02-07-2023, 02:33 AM
Only the army is permitted under law to manufacture rifles under the regime as an attempt to centralize resources to the army owned factories. The army, however, was unwilling to provide rifles to the other branches. This results in the Navy & Air Corps manufacturing the same designs for small arms in their own factories, under their own naming conventions.
Instituto de Armamento Náutico naming scheme:
[Toponym of location operated in by the navy] — Role trigram — Years since independence at introduction
The Generation 4 R480 rifle would be produced under the naval naming schema as the "Olino Strait MPM 36"
Municiones Aéreas de las Islas (MAI) naming scheme:
[Place of design] - [RPM rounded up to the nearest hundred] - [Years of Stratocracy at time of introduction]
So they produced the Generation R480 as the Olino 600–0.
When MPG began to manufacture the Generation R480 rifle, they did so under their own proprietary naming scheme, as the MPG A-89. When their army supplied tooling was split off into MPG-Sur, the naming scheme changed to A-89M/L (senior/legacy) for any new product produced with those specific machines.
Instituto de Armamento Náutico naming scheme:
[Toponym of location operated in by the navy] — Role trigram — Years since independence at introduction
The Generation 4 R480 rifle would be produced under the naval naming schema as the "Olino Strait MPM 36"
Municiones Aéreas de las Islas (MAI) naming scheme:
[Place of design] - [RPM rounded up to the nearest hundred] - [Years of Stratocracy at time of introduction]
So they produced the Generation R480 as the Olino 600–0.
When MPG began to manufacture the Generation R480 rifle, they did so under their own proprietary naming scheme, as the MPG A-89. When their army supplied tooling was split off into MPG-Sur, the naming scheme changed to A-89M/L (senior/legacy) for any new product produced with those specific machines.