Arsenal AD
JSC Arsenal AD (Bulgarian: Арсенал АД) is a Bulgarian joint-stock company based in Kazanlak, engaged primarily in the manufacture of firearms and military equipment. It is Bulgaria's oldest arms supplier.
Type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Defense |
Founded | 1878 |
Headquarters | Kazanlak, Bulgaria |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Nikolai Ibushev (President) |
Products | Firearms Air defense equipment Artillery Munitions Explosives ED devices Industrial machinery |
€ 51,300,000 (2008)[1] | |
Number of employees | 7,000[2] (2010) |
Website | arsenal-bg.com |
History
The company's history can be traced back to 1878 with the first armory in the country - the Ruse Artillery Arsenal. Due to strategic concerns it was relocated in Sofia in 1891. After the nation's defeat in the Second Balkan War and World War I, in 1924 the company and all of its equipment were relocated in Kazanlak, a town situated in central Bulgaria. The armory was given the name Darzhavna voenna fabrika ("State Military Factory").
Initially producing only artillery gun components and ammunition, the factory later began to manufacture gas masks (1920s), nitroglycerin (1930s), machine tools (1940s) and finally assault rifles, optic sights and B-10 recoilless rifles (1950s). The first assault rifle, a direct copy of the Soviet AK-47, was produced in 1958. By the 1960s a total of seven factories were under the company's jurisdiction. Until the Fall of Communism in 1989-1990, the company was named Mashinostroitelen kombinat Fridrikh Engels ("Friedrich Engels Machinery Works") to conceal its activities as a military enterprise. As part of this strategy it adopted the manufacture of various civilian products, including automobiles such as the then-popular Bulgarrenault-8. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Arsenal began cooperation with companies from Japan, Sweden, Ukraine and Germany.
Currently Arsenal AD is a private company conducting international arms trade, although it also expands its civilian exports, now including high-precision metalworking machinery, mobile robot manipulators and synthetic diamonds.
Military production
Submachine guns
Assault rifles
- AR-M1 / AR-M1F - improved AK-47 copy with an AK-74 front sight base, flash suppressor, black polymer stock set, luminous spots on the iron sights and a rail for mounting optics. The -F model features a folding stock. Chambered in 5.56×45mm NATO and 7.62×39mm.
- AR-M2 / AR-M2F - improved AK-47 copy like the AR-M1/AR-M1F, but with a shortened barrel, AKS-74U front sight base and muzzle booster/flash suppressor hybrid.
- AR-M4SF - extremely short development of the AKS-74 with red dot sight, provision to mount a night vision or laser sight. Chambered in 5.56×45mm NATO and 7.62×39mm.
- AR-M7F - improved AK-47 copy like the AR-M1, but with an AK-101-style folding stock.
- AR-M9 / AR-M9F - improved AK-47 copy like the AR-M1/AR-M1F, features a thumb-operable fire selector and a different style polymer stock set. AR-M9F uses a NATO length right side folding tubular stock. Unlike most AK folding variants that have left side folding stocks. The advantages a right side folder has over a left allows the optic mount to remain on the weapon when folded. Instead of having to remove the optic mount to latch the stock. The AR-M9F can still be fired from a folded position as the reciprocating charging handle clears the stock. The selector lever can also still be used since the left side incorporates the thumb selector lever on left side of grip. AR-M9F civilian base rifle counterpart in semiautomatic is the SAM7SF-84.
- AR-1 / AR-1F - improved AK-47 copies with black polymer lining and luminous sights.
- AR-SF - based on AKS-74U with laser aim indicator. Chambered in 5.56×45mm NATO and 7.62×39mm.
Machine guns
- LMG/LMG-F - RPK copies in 7.62×39mm, 5.45×39mm or 5.56×45mm NATO chambering
- Arsenal MG series - different versions of the PK machine gun, all with polymer lining and slightly higher muzzle velocity;
Grenade launchers
- Lavina - 40mm semi-automatic revolver-type grenade launcher;[3]
- Arsenal MSGL - 40×46mm multi-shot grenade launcher; somewhat similar to the Milkor MGL
- UBGL series - underbarrel grenade launchers for all AR and AK series of assault rifles, the Bushmaster M4 Type Carbine, M4 carbine and M16 rifles
- ATGL-L - a lighter RPG-7 version with a more powerful warhead and a red dot sight;
- ATGL-H - a heavier SPG-9 copy with a higher muzzle velocity;
- AGL-30M - a heavier, more durable copy of the AGS-17 Plamya
Artillery and AA guns
- M6-210 - 60mm mortar
- M8 - 81mm mortar
- M82 - 82mm mortar
- ADS - a ZU-23-2 copy with advanced sights and a computerised fire control system
Other firearms and products
- BARR series - bolt-action hunting rifles, based on AK series;
- SAR series - semi-automatic hunting rifles
- HE-FRAG and flash bang grenades
Munitions
- Bullets and shells of all calibres and sorts;
- S-5 rockets
Other products
- Computer Numerical Control (CNC) equipment
- Cemented Carbide Inserts
- Cemented Carbide Tips
- Cemented Carbide Special Tools
- Hunting Powders "Sokol", "Mars", "Magia"
- Nitrocellulose for Lacquer Production
- Nitrocellulose for Dynamite Production
See also
- TEREM, another Bulgarian arms manufacturing company
- Mars Armor Ltd, a Bulgarian ballistic protection manufacturing company
- Defense industry of Bulgaria
References
- Златната кокошка “Арсенал” Archived July 21, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, Monitor, 21.11.2008
- „Арсенал” АД отбеляза 132 години от създаването на първото предприятие в отбранителната промишленост у нас , Stara-Zagora.org
- http://world.guns.ru/grenade/bg/lavina-e.html
External links
- Official website
- History of Arsenal AD
- Arsenal, Inc. (US importer)
- Blue Book Publication: ARSENAL, BULGARIA companyinformation (archiveversion)