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In the mid 1990s, UMC Cugir began looking at ways to adapt its AKM production tooling to make a 9mm submachine gun. What would become the LP7 was first prototyped in 1998, and went into limited production in 2003, with an order of 200 made for the Romanian Interior Ministry. Romanian Gendarmes deployed with LP7s to a peacekeeping mission in Kosovo.

Mechanically, the gun is based on a standard AKM receiver and fire control system, with a short barrel, no gas system, and a heavy simple blowback bolt telescoped over the rear end of the barrel. They use a slight modification of the old Romanian Orita SMG magazine. The stock folds to the left side, and extends to a remarkably long length. In use, the gun is quite controllable and pleasant to shoot!

Thanks to Uzina Mecanica Cugir S.A. for giving me access to these pistols for filming, and to A.N.C.A., the Romanian national firearms collectors' association, for organizing the trip that made this video possible!

https://www.anca.com.ro

Files

Previews only

Romania's AK-Based SMG: the LP7 (Full Cut; Ad-Free)

Full cut with shooting segment in History of Weapons & War: https://forgottenweapons.vhx.tv/videos/lp7-smg-4k Also available at Patreon, Playeur, and Floatplane. In the mid 1990s, UMC Cugir began looking at ways to adapt its AKM production tooling to make a 9mm submachine gun. What would become the LP7 was first prototyped in 1998, and went into limited production in 2003, with an order of 200 made for the Romanian Interior Ministry. Romanian Gendarmes deployed with LP7s to a peacekeeping mission in Kosovo. Mechanically, the gun is based on a standard AKM receiver and fire control system, with a short barrel, no gas system, and a heavy simple blowback bolt telescoped over the rear end of the barrel. They use a slight modification of the old Romanian Orita SMG magazine. The stock folds to the left side, and extends to a remarkably long length. In use, the gun is quite controllable and pleasant to shoot! Thanks to Uzina Mecanica Cugir S.A. for giving me access to these pistols for filming, and to A.N.C.A., the Romanian national firearms collectors' association, for organizing the trip that made this video possible! https://www.anca.com.ro https://utreon.com/c/forgottenweapons/ http://www.patreon.com/ForgottenWeapons http://www.floatplane.com/channel/ForgottenWeapons Cool Forgotten Weapons merch! http://shop.forgottenweapons.com

Comments

David Teach

What got cut for the YouTube limited version of this vid?

Mr. Metzger

I wonder how much reduction the rate reducer actually achieves, that sounded pretty fast, definitely above 800 rpm.

Glenn Miller

Would be nice to be able to buy this in the US. Thanks for the video.

Guido Schriewer

took them a looong time to get them on the market! kind of a short, isn't it.

Robert Beattie

Thanks for interesting video on what I would call a Not Known instead of Forgotten Weapon. Good to see the actual shooting, and to see the actual target outcome.

Mrgunsngear

that range facility is epic 🤌🏽

David Teach

I was confused because when I clicked on the YouTube link from the video it showed the shooting bit at the end just fine. I guess it's how you get there that matters.