Underlined equipment has been regained in Mayfield RPG.
Thompson/Center Arms Contender Custom
Calibre: .30-06 Springfield
Length: 444mm (17in)
Weight: 2kg (4.54lb)
Barrel: 355mm (14in)
Current ammunition: 29 (.30-06)
11 (Origin)
With a 14-inch barrel and the grip and forearm carved in walnut, it is reminiscent of a dagger in its scabbard. The only visible mechanical parts are the trigger and the hammer, with neither a cylinder nor a slide on the simple exterior, making it similar to the percussion pistols used in the last hours of the Middle Ages.
The Contender was developed in 1967 by American company Thompson/Center Arms. It is a break-open single-shot pistol meant for sport shooting. Simple yet powerful, the weapon can, with little modification, be used to shoot various ammunition ranging from .22 LR to rifle bullets. The lack of complex parts between the barrel and trigger allows for high accuracy. Kiritsugu's 14-inch model is 444mm and 1700g, with his modifications bringing the total weight to 2060g. It is customized with a rifled barrel fitted for .30-06 Springfield bullets, a special firing pin, as well as additional magical modifications for firing "magic bullets". The .30-06 rifle bullet was chosen for its raw firepower, being 10% stronger than the .308 Winchester rifle bullet and surpassing even 'hand-cannon' Magnum bullets.
Calico M960
Calibre: 9mm Parabellum Magazine: 50- or 100-round detachable helical magazine
Length: 365mm (14.3in) Operation: Delayed blowback
Weight: 1kg (2.2lb) Muzzle velocity: 393 mps (1290fps)
Barrel: 152mm (6in), 6 grooves, rh Rate of fire: 10 rounds per second
Current ammunition: 1000 rounds (9mm)
Although chambered in .22LR or 9mm Parabellum, both pistol calibres, the Calico M950 is really more of a carbine-type weapon. Shaped like a large handgun with a curious cylinder (the magazine) on top, the Calico has enough barrel shrouding to allow a two-handed grip more suited to a submachine gun or rifle than a pistol; some variants (such as Kiritsugu's M960) have a canted foregrip. The M950's long barrel allows accurate fire out to about 60 metres (197 feet), which is more normally seen with submachine guns than handguns, and the 50- or 100- round helical feed magazine offers impressive, semi-automatic only firepower.
Walther WA 2000
Calibre: .30 Winchester Magnum Magazine: 6-round detachable box magazine
Length: 905mm (35.63in) Operation: Gas
Weight: 8.31kg (18.32lb) loaded, with sight Muzzle Velocity: 800mps (2624fps)
Barrel: 650mm (25.59in)
With 30 years of development behind it, the PSG1 is a well-tried military rifle with an impressive pedigree. It uses H&K's stantard roller-locking delayed blowback semi-automatic feed and can take a 5- or 20- round magazine, using standard NATO 7.62mm rounds rather than march-grade ammunition at need. The WA 2000m on the other hand, was developed purely as a sniping weapon. Its bullpup design takes advntage of straight-through recoil absorption. Chambered for .300 Winchester Magnum, the WA 2000 needs constant attention to maintain its phenomenal accuracy, making it unsuitable for military use.
Explosives (Claymores/C4/Grenades)
Mercedes-Benz 300SL
Yamaha VMAX
Magic
Outfit
Credit for weapon images goes to www.imfdb.org. Gullwing obtained from www.autogarages.us. VMAX obtained from www.uncrate.org. Weapon descriptions were mostly taken from 'Small Arms: From the Civil War to the Present Day' (101 ,109), by Martin J. Dougherty. Thompson Contender info taken from TM wiki.