Norinco production Type 56-1 Copy of the
AKS, with an under-folding steel shoulder stock and the bayonet removed to make the weapon easier to carry. As with the original Type 56, milled receivers were replaced by stamped receivers in the mid-1960s, making the Type 56-1 an equivalent to the Russian
AKMS. Civilian semi-auto versions (Type 56S-I) may have the spike bayonet added, though it is worth noting that this is not the original military configuration.
Type 06 The Type 06 is an assault rifle manufactured by Poly Technologies to be chambered in 5.56mm NATO.
Type 56-2 Improved variant introduced in 1980, with a side-folding stock and dark orange bakelite furniture. The stock also houses a cleaning kit, which both underfolding AKs (all nations) and other sidefolding AKs lacked, instead requiring a separate pouch. It also allows a traditional detachable bayonet, both AK-47 and AKM styles, as an option in addition to the folding spike style. Mainly manufactured for export and rare in China as the Type 81 was already in production by the time of conception.
7.62 RK 56 TP Modified Type 56-2 in China for Finnish use, with a new hammer spring that allows firing of Finnish 7.62x39.
Type 56C Short-barrel version, introduced in 1991 for the domestic and export market. The QBZ-56C as it is officially designated in China, is a carbine variant of the Type 56-2 and supplied in limited quantities to some PLA units. The Chinese Navy is now the most prominent user. Development began in 1988, after it was discovered that the Type 81 assault rifle was too difficult to shorten. In order to further reduce weight, the
bayonet lug was removed. The QBZ-56C is often carried with a twenty-round box magazine, although it is capable of accepting a standard Type 56 thirty-round magazine. It also has a sidefolding stock in addition to a
muzzle booster, giving it a similar appearance to the
AKS-74U.
Type 56S The Type 56 Sporter, also known as the
AK47S,
AKS-762 and
MAK-90 (Modified AK-1990) is the
semi-automatic only
civilian version of the Type 56 Later versions were modified to meet the requirements of a 1989 Executive Order by President
George H. W. Bush prohibiting importation of certain 'assault rifle' configurations of military-style semi-automatic rifles such as the Norinco AKM/AK-47. These modifications included a one-piece U.S.-made thumbhole stock to replace the separate Chinese-made buttstock and pistol grip of the original AK rifle and the inclusion of a rivet on the receiver preventing use of standard AK-47, RPK, or AKM magazines.
56S Galil sidefolder Special version of the 56S/MAK-90 with an
IMI Galil style side folding stock. Was exclusive to the US market.
The Legend Another version of the 56S/MAK-90 except configured to look like the Type 3 AK-47. It is extremely faithful to the Type 3 design, even having a milled receiver and original AK-47 style bayonet lug, but does retain some manufacturing differences from the Type 56 such as the pinned in barrel, lack of vent cuts on the gas tube heat guard, only 3 rivets on the trigger guard, the stamped recoil guide rod, spring loaded firing pin and variance in machining such as on the receiver and lightening cuts. Like the previous, US market only.
Type 56M RPK style LMG version of the Type 56. Utilizes a standard Type 56 stamped receiver and front trunnion, likely due to their rigidity, and its bi-pod is more
RPD like then RPK, being tubular. It seems to have two configurations with only minor cosmetic changes, one with standard AK-47/M open sights with "ears" and the bi-pod directly behind the front sight base, and a second configuration with typical Type 56 enclosed "hooded" sights and the bi-pod in front of the front sight base near the muzzle. The latter version usually is seen with a birdcage flash hider or
AK-74 style muzzle brake. Like the Type 56-2, it was only made for export as the
Type 81 LMG was selected for military service instead.
Sporting variants Civilian semi-auto sporter versions are known as the
Type 87S or
NHM 91. The semi-auto versions have also been sold with standard Type 56 stocks instead of the RPD "club foot" style as well as thumbhole variants after 1989. A rare version known as the "National Match" was once sold with a milled receiver and scope and
scope mount.
Type 84 Export version of the Type 56 rifle chambered for the
5.56×45mm NATO round. The lineup also featuer underfolder (
Type 84-1) and sidefolder (
Type 84-2) versions. Civilian semi-auto version known as
Type 84S and
AKS-223. Special matte black synthetic versions were also available as the
Type 84-3,
Type 86S Semi automatic bullpup version.
Foreign production KL-7.62 Iranian copy of the Type 56. The original version of the KL-7.62 was indistinguishable from the Type 56, but in recent years
DIO appears to have made some improvements to the Type 56 design, adding a plastic stock and handguards (rather than wood) and a ribbed receiver cover (featured on most
AKM variants, but missing from the Type 56), as well as picatinny rails on newer versions. They consist of the KLS (AKM wooden stock) and the KLF (AKM folding stock).
MAZ Sudanese licensed copy of the Type 56 made by
Military Industry Corporation.
ASh78 Albanian licensed copy of the Type 56.
TUL-1 North Vietnamese-made variant, but with stock of an
RPK, barrel sights from an
RPD. The TUL-1's body was thin, only 1 mm compared to the 1.5 mm of an
RPK. It was also heavier and had an inferior rate of fire compared to the
RPK. However, the firing rate and effective range of the weapon was better than an AK-47-based rifle.
KA2-5 Clone made in Myanmar by the Kachin Independence Army. ==Users==