FB Beryl

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Karabinek szturmowy wz. 1996 Beryl
Rifle wz.1996 Beryl.jpg
The rifle cal. 5.56 wz. 96 Beryl.
Type Assault rifle
Place of origin Poland
Service history
In service 1997-present
Used by See Users
Wars War in Afghanistan, Kosovo Conflict, Iraq War, EUFOR Tchad/RCA
Production history
Designer FB Radom
Designed 1995-1996
Manufacturer FB Radom
Produced 1997-present
Variants Kbk wz. 1996 Mini-Beryl, kbk wz. 2003, Beryl IPSC, Beryl Commando, Beryl M762, Beryl M545
Specifications
Weight 3.35 kg (7.39 lb) (without magazine)
Length 943 mm (37.1 in) stock extended / 742 mm (29.2 in) stock folded
Barrel length 457 mm (18.0 in)

Cartridge 5.56×45mm NATO
7.62×39mm - Beryl M762
5.45×39mm - Beryl M545
Action Gas-operated, rotating bolt
Rate of fire 700 rounds/min
Muzzle velocity 920 m/s (3,018 ft/s)
Effective firing range 100–1,000 m sight adjustments
Maximum firing range 600 m
Feed system 30-round detachable box magazine
Sights Rear sight notch on a sliding tangent, front post
wz.2004 Beryl with railed forend, vertical forward grip and receiver Picatinny rail (modified version of the wz. 96 Beryl)

The kbs wz. 1996 Beryl (English: beryllium) is a Polish 5.56mm assault rifle, designed and produced by the Łucznik Arms Factory in the city of Radom. The rifle is to replace the 7.62×39mm AKM and 5.45×39mm Tantal used in the Polish Armed Forces.

Development

Development work on a new service rifle (both a standard and carbine variant) adapted to use the intermediate 5.56×45mm NATO cartridge had been undertaken in 1995, however a functioning 5.56 mm rifle and carbine variant had already been available in Radom since 1991, known as the wz. 1991 (a rechambered wz. 1988 Tantal rifle). The new weapon’s specifications were approved in February 1995 and in December the same year, a prototype production batch consisting of 11 Beryl rifles was produced. In 1997 the weapon had been successfully evaluated and adopted into service as the 5,56 mm karabinek szturmowy wz. 1996 ("assault carbine pattern 1996").

The Beryl subsequently became the standard Polish rifle. In 2011, there were more than 45,000 in the inventory, accounting for about half of the assault rifles in the Polish Army.[1]

Apart from Poland, 80 wz. 96A Beryls and 10 wz. 96A Mini Beryls are used by Lithuania (donated in May 2000 by Poland, including 10 rifles with Pallad grenade launcher and 10 rifles with CWL-1 scope with integrated laser rangefinder). Until 2002/2003 they were equipment of a special forces unit SOJ Aitvaras, operating in Afghanistan.[2]

Design details

Polish paratroopers carrying Beryl rifles
Polish army soldiers of the 18th Bielsko Airborne Assault Battalion treat a simulated wounded civilian during a training exercise at the Joint Multinational Readiness Center (JMRC) in Hohenfels, Germany, Dec. 14, 2006. Their Beryl rifles are equipped with EOTech holographic weapon sights.
A Beryl fitted with an under-barrel wz. 74 Pallad grenade launcher.

The Beryl’s design layout and system of operation are similar to those of the Tantal rifle, and the principal differences, resulting primarily from using a different cartridge, include the following components: the barrel, receiver housing, buttstock, foregrip, muzzle device, sight system and magazine. With an adapter, it can use M16 NATO standard magazine.

The 457 mm-long barrel, has six right-hand grooves and a 228 mm (1:9 in) twist rate. The barrel’s external profile (from the breech to the front sight base) is identical to the Tantal’s barrel, but the length from the foresight base has a visible tapered contour with a decreasing diameter towards the muzzle end, used to mount a flash suppressor.

The flash hider can be used to mount and launch rifle grenades. The flash hider has a slight taper at the front that supports a bayonet and a little further to the rear – six side ports arranged in pairs. These ports are placed asymmetrically around the circumference of the flash hider and stabilize the weapon during continuous fire. Internally the flash suppressor features threading at the muzzle used to screw-in a blank firing attachment. Located mid-length on the flash hider is a cut-out with a ring retainer spring that secures a rifle grenade to the barrel.

The receiver housing contains several modifications over the receiver of the wz. 1988 rifle. It uses a reinforced rear stock trunnion, adapted for the new shoulder stock and a top-mounted Picatinny rail for mounting optical sights.

The side-folding tubular metal stock is coated with a thermal polymer shrink film. It has a metal shoulder stop covered with a rubber recoil pad. More recent models come with a collapsible stock (see picture of wz. 2004 model on right side of page).

The standard lower handguard features an angled rib pattern designed to enhance gripping by the support hand. The rear of the handguard features two molded notches that enable the 40 mm wz. 1974 grenade launcher to be mounted under the barrel (early versions of the wz. 1996 lacked these notches, fitted instead with handguards with lateral grooves). Some Beryl handguards are equipped with short Picatinny rails and an integral vertical foregrip.

The Beryl’s sighting system is very similar to the setup used on the Tantal, it does however differ with the addition of twin cuts made into the sides of rear sight base that are used to fasten a bracket for mounting the following optical sights: the passive PCS-6 night sight, a CK-3 reflex optical collimator (red dot sight), LKA-4 telescopic sight and CWL-1 scope with integrated laser rangefinder. However, the most used additional sight for Beryl is EOTech 552 holographic sight and PCS-5M passive night sight. PCS-6 and CWL-1 are introduced in small number.

The weapon's unique magazine is molded from plastic and is not interchangeable with magazines from the kbk wz. 1988 Tantal.

The Beryl fires 5.56×45mm ammunition with a steel-core standard round, a tracer cartridge and a training slug, which are produced by Zakłady Metalowe Mesko in the town of Skarżysko-Kamienna.

Standard equipment shipped with the rifle includes: three spare magazines, four 15-round stripper clips, a stripper clip guide, bayonet, cleaning kit, lubricant bottle, cleaning rod (two-piece, stored in the cleaning kit pouch), sling, a magazine pouch and bipod. The rifle can also be fitted with a mounting system for optical sights and a blank-firing adaptor.

The Beryl was used to create a carbine variant known as the Mini-Beryl.

Variants

  • kbs wz. 1996A Beryl (1996) - standard version of Beryl, the most produced version for Polish Forces, some examples were equipped with POPC I rail, where Polish sights (CWL-1, CK-3, LKA-4, PCS-6) could be mounted, but most mounted rail is POPC III. In Iraq, some Beryls were modified and received wooden fore grip from PM md. 63.
  • kbs wz. 1996B Beryl (2004) - same as standard version, but with fixed fore grip and rails on it. Also, "B" version get new rail, POPC II (short) and POPC III (long) which subtended the Picatinny standard (however, some "B" Beryls get POPC I rail).
  • kbs wz. 1996C Beryl (2009) - version with new buttstock (which is fixed and telescopic), new rails (POPC IV), new handguard, magazines and new fore grip.
  • kbs wz. 1996D Beryl (2013-2014) - version with the same buttstock as in "C", but foldable, STANAG magazines, rails adherent to cover, foldable sight. Polish Armed Forces refused of buying this variant, however, there are orders on "C" variant.

Users

  •  Afghanistan - an unspecified number was donated Poland.[citation needed]
  •  Lithuania - around 80 units of wz. 1996A (10 with wz. 74 Pallad and 10 with CWL-1) in use by special forces and by recon units.[3]
  •  Nigeria - 1,000 units of the Beryl M762 (wz. 96C version in 7.62×39mm cartidge) were delivered to the Nigerian Armed Forces in 2014, 500 in 2015.[4] Fabryka Broni Łucznik is expecting a delivery contract exceeding 6000 units in the following years, should the Nigerian Army decide to fully adopt the weapon.[5]
  •  Poland - around 75,000 units (+5,498 wz. 1996C on order), includes all versions (wz. 1996A, wz. 1996B, wz. 1996C) and Mini-Beryl[6]

See also

References

  1. Michał Sitarski, MSBS-5,56 in: Nowa Technika Wojskowa 7/2011, p.32 (in Polish)
  2. Remigiusz Wilk (REMOV), G36K/KV dla Litwy in: Raport WTO Nr.12/2007, p. 62 (Polish)
  3. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  4. http://www.altair.com.pl/news/view?news_id=17144
  5. http://www.altair.com.pl/news/view?news_id=15145
  6. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links