Rasheed Carbine
| Rasheed Carbine | |
|---|---|
| Top to bottom: Swedish AG-42B Ljungman rifle, Egyptian Hakim rifle, Egyptian Rasheed carbine | |
| Type | Semi-automatic carbine | 
| Place of origin |  Egypt  Sweden (Design) | 
| Service history | |
| Used by | Egypt | 
| Production history | |
| Designer | Erik Eklund | 
| Manufacturer | Ministry of Military Production, Factory 54 | 
| Number built | appx. 8000 | 
| Specifications | |
| Weight | 4.19 kg (9 lb, 4 oz; unloaded) | 
| Length | 1035 mm (40.75 in) | 
| Barrel length | 520 mm (20.5 in) | 
|  | |
| Cartridge | 7.62×39mm | 
| Caliber | 7.62 mm | 
| Action | direct impingement, gas-operated | 
| Feed system | 10-round removable box magazine, with latching magazine release catch | 
The Rasheed (or Rashid) is a semi-automatic carbine, derived from the Hakim Rifle and used by the Egyptian military. Only about 8,000 Rasheeds were produced, making it an extremely rare rifle. As of 2014 a carbine was valued at approximately USD $900 to 1,000, depending on condition.[1] Around 8,000 were made.[2]
The Rasheed was designed by the Swedish engineer Erik Eklund, who based it on his previous Hakim Rifle (8×57mm Mauser cartridge), which was itself a slightly modified version of the Swedish AG-42 Ljungman rifle (6.5×55mm Swedish cartridge).
Design
The carbine resembles the Soviet SKS carbine, particularly in the permanently attached pivoting-blade bayonet, which appears identical to its Russian counterpart. The 12-inch (305 mm) blade bayonet pivots from a mount under the barrel, back into a recessed groove in the forend stock.
The carbine features a rear ladder sight, with a "battle" position for short-range fire as well as increments of 100 to 1000 metres, although the latter distance greatly exceeds the 300-metre effective range of the weapon. The semi-automatic mechanism is gas-operated through the direct impingement system.