$2244 USD
No it's only a single shot since the missle is preloaded into it
When you Pack-a-punch the M72 Law, it becomes the "M72 Anarchy". It is a semi/full auto rocket launcher with 10 rockets. Only one rocket must be reloaded for the 10 rockets. It also has the Pack-a-punch camo pattern.
About the same size as a standard lipstick tube, roughly 2 inches by .5"
According to Wikipedia, the Belgian Land Component still uses the M72 LAW as its unguided anti-tank rocket launcher. The M72 law is a disposable unit - you fire it, and you can just drop the tube and leave it. They would originally have been sourced from the US, and manufactured by Talley Industries. However, they're also manufactured under licence by Raufoss Ammunisjonsfabrikker A/S in Norway and Makina ve Kimya Endüstrisi Kurumu (MKEK) in Turkey, so they may be currently sourcing them from either of those countries.
Python with speed reloader, but cz75 full auto and m72 law are pretty epic too
The third law of motion, also known as Newton's third law of motion, explains how a rocket is launched. This law states that for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. In the case of a rocket launch, the rocket propels exhaust gases downward, which in turn creates an upward force that lifts the rocket off the ground.
Nothing i have one you lose everything it sucks but it gets better trust me try to use the Mp5k in the first then that get with the m72 law thing ok?
The third law of motion, known as Newton's third law, is used to explain rocket propulsion. This law states that for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. In the case of a rocket, hot gases are expelled backward, causing the rocket to move forward in the opposite direction.
Your serial number suffix of M72 indicates that your rifle was made in the year 1972.
The law of interaction states that for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. In the context of rocket launching, this law is applied as the rocket pushes exhaust gases downward with force (action), causing the rocket to move upward (reaction) in the opposite direction. This principle underlies Newton's third law of motion and is fundamental to the physics of rocket propulsion.
There are several. The modern disposable anti-tank rocket traces its roots to the German Panzerfaust of Second World War vintage (which was also the jumping off point for the development of the RPG-2 and later RPG-7). The M72 Light Antitank Weapon (LAW) is still in use, and this was also copied by the Soviets and put into production as the RPG-22, but if you're referring to the one currently used by both the US military and several other forces around the world, you would be thinking of the Swedish AT-4 rocket.
The achievement of lifting a rocket off the ground and into space can be explained by Newton's third law of motion, which states that for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. This law explains how the rocket engines generate thrust by expelling gases downward, causing the rocket to move upward.