The NSV Utyos (Cyrillic: НСВ, initialism for Никитин-Соколов-Волков, Nikitin-Sokolov-Volkov; Russian: Утёс, lit.'Cliff'), is a Soviet heavy machine gun chambered in 12.7×108mm. It is named after the designers, G. I. Nikitin, Y. М. Sokolov and V. I. Volkov. It was designed to replace the DShK machine gun and was adopted by the Soviet Army in 1971.
The NSV was manufactured at the Metallist plant in Uralsk, Kazakh SSR, Soviet Union. The vehicle-mounted NSVT variant is used on the T-72,[2]T-64[3] and T-80[4] main battle tanks. Like many Soviet weapons, the NSV was also licence produced by Yugoslavia as the M87. Following the break-up of the Soviet Union, Russia began development on the Kord heavy machine gun, while Belarus, Poland, Bulgaria, Ukraine and Vietnam all introduced their own copies of the NSV.
NSVT machine gun mounted on an Iraqi T-72 tank
The NSV weighs 25kg (55lb), has a rate of fire of 700–800 rounds per minute, and an effective range from 1,500m (1,600yd) to 2,000m (2,200yd) against airborne and ground targets, respectively. A loaded ammunition belt with 50 rounds weighs 11kg (24lb).[5]
History
The Soviet Army began looking for a new heavy machine gun to replace its older SGM and DShK machine guns in the early 1950s. The Soviet Army liked the idea behind the German MG 42: a versatile weapon used on a variety of mounts to perform many different roles. Two Soviet weapon designers were asked to design one weapon each utilizing the same principle. Mikhail Kalashnikov's submission was approved following trials as it was found to be more reliable and cheaper to manufacture than the design of Grigory Nikitin and Yuri Sokolov. Kalashnikov's machine gun became the new standard machine gun, and was named PK.
Nikitin's and Sokolov's design was, however, not forgotten. It was eventually developed into the NSV heavy machine gun about 10 years later and selected in 1969 as the successor to the DShK and DShKM machine guns. It was accepted in service by the Soviet Army in 1971.
Following the break-up of the Soviet Union, Russia began developing the Kord heavy machine gun to replace the NSV "Utyos" and which entered service in 1998. The Metallist factory in what is now Oral, Kazakhstan struggled to find customers in the 1990s. The factory was converted to focus on industrial production in the oil and gas sector in 2003.
Use in Finland
The NSV is called 12,7 Itkk 96 or 12,7 ilmatorjuntakonekivääri 96 ('12.7 anti-aircraft machine gun 96') in Finland. It is often used as a vehicle-mounted machine gun, and can be seen on the Pasi armoured personnel carrier, the Nasu transport vehicle and the Leopard 2R tank.
Due to its high rate of fire, the NSV is intended to be used as a close-range anti-aircraft weapon against helicopters, UAVs and aircraft. In dismounted ground combat it is placed on a special mount.
NSV-12.7: Baseline variant, currently produced by West-Kazakhstan machine building company JSC (ZKMK). Available in both 12.7×108mm and .50 BMG (12.7×99mm NATO).[6]
NSVS-12.7 (Russian: Никитина-Соколова-Волкова станковый — 12,7, romanized:Nikitina-Sokolova-Volkova Stankovy – 12.7, lit.'NSV-designed 12.7mm mounted machine gun'): Used on tripod mount.[7]
NSVT-12.7 (Russian: Никитина-Соколова-Волкова танковый — 12,7, romanized:Nikitina-Sokolova-Volkova Tankovy – 12.7, lit.'NSV-designed 12.7mm tank-mounted machine gun'): Used as a vehicle-mounted machine gun for tanks and other armoured fighting vehicles.[7]
The Utyos-M machine gun turret mounted on the Ukrainian Sea Guard Zhuk-class patrol boat Darnytsia (BG116)
12.7 Itkk 96: Finnish designation. Guns acquired from Soviet Union, Russia and Germany (ex-Nationale Volksarmee).[9]
M87 NSVT: Serbian license built version by Zastava Arms. The M87 has seen use with the armies of the former Yugoslav states. Available in both 12.7×108mm and .50 BMG.[10]
Poland: Manufactured at ZM Tarnów as NSW. Poland also developed their own machine gun based on NSV and chambered to .50 BMG NATO round, known as WKM-B.[21]
↑Alexander Shirokorad (2001), 12,7-мм турельно-башенная установка «Утёс-М»[12.7mm Utyos-M Machine Gun Turret], in Anatoly Taras (ed.), Оружие отечественного флота, 1945—2000[Weapons of the Fatherland's Navy, 1945–2000] (in Russian), Minsk/Moscow: Harvest/AST, pp.15–18, ISBN985-13-0183-3.
↑"NSV AAMG". Finnish Defence Forces. Archived from the original on 13 November 2017. Retrieved 12 November 2017.
↑"Machinegun M87". Zastava Arms. Archived from the original on 27 July 2021. Retrieved 13 November 2023.
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