptian refurbishment and modernization program. The tanks were fitted with a license-built German MTU engine developing 880 hp (656 kW). The tanks are armed with a license-built 105 mm M68 tank gun, an Italian fire control system with ballistics computer, infrared vision device, laser rangefinder, gun stabiliser, additional armour including reactive armour, armoured side skirts, modernised suspension and six smoke grenade launchers on each side of the turret. It has an upgraded NBC (nuclear, biological, and chemical) protection system. The T-62E Mark II carries two Egyptian-made two-round anti-tank missile launchers, or two 2-round launchers for 80 mm D-3000 smoke rockets on an encroachment extension, or a box-type launcher holding two Sakr smoke missiles on each side of the turret.[22] The upgrade did not change the weight of the tank, which remained at 45 tons. -5,000 (with 120 monthly)

RO-120 Mark III: T-62 main battle tank upgrade developed in 2004. This upgrade arms the tank with the 120 mm M-393 tank gun developed by FSUE. The gun is 5.30 m long and weighs 2.6 tonnes. It can be elevated or depressed between −7° and +15°. The tank has a new license-built German MTU engine developing 890 hp (664 kW) and additional armour, including reactive armour and armoured side skirts. The upgrades resulted in a weight increase to 46.5 tons. This upgrade was completed by the end of 2008. -5,000 (with 120 monthly)

ammunition:

3VBM-1 -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
3UBM-13 -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
3BM4 -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
3BM3 -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
3BK4 -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
3OF11 -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month

HE-FRAG -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
HEAT ammunition -100,000,000 with 10,000 per month
9K118 Sheksna 100,000 with 10,000 per month

m-1 abrams line:

M1: First production variant. Production began (at Chrysler) in 1979 and continued to 1985 (at General Dynamics) (3,273 built for the US). The first 110 tanks were Low Rate Initial Production (LRIP) models, still called XM1s, because they were built prior to the tank being type-classified as the M1. -5,000 (with 120 per month)
M1IP (Improved Performance): Produced briefly in 1984 before the M1A1, contained upgrades and reconfigurations like new turret with thicker frontal armor, new turret is referred as "long" turret instead of older "short" turret, armor upgraded from ~650mm line of sight thickness to ~880mm (894 built for US). -5,000 (with 120 per month)
M1A1: Production started in 1985 and continued to 1992, pressurized NBC system, rear bustle rack for improved stowage of supplies and crew belongings, redesigned blow-off panels and M256 120 mm smoothbore cannon (4,976 built for the U.S. Army, 221 for USMC, 59 M1A1 AIM SA sold to Australia). -5,000 (with 120 per month)
M1A1HA (Heavy Armor): Added 1st generation depleted uranium armor components. Some tanks were later upgraded with 2nd generation depleted uranium armor components, and are unofficially designated M1A1HA+. -5,000 (with 120 per month)
M1A1HC (Heavy Common): Added new 2nd generation depleted uranium armor components, digital engine control and other small upgrades common between Army and Marine Corps tanks. -5,000 (with 120 per month)
M1A1D (Digital): A digital upgrade for the M1A1HC, to keep up with M1A2 SEP, manufactured in quantity for only 2 battalions. -5,000 (with 120 per month)
M1A1 AIM v.1 (Abrams Integrated Management): A program whereby older units are reconditioned to zero hour conditions;[139] and the tank is improved by adding Forward-Looking Infra-Red (FLIR) and Far Target Locate sensors, a tank-infantry phone, communications gear, including FBCB2 and Blue Force Tracking to aid in crew situational awareness, and a thermal sight for the .50 caliber machine gun. -5,000 (with 120 per month)
M1A1 AIM v.2/M1A1 SA (Situational Awareness): Upgrades similar to AIM v.1 tanks + new 3rd generation depleted uranium armor components. Configuration for the Royal Moroccan Army, which is almost identical to the Australian variant, except exportable turret armor is installed by General Dynamics Land System to replace the DU armor. -5,000 (with 120 per month)
M1A1 FEP (Firepower Enhancement Package): Similar upgrade to AIM v.2 for USMC tanks. -5,000 (with 120 per month)
M1A1KVT (Krasnovian Variant Tank): M1A1s that have been visually modified to resemble Soviet-made tanks for use at the National Training Center, fitted with MILES gear and a Hoffman device. -2,000 (with 60 a month) (yes swe assume to be used for training0
M1A1M: An export variant ordered by the Iraqi Army with depleted uranium armor removed and older thermal imaging system with lower resolution used. -5,000 (with 120 per month) M1A1 (AIDATS upgrade): Upgrade-only variant to all
USMC General Dynamics M1A1 Abrams tanks to improve the tank commander's situational awareness with an upgraded thermal sight, color day camera, and a stationary color display.[citation needed] (wip)

M1A2 (Baseline): Production began in 1986 and entered service in 1992[142][unreliable source?] (77 built for the U.S. and more than 600 M1s upgraded to M1A2, 315 for Saudi Arabia, 1,005 for Egypt, 218 for Kuwait). The M1A2 offers the tank commander an independent thermal sight and ability to, in rapid sequence, shoot at two targets without the need to acquire each one sequentially, also 2nd generation depleted uranium armor components.[143] -5,000 (with 120 per month)
M1A2 SEP (System Enhancement Package): Has upgraded third-generation depleted uranium armor components with graphite coating (240 new built, 300 M1A2s upgraded to M1A2 SEP for the US, also unknown numbers of upgraded basic M1s and M1IPs, also 400 oldest M1A1s upgraded to M1A2 SEP). -5,000 (with 120 per month)
M1A2S (Saudi Package): Saudi Arabian variant upgrade of the M1A2 based on M1A2 SEP, with some features, such as depleted uranium armor, believed to be missing and replaced by special armor. (442 M1A2s upgraded to M1A2S). -5,000 (with 120 per month)
M1A2 SEPv2: Added Common Remotely Operated Weapon Station as standard, color displays, improved interfaces, a new operating system, improved front and side armor with ERA (TUSK kit), tank-infantry phone as standard, and an upgraded transmission for better durability. -5,000 (with 120 per month)

M1A2C (SEPv3): Has increased power generation and distribution, better communications and networking, new Vehicle Health Management System (VHMS) and Line Replaceable Modules (LRMs) for improved maintenance, an Ammunition DataLink (ADL) to use airburst rounds, improved counter-IED armor package, improved FLIR using long- and mid-wave infrared, a low-profile CROWS RWS, Next Generation Armor Package (NGAP),[147] and an Auxiliary Power Unit (APU) under armor to run electronics while stationary instead of the engine, visually distinguishing the version by a small exhaust at the left rear. More passive ballistic protection added to the turret faces, along with new Explosive Reactive Armor mountings (Abrams Reactive Armor Tile (ARAT))[148] and Trophy Active Protection systems added to the turret sides. Prototypes began testing in 2015,[149][146][150] and the first were delivered in October 2017.[151] The first unit received them in July 2020. -5,000 (with 120 per month)
M1A2T: Special configuration variant of the M1A2C reportedly being offered for sale to Taiwan as of March 2019 and approved by US State Department as of July 2019.[153] Per DSCA statement, it is roughly equivalent to M1A2C, except depleted uranium armor is replaced by FMS export armor. There is no mention of the Trophy APS system. The new-built tanks will be produced at Anniston Army Depot, Anniston, Alabama, and the Joint Systems Manufacturing Center, Lima, Ohio. -5,000 (with 120 per month)
M1A2D (SEPv4): Under engineering development with delivery planned to start by 2021.[156] The Commander's Primary Sight, also known as the Commander's Independent Thermal Viewer, and Gunner's Primary Sight will be upgraded with 3rd Gen FLIR, an improved laser rangefinder and color cameras. Additional improvements will include advanced meteorological sensors, laser warning/detection receivers, directional smoke grenade launchers and integration of the new XM1147 multi-purpose (AMP) 120mm tank round.[157][158][159][160][161] The AN/VVR-4 laser warning receiver and ROSY rapid obscurant system have been trialed by the US Army for adoption on the Abrams tank and Bradley fighting vehicle. -5,000 (with 120 per month)
M1A2-K: Under development, unique variant for the Kuwaiti Army, slated to replace Kuwait's current M1A2 fleet.[165]
M1A3: Under research development as of 2014.[41][10][needs update] Improvements are to include a lighter 120 mm gun, added road wheels with improved suspension, a more durable track, lighter-weight armor, long-range precision armaments, and infrared camera and laser detectors. The variant is believed to have a new diesel engine, instead of the gas turbine engine used in previous M1 variants.[166] -5,000 (with 120 per month)

M1 TTB (Tank Test Bed): Prototype with unmanned turret, 3 crew members in armored capsule in front of the heavy armored hull, main armament was 120 mm smoothbore gun, M256 derivative or modification, mechanical loading system under turret, never fielded. 200 (with 60 per month) (we assume you can find a use for them) (wip)
CATTB: The Component Advanced Technology Test Bed was an experimental model with a lightweight 120 mm smoothbore cannon,[167] heavy armored turret and upgraded hull based on the M1 chassis. It had a mechanical loading system in turret bustle, a new engine and probably other upgrades, never fielded. The tank went into trials in 1987–88.[168] (wip)
M1 Thumper: Experimental variant by Lockheed Martin, equipped with the 140 mm XM291 ATACS smoothbore cannon. Similar to the CATTB, it included a larger, elongated turret to offer protection levels comparable to the M1A2 while allowing the mounting of the larger cannon and its longer ammunition. Cancelled with the end of the Cold War, and never fielded. 200 (with 60 per month) (we assume you can find a use for them)
M1 AGDS (Air Ground Defense System): Proposed air defence variant of the Abrams equipped with dual 35 mm Bushmaster III autocannons, 12 ADATS missiles and advanced electro-optical and radar targeting systems derived from the ADATS. It was supposed to be capable of both air defence and anti-tank purposes with the ADATS MIM-146 missiles which was a dual purpose ATGM/SAM. The proposal never saw consideration and was never developed further. -5,000 (with 120 per month)

*wip

M1 Grizzly Combat Mobility Vehicle (CMV).[172][173]
M1 Panther II: A remote controlled mine clearing vehicle with turret removed, mine rollers on front, and the Standardized Teleoperation System.[174]
M104 Wolverine Heavy Assault Bridge[175]
M1074 Joint Assault Bridge (JAB): Bridgelayer combining a heavy "scissor" bridge with the M1 Abrams chassis. Expected to reach low-rate initial production in 2019 to replace the M60 AVLB and M104 Wolverine.[176]
M1150 Assault Breacher Vehicle (ABV): Assault variant for the USMC. Based upon the M1A1 Abrams chassis, the Assault Breacher Vehicle has a variety of systems installed, such as a full-width mine plow, two linear demolition charges, and a lane-marking system. Reactive armor has been fitted to the vehicle providing additional protection against High-explosive anti-tank warhead-based weapons. The turret has been replaced by a new smaller one with two MICLIC launchers at its rear. A M2HB .50 machine gun in a remote weapons station is mounted on the commander's cupola and a bank of grenade launchers are fitted to each side of the superstructure to cover the frontal arc for self-protection.[177][178]
M1 Armored Recovery Vehicle: Only a prototype produced.
Additional equipment

M1A1 Mine Clearing Blade System (MCBS): (LIN B13228)[a] It is electrically operated and is capable of clearing surface or buried mines up to 6 feet in front of the tank's path. The plough produces a windrow of soil that is filled with mines. This windrow must be reduced using a mine rake or by laying a MICLIC along side the windrow and detonating it. The plough is also capible of pushing up berms, clearing trench-lines, and proofing lanes and staging areas. It can be adapted for use on the M60A1 MBT.[179]
Self Protection Combat Roller (SPCR): (LIN M53112) The Self Protection Combat Roller (SPCR) exerts high pressure onto the ground ahead of the tracks of the host vehicle to target pressure activated explosive devices in order to actively prove routes. It is designed to operate on concrete, asphalt, gravel and hard dirt roads. The system comprises of two 4-wheel roller gangs to protect the vehicle tracks which stow neatly to minimize its impact on vehicle operation ability and mobility when not in use. The rollers are able to steer left and right to provide a level of coverage during cornering. An optional Magnetic System Duplicator (MSD) can be fitted to help protect the equipment from the effect of magnetic influence fused mines.[180]
Surface Clearance Device(SCD):(LIN B17484) The SCD is employed to clear surface laid mines and IEDs from roads, trails and rough terrain. There are two versions of the SCD; a V-blade optimised for clearing routes and a straight angle-blade which is optimised for clearing staging and assembly areas.[181]
Vehicle Magnetic Signature Duplicator(VEMSID): (LIN V53112) The VEMSID increases the effectiveness and survivability of countermine equipment by causing the stand-off detonation of magnetic influence mines at a safe distance ahead of the tank. It generates a multi-axial magnetic signature optimized for passively fused magnetic influence fused mines. The system comprises four emitter coils, two associated power boxes and a MSD Control Unit (MSDCU).[182]

(wip)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M1_Abrams
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M104_Wolverine
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M1074_Joint_Assault_Bridge
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M1150_Assault_Breacher_Vehicle

*wip

ammo for abrams:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M1_Abrams

https://wiki.warthunder.com/M1_Abrams

https://wiki.warthunder.com/M1_Abrams_(Family)

https://wiki.warthunder.com/M1A2_Abrams

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M829

https://battlefield.fandom.com/wiki/Canister_Shell

https://battlefield.fandom.com/wiki/Guided_Shell

https://battlefield.fandom.com/wiki/Gunner_SOFLAM

https://battlefield.fandom.com/wiki/120mm_HE_Shell

https://battlefield.fandom.com/wiki/Sabot_Shell

*end of wip*

m-60 patton line

m-60 patton -1,000 inital with 120 per month
m-60A1 patton -2,000 inital with 220 per month
m-60A2 patton -1,000 inital with 60 per month
m-60A3 patton -5,000 inital with 220 per month
High Performance M60, also called Super M60 -2,000 inital with 120 per month
M60A3 Phoenix -2,000 inital with 120 per month
Raytheon M60A3 SLEP -2,000 inital with 120 per month
Leonardo M60A3 SLEP -2,000 inital with 120 per month

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M60_AVLB
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M728_Combat_Engineer_Vehicle

m-48 patton line

M48 -2,000 inital with 120 per month
M48A1 -2,000 inital with 120 per month
M48A2 -2,000 inital with 120 per month
M48A3 -2,000 inital with 120 per month
M48A5 -5,000 inital with 220 per month
E48 AVLB -2,000 inital with 120 per month
Super M48 -2,000 inital with 120 per month
Zulfiqar-1 -2,000 inital with 120 per month

st 66 linerunner (m-1 abrams made by Blue skys weaponry) -400 inital with 40 per month (

Army

by Southern xenickese military factbooks

The army is the most well funded branch of the military, as it receives many tank, helicopter, and jet upgrades. It has a size of 8 million troops because there is conscription and the people in tge colonies usually join the military. Its reserve size is 2 million adding up to a whopping total of 10 million army personnel. Its very good at defeating enemy assets as efficiently as possible, and uses lots of its funding on new vehicles and then training.

Bork mobile artillery

overview
The BORK is mobile artillery capable of precision strikes and an ability to move across the battlefield quickly and effectively. Its targeting systems are linked with satellites and have many tracking tools that use thermal, airflow and all sorts of devices to maintain pinpoint and reliable accuracy.

stats
top Speed: 45 mph
Dimensions: 12 feet wide, 10 feet tall without cannon, 8 feet long.
Weapon: 170 mm cannon
Crew: 3 (excluding escort troops)
Range: 15 miles
weight: 30 tons
ammo: 30 AT rounds, 20 HE rounds. (with accompanying ammo carriers it can go up to 100 AT 80 HE)
Fuel: 300 gallons (2 miles per gallon)

facts
It is guarded by 5 infantry troops, and has a hatch that will lock if enemy troops try to capture the vehicle. It has tendencies to get stuck in mud because it is relatively light and doesn't ave the sufficient speed to exit mud. Its armor is thin and will not withstand blows from cannons or airstrikes. Its weapon has immense range and can do severe damage to structures, tanks, and especially infantry. It usually stays in formation with MBTs and radleys so it has protection from enemy tanks.

history
Its developnent was a long process because it was cited to have "too thin armor" and "not enough protection measures" but was finally accepted on the basis that its always stayed with an MBT for protection. When it was first used bombarding the Krovx Belgium troops in the 5 mile war it excelled at smashing infantry with highly effective HE shells, and later it bombarded Plaugetopia in the Zenish-plaguo war with great efficiency. It was decided that it would receive an upgrade on its cannon bringing the former 150 mm to 170 mm.
The most currnt event was its use in the Zenish civil war where Stephanland-acland tried to invade the communist forces but were beaten back by these artillery units, only for nukes to be launched. It saw general bombardment use in the Zenish civil war tug 'o' war for the south and north, severely hindering progress with pinpoint bombardment.

1 unit costs 12 million xens to make.

st 66 linerunner

the st 66 is an assault tank meant to break lines, other tanks, and forts. its stats are...

top speed 45mph but 32 mph cross country.

32 feet long

12 feet wide

8 feet tall

4 gallons per operation hour

holds 55 cannon rounds

70 tons

3 crew (1 high speed autoloader takes 1 crew member away)

120 mm smooth bore firing a SABOT, HEAT or HESH round.

3 machine guns, one 50 calibre above hatch, and two 7.62 mm fired from inside.

150 horsepower turbine makes it a gas guzzler

tactical cruising range of 295 miles

uses a wide aray of sensoring equipment like a laser range finder, thermal imagery night sight, optical day sight, and digital ballistics computer, and a system o measure air pressure, tempature, etc..making the aim dead on. it uses reactive armor as a countermeasure to armor piercing rounds but usually uses upgraded chobham armor that is thickened in the rear, adding some weight. it can move reliably through mud, sand, swamp and shallow water, but can still get stuck if the crew is foolish. it has a policy that these are to be deployed in groups of at least 2 with infantry escort, to protect it from other infantry, but also has blowout compartments so if a shell hits the ammo compartment the tank will be safe unless it is hit again, where the blowout will protect the crew but the tank has a possibility of becoming a mission kill. it is invulnerable to most rpg weapons except for exceptionally powerful ones.

the armor is 700mm thick on front the hull, and the turret armor is 700 mm thick on the front, while the back turret armor is 400mm thick, the side turret armor is 350mm thick and the base hull armor 50 mm thick, the crew compartment is 70 mm thick and ammo storage is 100 mm thick. the back is still a weak point but it has significantly more protection there than the st45.

the armor is made of chobham, which is a composite made of a depleted uranium, titanium, ceramic, and nylon micromesh.

the tank is regarded as better than an abrams because of nifty cost savings from the colonies but also a special alloy used in the chobham that reduces weight so it maintains a good speed with thick armor and it costs 9 million xens to produce, the upped cost because of the advanced electronic systems, the jet turbine, autoloader, and special armor.


death falcon helicopter


The death falcon helicopter has 1 goal, to destroy and spy on the enemy. This helicopter is feared by all because of its sheer speed and lifting power. It carries a 20 mm cannon and a munitions launcher capable of firing missles, bullets, or whatever is deemed necessary. Its shorter rotors let it operate in urban areas and strange terrain. It has a supplement power system so in a critical moment it can boost to escape fire.

It has a scout version which is shown in the photo, but the attack version is slower but packs a bigger punch. The scout goes at max speed of 185 knots, and has a combat range of 135 nautical miles. The sleek looking design is for superior maneuverability, a fearure that is not lost in the attack version, speaking of which, has an additional rocket pod and gatling gun. It is meant to replace the aging sea Falcon helicopters. It costs 20 million xens per aircraft, and 30 million for an attack version.


s99 robot sniper rifle

The s99 robot sniper rifle is a heavy sniper that is only the military robots can fire because of its sheer power. It can kill anyone with one shot and can penetrate heavy armor and can stop some armored vehicles. This weapon is quite expensive but is very powerful as it can penetrate some armored vehicles, including a humvee. It is mainly used for robots because a human cannot handle the recoil of the massive 70 calibre bullet. It is also best used by robots because of its electronic system that makes the robot link up with it and take out targets with pinpoint accuracy. It is semiautomatic and can fire a bullet every second with a 6 round magazine. It makes use of exacto systems as well to make its accuracy a battlefield scourge, as most of the shots it takes find their marks.

KR 101


The Kalashnikov Rifle 101 is the new Southern Xenickese rifle, that was in development ever since the civil war.

Stats: It has a 7.62x39 mm bullet and superior penetration and stopping power compared to other rifles.
rate of fire: 750 rounds per minute
weight: 3.60 pounds
magazine capacity: of 30 rounds
Maximum range: 834 meters

description
The KR-101 also can have a suppressor, flashlight, scope (standard issue), laser sight, grenade launcher, and has detachable extendable stock. It was noted to have excellent accuracy it still does have mild but present recoil, mostly when going full auto. The rifle is known for its versatility, but while it is not as reliable as the AR-45 it is more accurate and can still work well in more extreme environments, but not as much as the 45. It is easily produced and requires fair skill and training to learn because of its reload difficulties and slight recoil but once you get used to it people have become masters at the weapon. It sclaes down the difficult to produce and absurd 8.62 mm bullet to a respectable and powerful 7.62. It is best used in plains and natural landscapes due to its long range and its accuracy but still does plenty of good in an urban environment.

The KR 101 is produced by Blue skies weaponry and was the winner of the 2 billion grant for the design. Its competitors were the Cascadian reich made AR 65 and the CorpCorp M2b2


rose pistol

the rose pistol is a powerful gun, with a 12.7 x 40 mm bullet and a mag size of 8, it is used as a backup gun but is still effective when attacking if used carefully. It is quite large but light and can be easily produced, the only thing to complain about for the gun is that it has a short range and is prone to jamming in humid temperatures. Its strengths are its versatility in urban situations and law enforcement, while being able to drop all unarmed hostiles at a medium range.


MQ-9b
The MQ-9 is a precision drone used for airstrikes and recon. It is mainly used for remote attacks and hits its target with pinpoint attacks and assassination missions. The drones are able to be used for up to 26 hours at a time, and can pack up to 8 missiles worth of firepower on hardpoints. The drones have a smaller version fit for recon and espionage uses, and able to airstrike without detection, with a smaller impact of course. The drone has high tech cameras for surveillance and targeting, and also for keeping an eye on friendly troops.
weaponry
6 Missiles
2 high res camera
1 gatling gun (optional)
stats
Speed: 350 mph
26 feet long
66 feet wingspan
12.5 feet tall

Read factbook

)

avre

M578 light recovery vehicle (G309) 10,000 (with 1,000 per month)

artillery:

towed:

M198 howitzer -8,000 initial (with 100 per month)

(ammo for it) Ammunition types:

High Explosive (HE)
(M-107 NC/DC): Explosive Composition B material packed into a thick, internally scored shell which causes a large blast and sends razor-sharp fragments at extreme velocities (5,000–6,000 meters per second). The kill zone is approximately a radius of 50 meters and casualty radius is 100 meters. The Marine Corps and US Army also uses the M795 High Explosive round. -10,000,000 with 10,000 per month

Rocket Assisted Projectile (RAP)
A rocket-assisted HE (also known as H.E.R.A.) M549 round that adds to the maximum range of the normal HE. For the 155 mm RAP round, max range is 30.1 kilometres (18.7 mi). -10,000,000 with 10,000 per month

White Phosphorus (WP)
A base-ejecting projectile which can come in two versions: felt-wedge and standard. White phosphorus smoke is used to start fires, burn a target, or to create smoke which is useful in concealing the movements of friendly units. -10,000,000 with 10,000 per month

Illumination
Illumination projectiles are base-ejecting rounds which deploy a bright parachute flare ideally 600 meters above the ground and illuminates an area of approximately 1 grid square (1,000 square meters). Illumination rounds are often used in conjunction with HE rounds, to illuminate the target area so that HE rounds can be fired more effectively. Illumination rounds can also be used during the daytime to mark targets for aircraft. The M485 Illumination round burns for 120 seconds. -10,000,000 with 10,000 per month

Dual-Purpose Improved Conventional Munition (DPICM)
A base-ejecting projectile that drops 88 bomblets above a target. Each bomblet has a shaped-charge munition capable of penetrating two inches of solid steel as well as a fragmentation casing which is effective against infantry in the open. The DPICM round is effective against armored vehicles, even tanks (since the deck armor is usually the thinnest on the vehicle), and is also extremely useful against entrenched infantry in positions with overhead cover. -10,000,000 with 10,000 per month

Area Denial Artillery Munition System (ADAMS)
An artillery round that releases anti-personnel mines. These mines eject tripwires to act as booby traps, and when triggered are launched upward before exploding. They are designed to self-destruct after a pre-determined period of time. -10,000,000 with 10,000 per month

Remote Anti Armor Mine System (RAAMS)
An artillery round that releases anti-armor mines, usually used along with ADAMS rounds to prevent the antitank mines from being removed. Designed to self-destruct after a pre-determined period of time. -10,000,000 with 10,000 per month

Copperhead
An artillery launched guided high-explosive munition used for very precise targeting of high-value targets such as tanks and fortifications. It requires the target be designated with a laser designator system. This round is currently no longer produced or used by the US military. -10,000,000 with 10,000 per month

Sense and Destroy ARMor (SADARM)
An experimental munition that is fired in the general direction of an enemy vehicle. The shell activates at a certain point in time ejecting a parachute and then guides itself to the nearest vehicle. -10,000,000 with 10,000 per month

M45 AFAP (artillery fired atomic projectile) (W48)
The M45 AFAP (W48) nuclear artillery shell had a 155mm caliber and an explosive yield of only 72 ton. All units were retired from service in 1992. (WIP)

aircraft:

jets:

F-14 versions

F-14A -500 (with 14 per month)
F-14B -500 (with 14 per month)
F-14B Upgrade -500 (with 14 per month)
F-14D Super Tomcat -500 (with 14 per month)
F-14C -500 (with 14 per month)
ASF-14 (Advanced Strike Fighter-14) -500 (with 14 per month)

1: we have a lot of these manpeds and know they are hardly effective to nil. but we figure the fear of more might help fighting forces. or improvised use of them could be figured.
2: we have many lines of these rifles and since militia and other forces are cought up and can maintain the rifles many can be spared up for export in this dire situation. and its use of 7.62x54R means they can be used in this war by the customer.

references:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FIM-43_Redeye
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/9K32_Strela-2
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FIM-92_Stinger
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XM29_OICW
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ArmaLite_AR-15
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Colt_AR-15_and_M16_rifle_variants
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M16_rifle
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M4_carbine
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CAR-15_XM177
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Close_Quarters_Battle_Receiver
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M47_Dragon
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M1917_Revolver
https://www.everydaymarksman.co/equipment/m16a5/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stevens_Model_520/620
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winchester_Model_1897
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ishapore_2A1_rifle
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gauge_(firearms)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.223_Remington
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/7.62%C3%9751mm_NATO
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.30-06_Springfield
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M60-2000_Main_Battle_Tank
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M3_submachine_gun
https://www.americanrifleman.org/articles/2016/5/20/the-m3-and-m3a1-grease-guns/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ArmaLite_AR-10
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remington_Model_10
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OB8__9I-NNk O (Remington model 10)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M1911_pistol
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M1918_Browning_Automatic_Rifle
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T-64
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T-62
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M60_tank
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M48_Patton
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zulfiqar_(tank)#Zulfiqar-1
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M1917_Enfield
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winchester_Model_1912
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nagant_M1895
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nagant_wz._30
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winchester_Model_1895
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blowpipe_(missile)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HN-5

Army

by Southern xenickese military factbooks

The army is the most well funded branch of the military, as it receives many tank, helicopter, and jet upgrades. It has a size of 8 million troops because there is conscription and the people in tge colonies usually join the military. Its reserve size is 2 million adding up to a whopping total of 10 million army personnel. Its very good at defeating enemy assets as efficiently as possible, and uses lots of its funding on new vehicles and then training.

Bork mobile artillery

overview
The BORK is mobile artillery capable of precision strikes and an ability to move across the battlefield quickly and effectively. Its targeting systems are linked with satellites and have many tracking tools that use thermal, airflow and all sorts of devices to maintain pinpoint and reliable accuracy.

stats
top Speed: 45 mph
Dimensions: 12 feet wide, 10 feet tall without cannon, 8 feet long.
Weapon: 170 mm cannon
Crew: 3 (excluding escort troops)
Range: 15 miles
weight: 30 tons
ammo: 30 AT rounds, 20 HE rounds. (with accompanying ammo carriers it can go up to 100 AT 80 HE)
Fuel: 300 gallons (2 miles per gallon)

facts
It is guarded by 5 infantry troops, and has a hatch that will lock if enemy troops try to capture the vehicle. It has tendencies to get stuck in mud because it is relatively light and doesn't ave the sufficient speed to exit mud. Its armor is thin and will not withstand blows from cannons or airstrikes. Its weapon has immense range and can do severe damage to structures, tanks, and especially infantry. It usually stays in formation with MBTs and radleys so it has protection from enemy tanks.

history
Its developnent was a long process because it was cited to have "too thin armor" and "not enough protection measures" but was finally accepted on the basis that its always stayed with an MBT for protection. When it was first used bombarding the Krovx Belgium troops in the 5 mile war it excelled at smashing infantry with highly effective HE shells, and later it bombarded Plaugetopia in the Zenish-plaguo war with great efficiency. It was decided that it would receive an upgrade on its cannon bringing the former 150 mm to 170 mm.
The most currnt event was its use in the Zenish civil war where Stephanland-acland tried to invade the communist forces but were beaten back by these artillery units, only for nukes to be launched. It saw general bombardment use in the Zenish civil war tug 'o' war for the south and north, severely hindering progress with pinpoint bombardment.

1 unit costs 12 million xens to make.

st 66 linerunner

the st 66 is an assault tank meant to break lines, other tanks, and forts. its stats are...

top speed 45mph but 32 mph cross country.

32 feet long

12 feet wide

8 feet tall

4 gallons per operation hour

holds 55 cannon rounds

70 tons

3 crew (1 high speed autoloader takes 1 crew member away)

120 mm smooth bore firing a SABOT, HEAT or HESH round.

3 machine guns, one 50 calibre above hatch, and two 7.62 mm fired from inside.

150 horsepower turbine makes it a gas guzzler

tactical cruising range of 295 miles

uses a wide aray of sensoring equipment like a laser range finder, thermal imagery night sight, optical day sight, and digital ballistics computer, and a system o measure air pressure, tempature, etc..making the aim dead on. it uses reactive armor as a countermeasure to armor piercing rounds but usually uses upgraded chobham armor that is thickened in the rear, adding some weight. it can move reliably through mud, sand, swamp and shallow water, but can still get stuck if the crew is foolish. it has a policy that these are to be deployed in groups of at least 2 with infantry escort, to protect it from other infantry, but also has blowout compartments so if a shell hits the ammo compartment the tank will be safe unless it is hit again, where the blowout will protect the crew but the tank has a possibility of becoming a mission kill. it is invulnerable to most rpg weapons except for exceptionally powerful ones.

the armor is 700mm thick on front the hull, and the turret armor is 700 mm thick on the front, while the back turret armor is 400mm thick, the side turret armor is 350mm thick and the base hull armor 50 mm thick, the crew compartment is 70 mm thick and ammo storage is 100 mm thick. the back is still a weak point but it has significantly more protection there than the st45.

the armor is made of chobham, which is a composite made of a depleted uranium, titanium, ceramic, and nylon micromesh.

the tank is regarded as better than an abrams because of nifty cost savings from the colonies but also a special alloy used in the chobham that reduces weight so it maintains a good speed with thick armor and it costs 9 million xens to produce, the upped cost because of the advanced electronic systems, the jet turbine, autoloader, and special armor.


death falcon helicopter


The death falcon helicopter has 1 goal, to destroy and spy on the enemy. This helicopter is feared by all because of its sheer speed and lifting power. It carries a 20 mm cannon and a munitions launcher capable of firing missles, bullets, or whatever is deemed necessary. Its shorter rotors let it operate in urban areas and strange terrain. It has a supplement power system so in a critical moment it can boost to escape fire.

It has a scout version which is shown in the photo, but the attack version is slower but packs a bigger punch. The scout goes at max speed of 185 knots, and has a combat range of 135 nautical miles. The sleek looking design is for superior maneuverability, a fearure that is not lost in the attack version, speaking of which, has an additional rocket pod and gatling gun. It is meant to replace the aging sea Falcon helicopters. It costs 20 million xens per aircraft, and 30 million for an attack version.


s99 robot sniper rifle

The s99 robot sniper rifle is a heavy sniper that is only the military robots can fire because of its sheer power. It can kill anyone with one shot and can penetrate heavy armor and can stop some armored vehicles. This weapon is quite expensive but is very powerful as it can penetrate some armored vehicles, including a humvee. It is mainly used for robots because a human cannot handle the recoil of the massive 70 calibre bullet. It is also best used by robots because of its electronic system that makes the robot link up with it and take out targets with pinpoint accuracy. It is semiautomatic and can fire a bullet every second with a 6 round magazine. It makes use of exacto systems as well to make its accuracy a battlefield scourge, as most of the shots it takes find their marks.

KR 101


The Kalashnikov Rifle 101 is the new Southern Xenickese rifle, that was in development ever since the civil war.

Stats: It has a 7.62x39 mm bullet and superior penetration and stopping power compared to other rifles.
rate of fire: 750 rounds per minute
weight: 3.60 pounds
magazine capacity: of 30 rounds
Maximum range: 834 meters

description
The KR-101 also can have a suppressor, flashlight, scope (standard issue), laser sight, grenade launcher, and has detachable extendable stock. It was noted to have excellent accuracy it still does have mild but present recoil, mostly when going full auto. The rifle is known for its versatility, but while it is not as reliable as the AR-45 it is more accurate and can still work well in more extreme environments, but not as much as the 45. It is easily produced and requires fair skill and training to learn because of its reload difficulties and slight recoil but once you get used to it people have become masters at the weapon. It sclaes down the difficult to produce and absurd 8.62 mm bullet to a respectable and powerful 7.62. It is best used in plains and natural landscapes due to its long range and its accuracy but still does plenty of good in an urban environment.

The KR 101 is produced by Blue skies weaponry and was the winner of the 2 billion grant for the design. Its competitors were the Cascadian reich made AR 65 and the CorpCorp M2b2


rose pistol

the rose pistol is a powerful gun, with a 12.7 x 40 mm bullet and a mag size of 8, it is used as a backup gun but is still effective when attacking if used carefully. It is quite large but light and can be easily produced, the only thing to complain about for the gun is that it has a short range and is prone to jamming in humid temperatures. Its strengths are its versatility in urban situations and law enforcement, while being able to drop all unarmed hostiles at a medium range.


MQ-9b
The MQ-9 is a precision drone used for airstrikes and recon. It is mainly used for remote attacks and hits its target with pinpoint attacks and assassination missions. The drones are able to be used for up to 26 hours at a time, and can pack up to 8 missiles worth of firepower on hardpoints. The drones have a smaller version fit for recon and espionage uses, and able to airstrike without detection, with a smaller impact of course. The drone has high tech cameras for surveillance and targeting, and also for keeping an eye on friendly troops.
weaponry
6 Missiles
2 high res camera
1 gatling gun (optional)
stats
Speed: 350 mph
26 feet long
66 feet wingspan
12.5 feet tall

Read factbook


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winchester_Model_1200
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grumman_F-14_Tomcat
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M198_howitzer
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M578_light_recovery_vehicle
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bushmaster_M4-type_Carbine
https://fas.org/man/dod-101/sys/land/row/t62tank.htm
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U-5TS
https://wiki.warthunder.com/index.php?title=T-62
https://wiki.warthunder.com/U-5TS_(115_mm)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winchester_Model_1894
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winchester_Model_1892
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winchester_Model_1886

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