Nikolai Afanasyev

Nikolay Mikhailovich Afanasyev (Russian: Николай Михайлович Афанасьев; November 14, 1916 – March 15, 2009) also known as Nicolai Michaelovich Afanasiev, was a Russian firearms designer.[1]

Nikolay Mikhailovich Afanasyev
Born
Nikolay Mikhailovich Afanasyev

(1916-11-14)November 14, 1916
St. Petersburg, Russia.
DiedMarch 15, 2009(2009-03-15) (aged 92)
OccupationWeapons designer

Biography

Nicolai Michaelovitch Afanasiev was born in Russia on 14 November 1916 in St. Petersburg. In 1938 he graduated from a Tekhnikum of the Mechanization of Agriculture.

In 1939 he was drafted to serve in a tank corps in Mongolia, where he started to work on machine gun design. After the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union, he volunteered for front-line service. He was allowed to be a fighter from September 1941 until the fall of 1942, when he was recalled to work on armaments, initially on improving fuses for 82- and 120-mm mortars.

After 1948 Afanasiev worked at the KBP Instrument Design Bureau.[1]

He died on 15 March 2009.

Designs

Honours and awards

gollark: On some of them you literally have to unglue the screen.
gollark: Apparently, though, most consumers do not actually care, and thus the magic of capitalism™ has produced slightly shinier and harder to repair phones.
gollark: I would really prefer phones using technology such as "screws" and "detachable connectors" and "swappable parts".
gollark: no.
gollark: I don't go diving or swimming or whatever with my phone, so I'd value removable batteries over waterproofing.

References

  1. "Памяти Николая Михайловича Афанасьева", КАЛАШНИКОВ. ОРУЖИЕ, БОЕПРИПАСЫ, СНАРЯЖЕНИЕ 2009/4, p. 24
  2. Руслан Учмак, "Не вписавшийся в классификации. Лёгкий пулемёт под пистолетный патрон конструкции Лютого, Афанасьева и Дейкина", Kalashnikov 2012/5, pp. 82-87; addendum photo with the belt and its box: Коробка и лента к пулемету ЛАД под 7,62-мм пистолетный патрон Archived 2014-02-09 at the Wayback Machine
  3. Monetchikov, Sergei (2005). История русского автомата [The History of Russian Assault Rifle] (in Russian). St. Petersburg: Military Historical Museum of Artillery, Engineers and Signal Corps. pp. 87–93. ISBN 5-98655-006-4.
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