El nuevo diseño refleja la experiencia que las tropas rusas han adquirido durante la operación militar en Ucrania, según sostiene el presidente de Rostej, Serguéi Chémezov, en una entrevista con la prensa.
“Estamos trabajando en cooperación con los militares y estamos recibiendo sus comentarios”, señaló al presentar la nueva versión del rifle el viernes. “Podemos reaccionar rápidamente a las necesidades cambiantes [del ejército] e introducir cambios en el diseño, así como mejorar nuestros productos” refleja la página de los constructores.
De acuerdo con Chémezov, el nuevo modelo AK-12 adquirió “mejoras importantes” y es de manejo mucho más fácil y ergonómico. “El nuevo modelo se producirá en masa este año”, agregó.
El AK-12 de calibre 5,45 mm ha aumentado la precisión operativa y la densidad del fuego en comparación con las generaciones anteriores. También cuenta con varios rieles Picatinny para miras de armas y telémetros láser.
La revista Kaláshnikov detalló que en la versión mejorada del AK-12, llamada AK-12M1, el freno de boca-compensador fue sustituido por un apagallamas ranurado.
Otro de los cambios refiere al guardamanos. Según los expertos, ahora esta pieza es más duradera y menos propensa a recalentarse durante disparos intensos.
Además, los desarrolladores han reemplazado la mira frontal y la dioptría. La tercera versión de la dioptría para el AK-12 permitirá al tirador elegir entre tres configuraciones: disparo directo (principal), baja iluminación (agujero de gran diámetro) y 600 metros.
Asimismo, se sustituyó la culata telescópica del arma por una en forma de ‘L’: completamente polimérica con la capacidad de ajustar la longitud y la altura de la pestaña.
El arma es solo uno de los productos de una nueva familia del grupo Kaláshnikov, que también incluye el rifle de asalto AK-19 para cartuchos de 5,56×45 mm y la ametralladora PPK-20 de 9 mm de calibre.
El grupo produce fusiles de asalto AK-15 con calibre de 7,62 mm para el Ejército ruso y el AK-19 que usan los cartuchos de 5,56×45 mm para clientes internacionales.
For people wondering why KUSA has so many people interested in their rifles, it’s because they’re the only place in the U.S. making Russian 100 series AK copies. If you don’t know what 100 series AKs are, or even care, then move on to the other (dime a dozen) AK manufacturers stateside making 60+ year old AKM pattern rifles – nothing wrong with that design by the way, but AK-74Ms, AK-105s, 101s, 103, etc – these are just more interesting to me and KUSA is building them. Not even Palmetto is building as close to a real 100 series AK as KUSA is.
I bought a 103 folding stock and the rear trunnion rivets were literally falling out. One was lost in the grass the first time I shot it and the rest weren’t even peened in place. I’m lucky it wasn’t the front trunnion. Shameful display. I’ll only buy imports now, I’ve learned my lesson.
I know I’m preaching to the choir here but I need to vent out my frustrations, thanks ATF. Now that KP9 I always dreamed of buying might never happen. I fantasize about that pistol in my dreams at night, now that’s probably all it will be, a fantasy, as real as the other wet dreams
Just read some comments. Maybe the fantasy was too good to be true before the ruling
I own a KUSA side folder CFH and I love the gun but I got one of the earlier batches that clearly had better quality control and steel grade. They were worth the money at the start but not now with PSA offering GF5s that blow the KUSA quality out of the water at a fraction of the price. KUSA went downhill ever since they started focusing on quantity for contractors in Ukraine. Not to mention can only buy at an even more unreasonable markup from their dealers now the base guns are around 1500 for nothing fancy now 1200 is a pipe dream
Despite all the bad QC’s these days, I will say my KR103 I bought a year ago hasn’t had any issues and is one of my favorite AK’s. But I am skeptical with the initial releases in the “near” future and along with believing when the 101/105 will ACTUALLY release.
in short, ignored legitimate customer safety concerns on social media and in some instances, openly mocked and insulted customers. that was pretty odd.
They also have had a lot of QC issues they denied until it was impossible to ignore, and then only admitted the problem without offering any solution. What a pity!
Lawsuits from their suppliers have also been made public. They haven’t paid suppliers in over a year and are not in a good financial position. It doesn’t look very good.
Won’t be available for another for another 10 years
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Frank Waltz
posted on January 31, 2023
KUSA killed their own business by making terrible business decisions & failed to own up to their mistakes with transparency.
I like how even didn’t even mention who’s manufacturing the ammo for them. Clown show continues.
What sucks is most of us want to see them thrive but they continue to do themselves a disservice
when Stoner and Kalashnikov met, Mikhail Kalashnikov commented he’d be happy to supply our forces with his rifles at $130 per unit. Times change. I should have bought more of those $199 MAK90’s and $3 magazines at shows when I could.
El nuevo diseño refleja la experiencia que las tropas rusas han adquirido durante la operación militar en Ucrania, según sostiene el presidente de Rostej, Serguéi Chémezov, en una entrevista con la prensa.
“Estamos trabajando en cooperación con los militares y estamos recibiendo sus comentarios”, señaló al presentar la nueva versión del rifle el viernes. “Podemos reaccionar rápidamente a las necesidades cambiantes [del ejército] e introducir cambios en el diseño, así como mejorar nuestros productos” refleja la página de los constructores.
De acuerdo con Chémezov, el nuevo modelo AK-12 adquirió “mejoras importantes” y es de manejo mucho más fácil y ergonómico. “El nuevo modelo se producirá en masa este año”, agregó.
El AK-12 de calibre 5,45 mm ha aumentado la precisión operativa y la densidad del fuego en comparación con las generaciones anteriores. También cuenta con varios rieles Picatinny para miras de armas y telémetros láser.
La revista Kaláshnikov detalló que en la versión mejorada del AK-12, llamada AK-12M1, el freno de boca-compensador fue sustituido por un apagallamas ranurado.
Otro de los cambios refiere al guardamanos. Según los expertos, ahora esta pieza es más duradera y menos propensa a recalentarse durante disparos intensos.
Además, los desarrolladores han reemplazado la mira frontal y la dioptría. La tercera versión de la dioptría para el AK-12 permitirá al tirador elegir entre tres configuraciones: disparo directo (principal), baja iluminación (agujero de gran diámetro) y 600 metros.
Asimismo, se sustituyó la culata telescópica del arma por una en forma de ‘L’: completamente polimérica con la capacidad de ajustar la longitud y la altura de la pestaña.
El arma es solo uno de los productos de una nueva familia del grupo Kaláshnikov, que también incluye el rifle de asalto AK-19 para cartuchos de 5,56×45 mm y la ametralladora PPK-20 de 9 mm de calibre.
El grupo produce fusiles de asalto AK-15 con calibre de 7,62 mm para el Ejército ruso y el AK-19 que usan los cartuchos de 5,56×45 mm para clientes internacionales.
PrisioneroEnArgentina.com
Enero 31, 2023
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16 thoughts on “El nuevo Kaláshnikov ”
KUSA isn’t the only one building American made aks psa is actually top of the line rn and for 1200 you can get a psa ak fully tricked out
Get the AEK-971 upper receiver counter balance system going on those babies.
For people wondering why KUSA has so many people interested in their rifles, it’s because they’re the only place in the U.S. making Russian 100 series AK copies. If you don’t know what 100 series AKs are, or even care, then move on to the other (dime a dozen) AK manufacturers stateside making 60+ year old AKM pattern rifles – nothing wrong with that design by the way, but AK-74Ms, AK-105s, 101s, 103, etc – these are just more interesting to me and KUSA is building them. Not even Palmetto is building as close to a real 100 series AK as KUSA is.
Terrible máquina.
Me encantan las armas… lejos… lejos
I bought a 103 folding stock and the rear trunnion rivets were literally falling out. One was lost in the grass the first time I shot it and the rest weren’t even peened in place. I’m lucky it wasn’t the front trunnion. Shameful display. I’ll only buy imports now, I’ve learned my lesson.
I know I’m preaching to the choir here but I need to vent out my frustrations, thanks ATF. Now that KP9 I always dreamed of buying might never happen. I fantasize about that pistol in my dreams at night, now that’s probably all it will be, a fantasy, as real as the other wet dreams
Just read some comments. Maybe the fantasy was too good to be true before the ruling
I own a KUSA side folder CFH and I love the gun but I got one of the earlier batches that clearly had better quality control and steel grade. They were worth the money at the start but not now with PSA offering GF5s that blow the KUSA quality out of the water at a fraction of the price. KUSA went downhill ever since they started focusing on quantity for contractors in Ukraine. Not to mention can only buy at an even more unreasonable markup from their dealers now the base guns are around 1500 for nothing fancy now 1200 is a pipe dream
PSA AKs are way better
Despite all the bad QC’s these days, I will say my KR103 I bought a year ago hasn’t had any issues and is one of my favorite AK’s. But I am skeptical with the initial releases in the “near” future and along with believing when the 101/105 will ACTUALLY release.
What a shame that KUSA trashed their reputation. They had so much potential.
Wait what happened? I fell out of the loop…
in short, ignored legitimate customer safety concerns on social media and in some instances, openly mocked and insulted customers. that was pretty odd.
They also have had a lot of QC issues they denied until it was impossible to ignore, and then only admitted the problem without offering any solution. What a pity!
Lawsuits from their suppliers have also been made public. They haven’t paid suppliers in over a year and are not in a good financial position. It doesn’t look very good.
Won’t be available for another for another 10 years
KUSA killed their own business by making terrible business decisions & failed to own up to their mistakes with transparency.
I like how even didn’t even mention who’s manufacturing the ammo for them. Clown show continues.
What sucks is most of us want to see them thrive but they continue to do themselves a disservice
when Stoner and Kalashnikov met, Mikhail Kalashnikov commented he’d be happy to supply our forces with his rifles at $130 per unit. Times change. I should have bought more of those $199 MAK90’s and $3 magazines at shows when I could.