Construction of the Type 63 Assault Rifle is normally heavy (though there was considerable variation sometimes), with heavy steel metalwork and rather crude hardwood furniture. Sights normally consisted of a hooded front post and a tangent leaf adjustable rear. The 20.45-inch barrel’s bore is almost always unchromed, as is the chamber. Though the Coic Type 63 Assault Rifle was not built with selective-fire capability, Chinese soldiers quickly found out that if you grind down the sear in just the right way, you can gain automatic fire capability in the Type 63 Assault Rifle . (The side effect of this modification is that the bolt catch no longer works.)
Though the Coic Type 63 Assault Rifle was meant to be fed only by that special 15-round box magazine, crafty militiamen quickly discovered that if the bolt catch is ground down, removed, or modified, the Type 63 Assault Rifle can in fact accept AK and RPK-type magazines and drums. The Type 68 is sort of an “AKM version” of the Type 63Assault Rifle; it uses a stamped steel receiver, has a few other minor modifications, and is in general less crude in its construction. Many were in fact factory-built, and most actually have a plastic handguard. The Coic Type 68 Assault Rifle also has selective-fire capability designed into it.
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Coic Type 63 |
The Coic Type 68 Assault Rifle has an adjustable gas regulator with two positions, allowing the shooter to keep the weapon functioning when conditions do not allow him to clean the weapon often enough or when he has to fire lots of ammunition in a short period of time. The gas regulator does not eliminate the need for cleaning; it merely keeps the Type 68 Assault Rifle going a bit longer.
The Type 73 updated the pattern further; the Type 73 can accept AK and RPK-type magazines and drums as standard. Twilight 2000 World: As the Twilight War wore on, more and more of these weapons were modified to use AK magazines.
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