Coordinates | 52°17′3″N5°59′25 }}″N |
---|---|
Name | IMI Uzi |
Origin | |
Type | Submachine Gun |
Is ranged | yes |
Used by | See Users |
Wars | Vietnam WarSuez CrisisSix-Day WarYom Kippur WarSri Lankan Civil WarPortuguese Colonial WarFalklands WarSouth African Border WarRhodesian Bush WarSomali Civil War Mexican Drug War |
Designer | Uziel Gal |
Design date | 1948 |
Manufacturer | Israel Military IndustriesFN HerstalNorincoLyttleton Engineering Works (under Vektor Arms)RH-ALAN |
Production date | 1950–present |
Number | 10,000,000+ |
Variants | See Variants |
Weight | |
Length |
|
Part length | |
Crew | |
Cartridge | 9x19mm Parabellum.22 LR.45 ACP.41 AE |
Action | Blowback |
Rate | 600 rounds/min |
Velocity | 400 m/s |
Range | 200 m |
Feed | 10 (.22 and .41 AE)16 (.45 ACP)20,25,32,40,50 (9MM) magazines |
Sights | Iron sights }} |
The Uzi (, officially cased as UZI) is a related family of open bolt, blowback-operated submachine guns. Smaller variants are considered to be machine pistols. The Uzi was one of the first weapons to use a telescoping bolt design which allows for the magazine to be housed in the pistol grip for a shorter weapon, a design not seen since the Japanese Type II machine pistol.
The first Uzi submachine gun was designed by Major Uziel Gal in the late 1940s. The prototype was finished in 1950; first introduced to IDF special forces in 1954, the weapon was placed into general issue two years later. The Uzi has found use as a personal defense weapon by rear-echelon troops, officers, artillery troops and tankers, as well as a frontline weapon by elite light infantry assault forces.
The Uzi has been exported to over 90 countries. Over its service lifetime, it has been manufactured by Israel Military Industries, FN Herstal, and other manufacturers. From the 1960s through the 1980s, Uzi submachine guns were sold to more military and police markets than any other submachine gun ever made.
The weapon is constructed primarily from stamped sheet metal, making it less expensive per unit to manufacture than an equivalent design machined from forgings. With relatively few moving parts, the Uzi is easy to strip for maintenance or repair. The magazine is housed within the pistol grip, allowing for intuitive and easy reloading in dark or difficult conditions, under the principle of 'hand finds hand'. The pistol grip is fitted with a grip safety, making it difficult to fire accidentally. However, the protruding vertical magazine makes the gun awkward to fire when prone. The Uzi features a bayonet lug.
When the gun is de-cocked, the ejector port closes, preventing entry of dust and dirt. Though the Uzi's stamped-metal receiver is equipped with pressed reinforcement slots to accept accumulated dirt and sand, the weapon can still jam with heavy accumulations of sand in desert combat conditions when not cleaned regularly.
The Uzi gun was designed by Major (Captain at the time) Uziel Gal of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) following the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. The weapon was submitted to the Israeli army for evaluation and won out over more conventional designs due to its simplicity and economy of manufacture. Gal did not want the weapon to be named after him, but his request was ignored. The Uzi was officially adopted in 1951. First introduced to IDF special forces in 1954, the weapon was placed into general issue two years later. The first Uzis were equipped with a short, fixed wooden buttstock, and this is the version that initially saw combat during the 1956 Suez campaign. Later models would be equipped with a folding metal stock.
The Uzi was used as a personal defense weapon by rear-echelon troops, officers, artillery troops and tankers, as well as a frontline weapon by elite light infantry assault forces. The Uzi's compact size and firepower proved instrumental in clearing Syrian bunkers and Jordanian defensive positions during the 1967 Six-Day War. Though the weapon was phased out of frontline IDF service in the 1980s, some Uzis and Uzi variants were still used by a few IDF units until December 2003, when the IDF announced that it was retiring the Uzi from all IDF forces.
In general, the Uzi was a reliable weapon in military service. However, even the Uzi fell victim to extreme conditions of sand and dust. During the Sinai campaign of the Yom Kippur War, IDF army units reaching the Suez reported that of all their small arms, only the 7.62 mm FN MAG machine gun was still in operation.
The Uzi proved especially useful for mechanized infantry needing a compact weapon, and for infantry units clearing bunkers and other confined spaces. However, its limited range and accuracy in automatic fire (approximately 50 m) could be disconcerting when encountering enemy forces armed with longer-range small arms, and heavier support weapons could not always substitute for a longer-ranged individual weapon. These failings eventually caused the phaseout of the Uzi from IDF forces.
The Uzi has been used in various conflicts outside Israel and the Middle East during the 1960s and 1970s. Quantities of 9 mm Uzi submachine guns were used by Portuguese cavalry, police, and security forces during the Portuguese Colonial Wars in Africa.
The Mini-Uzi is a smaller version of the regular Uzi, first introduced in 1980. The Mini-Uzi is 600 mm (23.62 inches) long or 360 mm (14.17 inches) long with the stock folded. Its barrel length is 197 mm (7.76 inches), its muzzle velocity is 375 m/s (1230 f/s) and its effective range is 100 m. It has a greater automatic rate of fire of 950 rounds per minute due to the shorter bolt.
The Micro-Uzi is an even further scaled down version of the Uzi, introduced in 1986. The Micro-Uzi is 486 mm long, reduced to 282 mm with the stock folded and its barrel length is 117 mm. Its muzzle velocity is 350 m/s (1148 f/s) and its cyclic rate of fire is 1,200 rpm.
The Uzi-Pro is an improved variant of the Micro-Uzi has been launched in the year 2010 by Israel Weapon Industries Ltd. (I.W.I.), formerly the Magen ("Small Arms") division of Israel Military Industries. The Uzi-Pro is a blowback-operated, select-fire, closed-bolt submachine gun with a large lower portion, comprising grip and handguard, entirely made of polymer to reduce weight; the grip section has been redesigned to allow two-handed operation and facilitate control in full-automatic fire with such a small-sized firearm. The Uzi-Pro features three Picatinny rails, two at the sides of the barrel and one on the top for optics, having the cocking handle been moved on the left side.
The Uzi Carbine had two main variants, the Model A (imported from 1980 to 1983) and the Model B (imported from 1983 until 1989). These two variants were imported and distributed by Action arms.
In the mid 1990s Norinco of China manufactured an unlicensed copy of the Uzi model B with modifications made to avoid the US Assault Weapon Import Ban. The folding stock was replaced with a wooden thumbhole stock, the barrel nut was welded in place, and the bayonet lug was removed. The gun had a gray parkerized finish and was sold as the M320.
The Mini-Uzi Carbine is similar in appearance to the Mini-Uzi submachine gun, the Mini-Uzi carbine is fitted with a 19.8 inch barrel, to meet the minimum rifle overall length requirement for civilian sales in the United States. It fires from a closed-bolt position in semi-automatic mode only.
The Uzi Pistol is a semi-automatic, closed bolt, and blowback-operated pistol variant. Its muzzle velocity is 345 m/s. It is a Micro-Uzi with no shoulder stock or full-automatic firing capability. The intended users for the pistol were various security agencies in need of a high-capacity semi-automatic pistol, or civilian shooters that wanted a gun with those qualities and the familiarity of the Uzi style. It was introduced in 1984 and produced until 1993.
A company known as Vector Arms has built and marketed "pistol versions" of the Uzi Carbine and the Mini-Uzi. These versions lack a shoulder stock and have a shorter barrel.
Available magazines include 20-, 25-, 32-, 40-, and 50-round magazines (9x19mm Parabellum), 10-round magazines (.41 and .22 LR), and 16-round magazines (.45 ACP). All of the above are manufactured by IMI. Other high-capacity magazines exist (e.g., 50-round magazines and 100-round drums in 9 mm) which were manufactured by companies such as Vector Arms.
: Used by the Rapid Action Battalion. : Made under license by FN Herstal. : Mini-Uzi variant. : Produces unlicensed copies of the Uzi and Micro-Uzi called the ERO and Mini ERO respectively. : Uses the Mini-Uzi variant. : Made under license. : Uzi and Mini-Uzi variants used by Haitian National Police. : Uzi and Mini-Uzi variants. : Uzi variant was used by the Special Protection Group until 2008, when it was replaced with the FN P90. : Used by the Regional Support Unit. : Uzi and Mini-Uzi variants. Mini-Uzi variant was used by the YAMAM elite unit and Shin Bet. : The Mini-Uzi variant results by official schedules to be in the inventories of the Italian National Police. A local version called the Type 821-SMG was manufactured from 1984 to 1989 by the SOCIMI - Società Costruzioni Industriali Milano, S.p.A. in Milan. : Lithuanian Armed Forces. (mostly replaced) : Uzi, Mini-Uzi, and Micro-Uzi variants. : Portuguese Army. : Manufactured under license. : Mini-Uzi variant is used by the Military Police. : Manufactured under license.
Category:Infantry weapons of the Cold War Category:Falklands War infantry weapons Category:Machine pistols Category:Telescoping bolt submachine guns Category:Weapons of Israel Category:9mm Parabellum firearms Category:Israeli inventions Category:Israeli brands
bn:উজি be:Uzi be-x-old:Uzi cs:Uzi da:Uzi de:Uzi es:Uzi fa:یوزی fr:Uzi gu:ઉઝી ko:우지 기관단총 hr:Uzi (strojnica) id:Uzi it:IMI Uzi he:עוזי lv:Uzi hu:Uzi mk:Узи my:အူဇီ nl:Uzi-pistoolmitrailleur ja:UZI (SMG) no:Uzi nn:Uzi pnb:اوزی pl:Pistolet maszynowy Uzi pt:Uzi ru:Uzi simple:Uzi sk:Uzi sl:Uzi fi:Uzi sv:Uzi tr:IMI Uzi vi:Uzi yi:עוזי zh:烏茲衝鋒槍This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
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