The machine gun was developed as GVG (after last names of three designers) from February 1940 to November 1942, originally to be fired from either a magazine or belt-fed, however in spring 1942 the magazine feeding was dropped. After field trials on the frontline it was adopted as the M1943 Goryunov machine gun in May 1943. In 1944-1945 the machine gun was improved by Alexander Zaytsev and
Mikhail Kalashnikov, with the new version receiving
SGM ("M" for modernized) designation. Reloading handle was moved, dust covers and a new barrel lock were fitted, and a splined barrel was fitted to improve cooling. A coaxially-mounted stockless electric solenoid-fired variant was developed under the designation
SGMT (the "T" standing for
Tankovy, or "Tank"). The
SG-43M and
SGMB are versions modified with dust covers and used mostly on
armoured personnel carriers. The SG-43/SGM was widely exported and also licensed for construction in several countries. It was manufactured in the
People's Republic of China as the Type 53 (SG-43) and Type 57 (SGM) heavy machine guns. It was also produced in
Czechoslovakia (as Vz 43) and Poland (as Wz 43). In addition to World War II, SG-43 saw service in the
Korean War with the Communist
North Korean and
Chinese forces. In Soviet service, the Goryunov, together with the
RP-46, was replaced in the 1960s by the
PK machine gun due to the switch in Soviet tactical doctrine to the
general-purpose machine gun concept, rendering the gun effectively obsolete.
KGK general purpose machine gun The KGK (
Korszerűsített Gorjunov-Kucher) general purpose machine gun was based on the Goryunov machine gun modified by a
FEG team headed by József Kucher (partner of
Pál Király best known for his
Kucher Model K1 SMG) and produced in Hungary during the 1960s and 1970s. The team added a butt-stock, a pistol grip, a conventional trigger and a bipod from the
RPD machine gun, moved the charging handle from the bottom to the side, and redesigned the barrel lock mechanism so that the barrel could be quickly changed in the field. Otherwise, the machine gun is identical to an SGM, and most parts are interchangeable. It was used by the Hungarian army on a limited scale, including in the KGKT version as the turret machine gun on
D-944 PSZH scout car, and was later replaced by a domestically produced copy of the Kalashnikov PKM machine gun. ==Users==