Kk 62 (Light machine gun)

Vartuoosi

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Kk 62 (Konekivääri 62) also known as KvKk 62 (Kevyt Konekivääri 62)
kvkk62.jpg
KvKK-62.jpg
The Kk 62 is a gas-operated, belt-fed automatic weapon. It uses a tilting bolt, that locks into the roof of the receiver, and the overall system of operation is modeled on that found in the Czech vz. 52 machine gun. The Kk 62's receiver is machined from steel, and a tubular metal buttstock houses the recoil spring. The Kk 62 is fed from the right-hand side, from 100-round belts that are carried in pouches that clamp onto the receiver wall. The Kk 62 has no quick-change barrel, which is a serious drawback when sustained firepower is required; the original usage doctrine was based on agile hit-and-run tactics rather than suppressive fire from a strong position. The cleaning rod is attached to right side of the butt and receiver. A side-folding carrying handle is provided in front of the feeding mechanism. The Kk 62 is also equipped with a folding bipod.
The KK 62 uses the intermediate Soviet 7.62x39mm M43 cartridge, which can be interchanged with any FDF standard assault rifles (from Rk 62 to Rk 95 TP). The major drawbacks are the lack of a quick-changeable barrel and sensitivity to dirt and humidity—the KK 62 requires much more care in a combat environment than most FDF assault rifles.

Service history​
In service 1962–present
Used by Finnish Defence Forces
Production history​
Designer Valmet
Designed 1950s
Manufacturer Valmet
Specifications​
Weight 8.5 kg (18.74 lb)
Length 1,085 mm (42.7 in)
Barrel length 470 mm (18.5 in)
Cartridge 7.62x39mm
Action Gas-operated, tilting breechblock
Rate of fire 1,000–1,100 rounds/min
Feed system 100-round belt in detachable cloth container
Sights Iron sights
 
This MG is being replaced in frontline service by the Russian PKM and has been issued mainly to reserve units and second line troops(like artillery).

Personally I don't like this gun much. Mainly due to really bad ergonomics.It's hard to use from any other than the prone position(you can't support the gun for example in a kneeling position from the gun's underside because it ejects the shell casings directly below and the carrying handle is just useless) and reloading this thing is really awkward(the pistol grip doubles as a charging handle).
I served in the battery's guard team and had the battery's only LMG assigned to me which was a KvKk 62.
 
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