Name | Type | Country | Image | Years of service | Notes |
Schwarzlose machine gun | Heavy machine gun | Austria-Hungary | | 1920–1940s | Export variants. |
MG 30 | Light machine gun | Austria
Switzerland | | 1930–1940s | |
FN Model 24 and Model 30 | Bolt-action rifle | Belgium | | 1924–1986 | Variant of Gewehr 98.[3] |
FN Model 1949 | Semi-automatic rifle | Belgium | | 1949– | Export variant for Egypt.[4] |
FN Model 1930 and Model D | Light machine gun | Belgium | | 1930– | Export 7.92×57mm Mauser variant of M1918 Browning Automatic Rifle.[5] |
FN Browning Model 1939 | Light machine gun | Belgium | | 1939–1940s | Export 7.92×57mm Mauser variant of M1919 Browning machine gun. |
Bren light machine gun | Light machine gun | Canada | | 1940–1952 | Export variant for China, made by John Inglis and Company in Canada.[6] |
Mukden Arsenal Mauser | Bolt-action rifle | China
Manchukuo | | 1924–1950s | |
Chiang Kai-shek rifle | Bolt-action rifle | China | | 1935–1980s | Chinese variant of Mauser Standardmodell. |
General Liu rifle | Semi-automatic rifle / bolt-action rifle | China | | 1916 | Prototype and testing only. |
Type 24 heavy machine gun | Heavy machine gun | China | | 1935–1950s | Chinese variant of MG 08. |
Type 30 heavy machine gun | Heavy machine gun | China | | 1930s–1950s | Chinese variant of M1917 Browning machine gun. |
vz. 98/22 | Bolt-action rifle | Czechoslovakia | | 1922–2010s | |
vz. 24 | Bolt-action rifle | Czechoslovakia | | 1924–1960s | |
vz. 33 | Bolt-action carbine | Czechoslovakia | | 1934–1954 | |
ZH-29 | Semi-automatic rifle | Czechoslovakia | | 1929–1940s | |
ZB vz. 26 | Light machine gun | Czechoslovakia | | 1926–present | |
vz. 28/L | Light machine gun | Czechoslovakia | | 1928–1940s | Czechoslovak variant of Lewis gun. Rechambered from the original .303 British.[7] |
ZB vz. 30 | Light machine gun | Czechoslovakia | | 1930–2009 | |
ZB-53 | Medium machine gun | Czechoslovakia | | 1937–1960s | |
Madsen machine gun | Light machine gun | Denmark | | 1907–1970s | Export variants. |
Hakim Rifle | Semi-automatic rifle | Egypt | | 1950s– | Variant of Automatgevär m/42.[8] |
Lahti-Saloranta M/26 | Light machine gun | Finland | | 1937–1940s | Export variant for China. |
Hotchkiss M1922 | Light machine gun | France | | 1922–1950s | Export variant. |
Darne machine gun | Light machine gun | France | | 1923– | Export variant.[9] |
Hotchkiss Mle 1914 | Heavy machine gun | France | | 1920s–1950s | Export variants. |
Gewehr 88/05 | Bolt-action rifle | Germany | | 1905–1945 | Rechambered from the original Patrone 88 cartridge.[10] |
Gewehr 98 | Bolt-action rifle | Germany | | 1898–1945 | |
Mauser Model 1904 | Bolt-action rifle | Germany | | 1905–1950s | Export variant. |
Karabiner 98AZ | Bolt-action carbine | Germany | | 1908–1945 | Carbine variant of Gewehr 98. |
Mauser Model 1889 | Bolt-action rifle | Germany | | 1914–1918 | Rechambered from the original 7.65×53mm Mauser. |
Mauser Standardmodell | Bolt-action rifle | Germany | | 1924–1960s | Derived from the Gewehr 98. |
Karabiner 98k | Bolt-action rifle | Germany | | 1935–present | |
Gewehr 98/40 | Bolt-action rifle | Germany | | 1940–1945 | German-contract 7.92×57mm Mauser variant of 35M rifle.[11] |
Volkssturmgewehr 1 | Bolt-action rifle | Germany | | 1945 | |
Volkssturmgewehr 2 | Bolt-action rifle | Germany | | 1945 | |
Gewehr 41(M) | Semi-automatic rifle | Germany | | 1941–1945 | |
Gewehr 41(W) | Semi-automatic rifle | Germany | | 1941–1945 | |
Gewehr 43 | Semi-automatic rifle | Germany | | 1943–1945 | |
FG 42 | Automatic rifle | Germany | | 1943–1945 | |
MG 08 | Heavy machine gun | Germany | | 1908–1945 | |
MG 08/15 | Light machine gun | Germany | | 1915–1945 | |
Bergmann MG 15nA | Light machine gun | Germany | | 1916–1945 | |
MG 08/18 | Light machine gun | Germany | | 1918 | |
MG 13 | Light machine gun | Germany | | 1930–1940s | |
MG 15 | Light machine gun | Germany | | 1933–1945 | Flexible aircraft mount variant developed from MG 30. |
MG 17 | Light machine gun | Germany | | 1936–1945 | Fixed aircraft mount variant developed from MG 30. |
MG 34 | General-purpose machine gun | Germany | | 1936–1945 | |
MG 35/36 | Light machine gun | Germany | | 1936–1945 | 7.92×57mm Mauser variant of Kulsprutegevär m/40. |
MG 81 | Light machine gun | Germany | | 1940–1945 | |
MG 42 | General-purpose machine gun | Germany | | 1942–present | |
MG 45 | General-purpose machine gun | Germany | | 1944–1945 | |
Mannlicher M88/24 | Bolt-action rifle | Greece | | 1924– | Rechambered from the original 8×50mmR Mannlicher.[12] |
Mannlicher M95/24 | Bolt-action rifle | Greece | | 1924– | Rechambered from the original 8×50mmR Mannlicher.[13] |
43M rifle | Bolt-action rifle | Hungary | | 1943–1950s | 7.92×57mm Mauser variant of 35M rifle.[14] |
Dror light machine gun | Light machine gun | Israel | | 1947–1952 | |
Breda M37 | Medium machine gun | Italy | | 1937–1960s | Export variant. |
Type 98 Army machine gun | Light machine gun | Japan | | 1938–1945 | Japanese Army variant of MG 15. |
Type 100 machine gun | Light machine gun | Japan | | 1940–1945 | |
Type 1 Navy machine gun | Light machine gun | Japan | | 1941–1945 | Japanese Navy variant of MG 15. |
Karabinek wz. 91/98/23 | Bolt-action carbine | Poland | | 1923–1945 | Polish variant of Mosin–Nagant. Rechambered from the original 7.62×54mmR. |
Karabinek wz. 1929 | Bolt-action rifle | Poland | | 1930–1945 | |
Karabinek wz. 98a | Bolt-action rifle | Poland | | 1936–1945 | |
Kbsp wz. 1938M | Semi-automatic rifle | Poland | | 1938–1940s | |
Browning wz. 1928 | Light machine gun | Poland | | 1930–1945 | Polish variant of M1918 Browning Automatic Rifle. |
Karabin lotniczy uniwersalny wz. 36 | Light machine gun | Poland | | 1936–1946 | Fixed aircraft mount variant of Ckm wz. 30. |
Karabin maszynowy obserwatora wz.37 | Light machine gun | Poland | | 1937–1949 | Flexible aircraft mount variant of Browning wz. 1928. |
Ckm wz. 25 Hotchkiss | Heavy machine gun | Poland | | 1926–1945 | Polish variant of Hotchkiss Mle 1914. |
Ckm wz. 30 | Heavy machine gun | Poland | | 1931–1970 | Polish variant of M1917 Browning machine gun. |
Ckm Typ C | Heavy machine gun | Poland | | 1936–1939 | |
Mauser–Vergueiro m/1904-39 | Bolt-action rifle | Portugal | | 1939–1960s | Rechambered from the original 6.5×58mm Vergueiro. |
ALFA M44 | Light machine gun | Spain | | 1944–1950s | |
Fusil ametrallador Oviedo | Light machine gun | Spain | | 1951–1959 | Spanish variant of ZB vz. 30. |
SIG KE7 | Light machine gun | Switzerland | | 1929– | Export variants. |
Mauser Model 1890 | Bolt-action rifle | Turkey | | 1930s–1960s | Rechambered from the original 7.65×53mm Mauser. |
Mauser Model 1903 | Bolt-action rifle | Turkey | | 1930s–1960s | Rechambered from the original 7.65×53mm Mauser. |
Lee–Enfield | Bolt-action rifle | Turkey | | 1930s–1950s | Rechambered from the original .303 British. Popularly dubbed "Enfauser".[15] |
Besa machine gun | Medium machine gun | United Kingdom | | 1939–1960s | British variant of ZB-53. |
Mannlicher M95M | Bolt-action rifle | Yugoslavia | | 1924– | Rechambered from the original 8×50mmR Mannlicher.[16] |
Zastava M98/48 | Bolt-action rifle | Yugoslavia | | 1946–present | Refurbished captured Karabiner 98k. |
Zastava M48 | Bolt-action rifle | Yugoslavia | | 1950–present | Variant of FN Model 24. |
Zastava M76 | Semi-automatic designated marksman rifle | Yugoslavia | | 1978–present | |
Zastava M53 | General-purpose machine gun | Yugoslavia | | 1953–1999 | Yugoslav variant of MG 42. |