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I just deleted the mention of hydrostatic shock in the section describing wounding potential, as hydrostatic shock has been thoroughly discredited as a mechanism for causing injury in gunshot wounds. Sbard 00:23, 1 March 2006 (UTC)
My understanding is that there's a significant debate as to the parentage and development of the cartridge design. That is, there's a tendency for Russian Historians to deny that the 7.92x33mm has much influence in the design, but there's evidence that earlier pre-war german developements like the GeCo round were used as inspiration. So, I'm editing this part of the article slightly, and perhaps an entire section on developement should be added.
WHO WROTE THIS? its mostly IGNORENT NONSENSE! so is the M67 tomb below. bookwormizm by someone who obviously has never handled , used or deeply studied the items in question.
(copied from an edit by a user at 64.85.128.209 that placed this inside the section: "An Imperfect Design: M43". -- Mike Wilson 01:34, 24 December 2005 (UTC))
The Yugoslavian M-67 round is flat based and has no air pocket in the nose. Its yawing properties are a function of its center of gravity and ogive shape. The last paragraph is totally unrelated to the M-67. If you wish to discuss other 7.62x39 loads, start as seperate section for miscellaneous loads. 69.241.40.207 03:30, 4 March 2007 (UTC)
This article isn't well written at all. Anyway, I deleted part about it being as powerful as a .30-30. Although it does have somewhat similar ballistics (Nothing to brag about) to the .30-30, it doesn't do near as much damage, due to bullet size and the type of bullets a .30-30 usually employs. Think of throwing two baseballs at the same speed, but one happens to be heavier and hurts more.
Given that an SKS is about the same size, weight, and power as a Winchester or Marlin lever action in .30-30, and the SKS is quite a bit cheaper, it has certainly cut into the .30-30's domain as the cheap deer rifle of choice. scot 20:29, 5 June 2006 (UTC)
I still don't believe it has, and it is certainly erroneous- given your own infromation, and it is generally discouraged to use on deer, especially where I live. It is a poor performing round, and I have yet to find a person who considers it .30-30 comparable. Those 200 fps or 20 gr of bullet do a lot, but the most important bit is the flat tips you see most often in lever guns. You say that it is cutting into the .30-30's domain? It has done nothing of the sort. I suggest you take some milk jugs out, or deer, and see what the difference is.
I won't change it, but personal experience tells me that you are incorrect, particularly with the shoddy loads that you find in Wolf ammo. Winchester ammo has always been finicky in my SKS, and Remington isn't much better. Wolf is flawless, but I've only used it on groundhogs.
'The cartridge was influenced by the late-war German 7.92 mm Kurzdge]] was designed ("Kurz" meaning "short" in German)' this isn't the full truth, the soviets started research on a shorter cartridge in the 1930's; for more info read John Walter's The Evolution of the AK Machine Pistols and Machine Guns from 1945 to Present. Macerator 18:07, 13 August 2006 (UTC)
In the Specifications section, the muzzle velocity of the 7.62mm bullet is mentioned as being 710 m/s... doesn't the muzzle velocity of the bullet depend on the weapon that fires it? -- Ravenstorm 20:03, 1 October 2006 (UTC)
I noticed this morning that the muzzle kinetic energy of the 7.62 rounds were improperly calculated so I updated them using the usual formula 1/2 * mass * velocity^2 with the given mass and velocity on the page. These data could be inaccurate of course, but the site should at least be self-consistent. User:SCIENCEftw 10:37, 24 November 2010 (PST) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.16.109.253 ( talk)
i added the wrongtitle template because the article uses x and not ×. one is a letter and the other is a multiplication sign (which is correct) -- 80.63.213.182 21:28, 5 November 2006 (UTC)
As per the general consensus from the team at Wikiproject: Military History, it would seem that this article really ought to be named "7.62x39", with no spaces- It's even referred to thusly in the body of the article! I thought I'd give people a chance to comment before arbitrarily changing the title, however. -- Commander Zulu 07:03, 26 November 2006 (UTC)
Sure, but I did a search for simply "7.62x39" and got this page. But no, there is not suppose to be any spaces. And to be even further correct, you could use proper european metric notation: "7,62x39mm"--using the comma instead of a decimal. This notation appears on many brands of ammo, including, but not limited to Sellier&Bellot. 209.114.201.30 20:47, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
I've never seen boxes of this calibre ammo using the comma, and even if some manufacturers do (S&B are based in the Czech Republic, IIRC), standard English usage is for the decimal point... -- Commander Zulu 11:02, 10 December 2006 (UTC)
I have a box of S&B 7.62x54R ammo that uses the comma instead of the decimal. If I had the capability to scan it, I would. I will try to find an internet source for this. 209.114.201.30 12:35, 13 December 2006 (UTC)
I found it, nevertheless on S&B's website (www.sellier-bellot.cz). Here is a picture: http://www.sellier-bellot.cz/img/boxes/sb33225-kd.jpg (this picture is property of sellier&bellot). I knew I was not mistaken. :) 209.114.201.30 12:40, 13 December 2006 (UTC)
Fair enough- but my point still stands. S&B are a Czech company, and I've never seen Remington, Winchester, PMC, Federal, or even Norinco ammo with "7,62x39" on it. I'm pretty sure the consensus is that, on the English Language Wikipedia, we use English naming conventions- which means decimal points, not commas, in numbers.-- Commander Zulu 00:25, 14 December 2006 (UTC)
Oh, don't get me wrong, I agree with that. I felt perhaps it was worth mentioning that some packaging used the "7,62" notation merely as a factoid. I agree that with the English Wikipedia we should use SAE notation as the norm. JasonM45 15:56, 15 December 2006 (UTC)
Just been through the article, standardising its English, cartridge names, etc, and adding fact tags. This article needs a lot of citations from some good sources, because we have mostly decent info in the article (e.g. mild steel being used because it's cheap rather than its supposed armour-piercing capabilities) but no sources to back it up. Geoff B 17:49, 18 March 2007 (UTC)
A rifle bullet is not going to drop below the sight picture at a range shorter than the sight is adjusted to unless it is at point-blank range, in which case the effect is caused by sight offset. Unlike many modern Western designs, this is something AK-pattern guns have little of. This is claimed in the M43 section. Soviet soldiers were probably trained to aim low because infantrymen have a tendency to shoot high and waste ammo. Kensai Max 19:36, 26 March 2007 (UTC)
European and Soviet bloc catridges such as the 7.62x39mm, 7.62x54R, and .303 British use a .310 or so bullet diameter, while US cartridges a .308 bullet diameter in 7.62x51mm. Should this be mentioned in the article? I can probably find a source for this in a reloading manual. scot 02:53, 8 June 2007 (UTC)
the diameter is 0.311, which any good reloading book will tell you (e.g. lyman 49th edition p.242, hornady 8th edition p.597) — Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.231.42.19 ( talk) 07:47, 24 January 2012 (UTC)
The cite tags have been on this article for months now over the lethality of the cartrige. Can someone prove or disprove the claims? IIRC Fackler's studies claiming a low damage potential from the round have been refuted by decades of combat usage showing that it is highly effective. There's gotta be sources out there for this. Kensai Max 16:41, 18 October 2007 (UTC)
Subjective claim at best. Fackler claims damage potential approximately equal to 9x19mm Parabellum ball rounds UNLESS a bone (or other inelastic organ) is struck. Survival rates of people actually shot with these two rounds in the United States (even at extremely short ranges), as compared to being shot with other cartridges bears out his basic assertion. By contrast, short range hits with M193 and M855 5.56x45mm ball do more tissue damage, with lower survival rates.
Analysis of combat wounds suffered by US servicemen with 7.62x39mm, 5.56x45mm, 7.62x51mm, and 7.62x54mmR rounds indicate that the 7.62x39mm generally produces the least damaging, most surviveable, most easily healed wounds of the group. The round doesn't normally fragment like the 5.56, it doesn't have the raw horsepower (including weight and length of bullet) of the 7.62x54mmR and 7.62x51mm rounds, and it isn't a particularly fast tumbler -- it tends to produce relatively minor (compared to other combat rifle rounds. . . ANY gunshot wound sucks and can be lethal) through and through wounds when it hits soft tissue.
Don't have the references in front of me right now, but I seem to recall that Fackler actually references the Real World (as opposed to sticking purely with Jello Warrior results) statistics on various caliber hits.
Geodkyt ( talk) 16:57, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
Under the hunting section, we might want to mention the Mini-30 as it was introduced for the specific market. 68.116.99.152 ( talk) 18:13, 27 December 2007 (UTC)
Its mentioned in the latter part of the article that this calibre has "minimal recoil" and that this is one of the reasons for popularity, but really having shot lots with this calibre, i wouldnt call the recoil minimal, especially if compared to 5,56 nato weapons, which actually have "minimal" or nonexistant recoil compared to 7,62x39 weapons which actually do have a recoil. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 84.231.217.247 ( talk) 17:47, 19 September 2008 (UTC)
Since I'm completey unsophisticated at wiki editing, could somebody add that: Sturm-Ruger made a limited run of bolt action hunting rifles for this cartridge. CZ (Ceska Zbrojovka) markets their CZ 527 carbine chambered for 7.62x39. Remington imports Zastava's mini Mauser as the Model 799 Bolt action rifle chambered for this cartridge.
References: http://www.303british.com/id47.html http://www.cz-usa.com/product_detail.php?id=15
I would like to add that actual field test(anecdotal)with a 98K Mauser rifle barrel in this caliber has made this my favorite deer rifle. I have taken hog and deer up to 200lb with it. A oblique shot entering below the last full rib completely liquefied the cardiac muscle of a hog. We use strictly HP bullets due to hunting regulations and have found it will even take dangerous game such at 10' plus alligators. Shooting on a range with a bolt action rifle has demonstrated to me that consistent shots are possible out to 300 yd. past this the bullet goes sub-sonic and its trajectory is greatly influenced by environmental factors. As a responsible hunter I would not attempt a shot under 150 yd. with this cartridge. I believe such a shot does not guaranty a clean kill. 209.251.128.98 ( talk) 16:31, 11 January 2010 (UTC)
Though 7,62mm had been changed to 5,45mm, russian soldiers prefer to use 7,62mm automats in action, if they can, due to bigger ability of 7,62mm bullets. Military experts explain it by poor characteristics of 7H6 5,45mm cartridges, while new 7H10 cartridges doesn't arrive in army. Ходок ( talk) 16:34, 20 February 2010 (UTC)
I'm going to attempt to change some of the wording to improve the grammar of the article. My goal is to improve the readability of the piece and not take any of the content away. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Jill Orly ( talk • contribs) 01:52, 9 October 2010 (UTC)
The result of the move request was: page moved. Macr86 ( talk) 02:15, 16 January 2011 (UTC)
7.62x39mm → Ammo (RPD machine gun) — Article name refers to an unknown , not a common term and , lacks notability. Article name fails "Recognizability" , " Specific-topic naming conventions " and does not respect wp:UCN#Common_names and Wp:UCN#Deciding_on_an_article_title -Paul 19:28, 8 January 2011 (UTC)
The result of the move request was: page moved. Early close under WP:SNOW. The rename this reverses is ridiculous. Andrewa ( talk) 21:12, 16 January 2011 (UTC)
Ammo (RPD machine gun) →
7.62x39mm — Move discussion was closed and page was moved by an inexperienced editor. There was no consensus for a move and in fact the only !vote in the discussion was opposed to a move.
Srleffler (
talk) 14:20, 16 January 2011 (UTC)
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can sombody put a list of firearms that use the 7.62x39mm round at the bottom. Something similar to the list on the 7.62x54mmR page. I'm compileing a list of military firearms and common ammunition for a quick refrence and this would be extremly helpfull. thank you — Preceding unsigned comment added by Macaque21 ( talk • contribs) 13:49, 20 September 2011 (UTC)
"Other names for 7.62×39mm
On some occasions, this ammunition is referred to as 7.62 mm Soviet, 7.62 mm Warsaw Pact (or WP) being analogous to 5.56 NATO, or 7.62 mm ComBloc. It was also known in the United States as .30 Short Russian/ComBloc; the "Short" was to distinguish it from the older .30 Russian, which was the 7.62x54mmR.[citation needed]"
I routinely hear people referring to 7.62x39mm ammo simply as “SKS ammo”, “AK ammo” and “AK-47 ammo”. I have even seen boxes of ammo marked as “AK47 rifle ammo” [1]. I have never heard anyone call it 7.62mm Warsaw Pack, 7.62mm WP, 7.62mm ComBloc or .30 Short Russaian/ComBloc. I recommend that we rewrite this section as follows…
The 7.62x39mm ammo is also commonly referred to as "SKS ammo", "AK ammo" and "AK-47 ammo" It is also sometimes referred to as "7.62mm Russian" or "7.62mm Soviet". — Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.22.156.40 ( talk) 17:56, 17 May 2012 (UTC)
Hey,the diameter of bullet is written as 7.92 mm instead of 7.62mm please make this change..it must be 7.62mm..as the dimension suggests
Siddhesh201038 ( talk) 19:14, 20 May 2016 (UTC)
The absolute diameter of the projectile is closer to 7.92mm. The cartridge designation "7.62x39mm," as is true with nearly every other cartridge (see:
.38 Special), is nominal and rarely represents the absolute diameter of the projectile
63.234.214.254 (
talk) 16:12, 21 November 2016 (UTC)
Under "Hunting and sport use," it is claimed that AR-pattern rifles chambered in 7.62x39 are more accurate than Kalashnikov-pattern rifles in the same cartridge. This claim is not backed up by a later citation mentioning the differing components in such an AR-pattern rifle. 63.234.214.254 ( talk) 16:09, 21 November 2016 (UTC)
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The illustration showing cartridge dimensions in the article lists the bullet diameter as 7.92mm/.312", which, because of that, is repeatedly added to the infobox, but the illustration isn't an official CIP/SAAMI illustration of official CIP/SAAMI dimensions, but user generated (by a WP editor in 2008). And that editor got it wrong. According to Guns & Ammo the official SAAMI bullet diameter is .308"-.310" (".310 minus .002"), and various European sources list the official "type aproved" bullet diameter as 7.85mm (.309"), i.e. squarely in SAAMI territory. The actual bore diameter, measured between the grooves, various wildly between rifle manufacturers, from .308" up to .312" or more, and the recommended bullet diameter in reloading manuals also varies from .308" (like U.S. calibers) to .312" (like .303 British), but we should stick to what the official diameter is. - Tom | Thomas.W talk 12:47, 24 January 2019 (UTC)
I read a lengthy document in Russian (google translated to English)that contradicts many dates on the Wikipedia page. It states in 1944 the 7.62x41 went into mass production. In 1947, the 7.62-mm automatic cartridge was upgraded at the Ulyanovsk Machine Building Plant: the sleeve was shortened to 38.7 mm. The document states it wasn't until 1947-1948 coinciding with the release of the AK-47 that the shorted case of 39mm (7.62x39) was produced. The production date of the 7.62x39 is different than the 7.62x41 and this was updated to the correct date. Furthermore both the "intermediate" 7.62x41 and the "automatic" 7.62x39 were designed in 1943 (which should also be updated from 1944). samples were submitted for mass production in 1943 and it was the 7.62x41 that was produced first. I think it is important to get this information right. article link below. Chapter 3, 6 and 7 are the important chapters.
currently stated Designed 1944 Produced 1944–present Revised Designed 1943 Produced 1947–present
After more detailed testing results became available, starting in 1944 the cartridge was tweaked in order to improve its accuracy and penetration After more detailed testing results became available, starting in 1947 the cartridge was tweaked by The Ulyanovsk Machine Building Plant in order to improve its accuracy and penetration
added to the History The 7.62×39 cartridge equipped with the PS bullet finally overcame all objections of the GAU in mid-1947, when it was ordered into series production, and given the index 57-N-231S. The 7.62×39 cartridge equipped with the PS bullet finally overcame all objections of the GAU in mid-1947, when it was ordered into series production, and given the index 57-N-231S.[7] Field tests of the round & new prototype AK-47 were carried out at the NIPSVO from December 16, 1947 to January 11, 1948.
The Brass Forest ( talk) 03:41, 25 February 2019 (UTC)Joe 2/24/19
Here are some varieties of cartridges with brief descriptions. Maybe somehow cite it in an article?-- 188.66.34.192 ( talk) 17:58, 2 January 2022 (UTC)
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I just deleted the mention of hydrostatic shock in the section describing wounding potential, as hydrostatic shock has been thoroughly discredited as a mechanism for causing injury in gunshot wounds. Sbard 00:23, 1 March 2006 (UTC)
My understanding is that there's a significant debate as to the parentage and development of the cartridge design. That is, there's a tendency for Russian Historians to deny that the 7.92x33mm has much influence in the design, but there's evidence that earlier pre-war german developements like the GeCo round were used as inspiration. So, I'm editing this part of the article slightly, and perhaps an entire section on developement should be added.
WHO WROTE THIS? its mostly IGNORENT NONSENSE! so is the M67 tomb below. bookwormizm by someone who obviously has never handled , used or deeply studied the items in question.
(copied from an edit by a user at 64.85.128.209 that placed this inside the section: "An Imperfect Design: M43". -- Mike Wilson 01:34, 24 December 2005 (UTC))
The Yugoslavian M-67 round is flat based and has no air pocket in the nose. Its yawing properties are a function of its center of gravity and ogive shape. The last paragraph is totally unrelated to the M-67. If you wish to discuss other 7.62x39 loads, start as seperate section for miscellaneous loads. 69.241.40.207 03:30, 4 March 2007 (UTC)
This article isn't well written at all. Anyway, I deleted part about it being as powerful as a .30-30. Although it does have somewhat similar ballistics (Nothing to brag about) to the .30-30, it doesn't do near as much damage, due to bullet size and the type of bullets a .30-30 usually employs. Think of throwing two baseballs at the same speed, but one happens to be heavier and hurts more.
Given that an SKS is about the same size, weight, and power as a Winchester or Marlin lever action in .30-30, and the SKS is quite a bit cheaper, it has certainly cut into the .30-30's domain as the cheap deer rifle of choice. scot 20:29, 5 June 2006 (UTC)
I still don't believe it has, and it is certainly erroneous- given your own infromation, and it is generally discouraged to use on deer, especially where I live. It is a poor performing round, and I have yet to find a person who considers it .30-30 comparable. Those 200 fps or 20 gr of bullet do a lot, but the most important bit is the flat tips you see most often in lever guns. You say that it is cutting into the .30-30's domain? It has done nothing of the sort. I suggest you take some milk jugs out, or deer, and see what the difference is.
I won't change it, but personal experience tells me that you are incorrect, particularly with the shoddy loads that you find in Wolf ammo. Winchester ammo has always been finicky in my SKS, and Remington isn't much better. Wolf is flawless, but I've only used it on groundhogs.
'The cartridge was influenced by the late-war German 7.92 mm Kurzdge]] was designed ("Kurz" meaning "short" in German)' this isn't the full truth, the soviets started research on a shorter cartridge in the 1930's; for more info read John Walter's The Evolution of the AK Machine Pistols and Machine Guns from 1945 to Present. Macerator 18:07, 13 August 2006 (UTC)
In the Specifications section, the muzzle velocity of the 7.62mm bullet is mentioned as being 710 m/s... doesn't the muzzle velocity of the bullet depend on the weapon that fires it? -- Ravenstorm 20:03, 1 October 2006 (UTC)
I noticed this morning that the muzzle kinetic energy of the 7.62 rounds were improperly calculated so I updated them using the usual formula 1/2 * mass * velocity^2 with the given mass and velocity on the page. These data could be inaccurate of course, but the site should at least be self-consistent. User:SCIENCEftw 10:37, 24 November 2010 (PST) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.16.109.253 ( talk)
i added the wrongtitle template because the article uses x and not ×. one is a letter and the other is a multiplication sign (which is correct) -- 80.63.213.182 21:28, 5 November 2006 (UTC)
As per the general consensus from the team at Wikiproject: Military History, it would seem that this article really ought to be named "7.62x39", with no spaces- It's even referred to thusly in the body of the article! I thought I'd give people a chance to comment before arbitrarily changing the title, however. -- Commander Zulu 07:03, 26 November 2006 (UTC)
Sure, but I did a search for simply "7.62x39" and got this page. But no, there is not suppose to be any spaces. And to be even further correct, you could use proper european metric notation: "7,62x39mm"--using the comma instead of a decimal. This notation appears on many brands of ammo, including, but not limited to Sellier&Bellot. 209.114.201.30 20:47, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
I've never seen boxes of this calibre ammo using the comma, and even if some manufacturers do (S&B are based in the Czech Republic, IIRC), standard English usage is for the decimal point... -- Commander Zulu 11:02, 10 December 2006 (UTC)
I have a box of S&B 7.62x54R ammo that uses the comma instead of the decimal. If I had the capability to scan it, I would. I will try to find an internet source for this. 209.114.201.30 12:35, 13 December 2006 (UTC)
I found it, nevertheless on S&B's website (www.sellier-bellot.cz). Here is a picture: http://www.sellier-bellot.cz/img/boxes/sb33225-kd.jpg (this picture is property of sellier&bellot). I knew I was not mistaken. :) 209.114.201.30 12:40, 13 December 2006 (UTC)
Fair enough- but my point still stands. S&B are a Czech company, and I've never seen Remington, Winchester, PMC, Federal, or even Norinco ammo with "7,62x39" on it. I'm pretty sure the consensus is that, on the English Language Wikipedia, we use English naming conventions- which means decimal points, not commas, in numbers.-- Commander Zulu 00:25, 14 December 2006 (UTC)
Oh, don't get me wrong, I agree with that. I felt perhaps it was worth mentioning that some packaging used the "7,62" notation merely as a factoid. I agree that with the English Wikipedia we should use SAE notation as the norm. JasonM45 15:56, 15 December 2006 (UTC)
Just been through the article, standardising its English, cartridge names, etc, and adding fact tags. This article needs a lot of citations from some good sources, because we have mostly decent info in the article (e.g. mild steel being used because it's cheap rather than its supposed armour-piercing capabilities) but no sources to back it up. Geoff B 17:49, 18 March 2007 (UTC)
A rifle bullet is not going to drop below the sight picture at a range shorter than the sight is adjusted to unless it is at point-blank range, in which case the effect is caused by sight offset. Unlike many modern Western designs, this is something AK-pattern guns have little of. This is claimed in the M43 section. Soviet soldiers were probably trained to aim low because infantrymen have a tendency to shoot high and waste ammo. Kensai Max 19:36, 26 March 2007 (UTC)
European and Soviet bloc catridges such as the 7.62x39mm, 7.62x54R, and .303 British use a .310 or so bullet diameter, while US cartridges a .308 bullet diameter in 7.62x51mm. Should this be mentioned in the article? I can probably find a source for this in a reloading manual. scot 02:53, 8 June 2007 (UTC)
the diameter is 0.311, which any good reloading book will tell you (e.g. lyman 49th edition p.242, hornady 8th edition p.597) — Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.231.42.19 ( talk) 07:47, 24 January 2012 (UTC)
The cite tags have been on this article for months now over the lethality of the cartrige. Can someone prove or disprove the claims? IIRC Fackler's studies claiming a low damage potential from the round have been refuted by decades of combat usage showing that it is highly effective. There's gotta be sources out there for this. Kensai Max 16:41, 18 October 2007 (UTC)
Subjective claim at best. Fackler claims damage potential approximately equal to 9x19mm Parabellum ball rounds UNLESS a bone (or other inelastic organ) is struck. Survival rates of people actually shot with these two rounds in the United States (even at extremely short ranges), as compared to being shot with other cartridges bears out his basic assertion. By contrast, short range hits with M193 and M855 5.56x45mm ball do more tissue damage, with lower survival rates.
Analysis of combat wounds suffered by US servicemen with 7.62x39mm, 5.56x45mm, 7.62x51mm, and 7.62x54mmR rounds indicate that the 7.62x39mm generally produces the least damaging, most surviveable, most easily healed wounds of the group. The round doesn't normally fragment like the 5.56, it doesn't have the raw horsepower (including weight and length of bullet) of the 7.62x54mmR and 7.62x51mm rounds, and it isn't a particularly fast tumbler -- it tends to produce relatively minor (compared to other combat rifle rounds. . . ANY gunshot wound sucks and can be lethal) through and through wounds when it hits soft tissue.
Don't have the references in front of me right now, but I seem to recall that Fackler actually references the Real World (as opposed to sticking purely with Jello Warrior results) statistics on various caliber hits.
Geodkyt ( talk) 16:57, 17 September 2008 (UTC)
Under the hunting section, we might want to mention the Mini-30 as it was introduced for the specific market. 68.116.99.152 ( talk) 18:13, 27 December 2007 (UTC)
Its mentioned in the latter part of the article that this calibre has "minimal recoil" and that this is one of the reasons for popularity, but really having shot lots with this calibre, i wouldnt call the recoil minimal, especially if compared to 5,56 nato weapons, which actually have "minimal" or nonexistant recoil compared to 7,62x39 weapons which actually do have a recoil. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 84.231.217.247 ( talk) 17:47, 19 September 2008 (UTC)
Since I'm completey unsophisticated at wiki editing, could somebody add that: Sturm-Ruger made a limited run of bolt action hunting rifles for this cartridge. CZ (Ceska Zbrojovka) markets their CZ 527 carbine chambered for 7.62x39. Remington imports Zastava's mini Mauser as the Model 799 Bolt action rifle chambered for this cartridge.
References: http://www.303british.com/id47.html http://www.cz-usa.com/product_detail.php?id=15
I would like to add that actual field test(anecdotal)with a 98K Mauser rifle barrel in this caliber has made this my favorite deer rifle. I have taken hog and deer up to 200lb with it. A oblique shot entering below the last full rib completely liquefied the cardiac muscle of a hog. We use strictly HP bullets due to hunting regulations and have found it will even take dangerous game such at 10' plus alligators. Shooting on a range with a bolt action rifle has demonstrated to me that consistent shots are possible out to 300 yd. past this the bullet goes sub-sonic and its trajectory is greatly influenced by environmental factors. As a responsible hunter I would not attempt a shot under 150 yd. with this cartridge. I believe such a shot does not guaranty a clean kill. 209.251.128.98 ( talk) 16:31, 11 January 2010 (UTC)
Though 7,62mm had been changed to 5,45mm, russian soldiers prefer to use 7,62mm automats in action, if they can, due to bigger ability of 7,62mm bullets. Military experts explain it by poor characteristics of 7H6 5,45mm cartridges, while new 7H10 cartridges doesn't arrive in army. Ходок ( talk) 16:34, 20 February 2010 (UTC)
I'm going to attempt to change some of the wording to improve the grammar of the article. My goal is to improve the readability of the piece and not take any of the content away. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Jill Orly ( talk • contribs) 01:52, 9 October 2010 (UTC)
The result of the move request was: page moved. Macr86 ( talk) 02:15, 16 January 2011 (UTC)
7.62x39mm → Ammo (RPD machine gun) — Article name refers to an unknown , not a common term and , lacks notability. Article name fails "Recognizability" , " Specific-topic naming conventions " and does not respect wp:UCN#Common_names and Wp:UCN#Deciding_on_an_article_title -Paul 19:28, 8 January 2011 (UTC)
The result of the move request was: page moved. Early close under WP:SNOW. The rename this reverses is ridiculous. Andrewa ( talk) 21:12, 16 January 2011 (UTC)
Ammo (RPD machine gun) →
7.62x39mm — Move discussion was closed and page was moved by an inexperienced editor. There was no consensus for a move and in fact the only !vote in the discussion was opposed to a move.
Srleffler (
talk) 14:20, 16 January 2011 (UTC)
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-- JeffGBot ( talk) 20:59, 19 June 2011 (UTC)
can sombody put a list of firearms that use the 7.62x39mm round at the bottom. Something similar to the list on the 7.62x54mmR page. I'm compileing a list of military firearms and common ammunition for a quick refrence and this would be extremly helpfull. thank you — Preceding unsigned comment added by Macaque21 ( talk • contribs) 13:49, 20 September 2011 (UTC)
"Other names for 7.62×39mm
On some occasions, this ammunition is referred to as 7.62 mm Soviet, 7.62 mm Warsaw Pact (or WP) being analogous to 5.56 NATO, or 7.62 mm ComBloc. It was also known in the United States as .30 Short Russian/ComBloc; the "Short" was to distinguish it from the older .30 Russian, which was the 7.62x54mmR.[citation needed]"
I routinely hear people referring to 7.62x39mm ammo simply as “SKS ammo”, “AK ammo” and “AK-47 ammo”. I have even seen boxes of ammo marked as “AK47 rifle ammo” [1]. I have never heard anyone call it 7.62mm Warsaw Pack, 7.62mm WP, 7.62mm ComBloc or .30 Short Russaian/ComBloc. I recommend that we rewrite this section as follows…
The 7.62x39mm ammo is also commonly referred to as "SKS ammo", "AK ammo" and "AK-47 ammo" It is also sometimes referred to as "7.62mm Russian" or "7.62mm Soviet". — Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.22.156.40 ( talk) 17:56, 17 May 2012 (UTC)
Hey,the diameter of bullet is written as 7.92 mm instead of 7.62mm please make this change..it must be 7.62mm..as the dimension suggests
Siddhesh201038 ( talk) 19:14, 20 May 2016 (UTC)
The absolute diameter of the projectile is closer to 7.92mm. The cartridge designation "7.62x39mm," as is true with nearly every other cartridge (see:
.38 Special), is nominal and rarely represents the absolute diameter of the projectile
63.234.214.254 (
talk) 16:12, 21 November 2016 (UTC)
Under "Hunting and sport use," it is claimed that AR-pattern rifles chambered in 7.62x39 are more accurate than Kalashnikov-pattern rifles in the same cartridge. This claim is not backed up by a later citation mentioning the differing components in such an AR-pattern rifle. 63.234.214.254 ( talk) 16:09, 21 November 2016 (UTC)
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The illustration showing cartridge dimensions in the article lists the bullet diameter as 7.92mm/.312", which, because of that, is repeatedly added to the infobox, but the illustration isn't an official CIP/SAAMI illustration of official CIP/SAAMI dimensions, but user generated (by a WP editor in 2008). And that editor got it wrong. According to Guns & Ammo the official SAAMI bullet diameter is .308"-.310" (".310 minus .002"), and various European sources list the official "type aproved" bullet diameter as 7.85mm (.309"), i.e. squarely in SAAMI territory. The actual bore diameter, measured between the grooves, various wildly between rifle manufacturers, from .308" up to .312" or more, and the recommended bullet diameter in reloading manuals also varies from .308" (like U.S. calibers) to .312" (like .303 British), but we should stick to what the official diameter is. - Tom | Thomas.W talk 12:47, 24 January 2019 (UTC)
I read a lengthy document in Russian (google translated to English)that contradicts many dates on the Wikipedia page. It states in 1944 the 7.62x41 went into mass production. In 1947, the 7.62-mm automatic cartridge was upgraded at the Ulyanovsk Machine Building Plant: the sleeve was shortened to 38.7 mm. The document states it wasn't until 1947-1948 coinciding with the release of the AK-47 that the shorted case of 39mm (7.62x39) was produced. The production date of the 7.62x39 is different than the 7.62x41 and this was updated to the correct date. Furthermore both the "intermediate" 7.62x41 and the "automatic" 7.62x39 were designed in 1943 (which should also be updated from 1944). samples were submitted for mass production in 1943 and it was the 7.62x41 that was produced first. I think it is important to get this information right. article link below. Chapter 3, 6 and 7 are the important chapters.
currently stated Designed 1944 Produced 1944–present Revised Designed 1943 Produced 1947–present
After more detailed testing results became available, starting in 1944 the cartridge was tweaked in order to improve its accuracy and penetration After more detailed testing results became available, starting in 1947 the cartridge was tweaked by The Ulyanovsk Machine Building Plant in order to improve its accuracy and penetration
added to the History The 7.62×39 cartridge equipped with the PS bullet finally overcame all objections of the GAU in mid-1947, when it was ordered into series production, and given the index 57-N-231S. The 7.62×39 cartridge equipped with the PS bullet finally overcame all objections of the GAU in mid-1947, when it was ordered into series production, and given the index 57-N-231S.[7] Field tests of the round & new prototype AK-47 were carried out at the NIPSVO from December 16, 1947 to January 11, 1948.
The Brass Forest ( talk) 03:41, 25 February 2019 (UTC)Joe 2/24/19
Here are some varieties of cartridges with brief descriptions. Maybe somehow cite it in an article?-- 188.66.34.192 ( talk) 17:58, 2 January 2022 (UTC)