Hungarian ak 47 bayonet
![hungarian ak 47 bayonet hungarian ak 47 bayonet](https://stewartsmilitaryantiques.com/img/p30883_39683_1405712064.jpg)
Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. In Hungarian service, the AK-63 F and D are designated as the AMM and AMMS, respectively. In 1978, FÉG added a folding stock AKMS version of the AK-63 to their catalogue thereafter, the fixed-stock AK-63 became known as the AK-63F (Wooden Stock) and the folding-stock version was designated AK-63D (Descent). By the end of 1977, the AK-63 was adopted by the Hungarian People's Army (beginning with the Ground Forces). In the late-1970s, the Hungarian Defense Ministry requested that FÉG manufacture a cheaper rifle based on the more traditional Soviet AKM design. Although the AMD-65 had been the Hungarian service rifle since 1965, it was more expensive to build, and the forward grips had a reputation for being easily damaged in the field. In Hungarian service, the AK-63 replaced the AMD-65, which is nearly identical but features a modified heat shield and a vertical forward hand grip under the barrel. It is currently used by the Hungarian Ground Forces as its standard infantry weapon, and by most other branches of the Hungarian Defence Forces. The AK-63 (also known in Hungarian military service as the AMM) is a Hungarian variant of the AKM assault rifle manufactured by the Fegyver- és Gépgyár (FÉG) state arms plant in Hungary. 10, 20, 30, 40-round box magazines, 75 or 100-round drum magazine