Type 63 Para

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VC

Type 63 Para
Assault
20+1 / 80
Damage Base Headshot × Chest × Stomach × Leg × Arm × Bayonet Rifle Grenades Reload Speed
Partial Empty
43 ×2.52 = 108.36 ×1.2 = 51.6 ×1.15 = 49.45 ×0.8 = 34.4 ×0.75 = 32.25 NO NO 2.966 Seconds 3.66 Seconds
Designation Weapon Type Fire Modes Fire Rate Bullet Spread ° Range Modifier Muzzle Velocity Projectile weight Weight
K63 Carbine Auto+Semi 700 RPM 7.3° & 1.15° ADS 0.950 735 m/s 7.9g (121.916 gr) 3.85 kg (8.48 lbs)
Full name Caliber Place of Origin Date Manufacturer Barrel Length Total Length Weapon Script Name
63式7.62mm自动步枪 7.62x39mm China 1963 PRC government arsenals 20.9 in (531 mm) 40.7 in (1,033 mm) weapon_type63



Type 63 Para is a Chinese select-fire assault rifle variant chambered for the 7.62×39mm cartridge, featuring a folding buttstock for improved portability. Like the standard Type 63, it combines SKS-style features such as a folding spike bayonet with an AK-style rotating bolt and detachable box magazine. It is best known as a rare folding-stock Type 63 configuration often described as an airborne/paratrooper concept, with limited production compared to the standard rifle.

HISTORY

China developed the Type 63 in the early 1960s to provide a rifle with greater sustained fire capability than the SKS-pattern Type 56 while retaining familiar handling and close-quarters features. The design blended SKS layout elements with a rotating bolt system adapted from AK-pattern rifles, and it entered service in limited numbers as a transitional system before later Chinese rifles filled the role more successfully. Reputable reference material frequently notes that the Type 63’s manufacturing complexity and quality-control issues contributed to it being moved out of primary service and retained mainly for militia and local defense use.

The folding-stock “Para” configuration is described in specialist sources as a Type 63 sample/variant fitted with a folding buttstock intended to make the rifle easier to carry and deploy in roles where compactness mattered. Available published descriptions indicate this folding-stock Type 63 did not see broad mass production, making it considerably less common than the standard fixed-stock rifle. During the Vietnam War era, China exported a wide range of small arms to North Vietnam, and the Type 63 is cited as being among the rifles supplied in comparatively small quantities; a folding-stock Type 63 would have been rarer still within those broader aid deliveries.

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