Blitz & Keckler
This article is incomplete because it is pending further input from participants, or it is a work-in-progress by one author. Please comment on this article's talk page to share your input, comments and questions. Note: To contribute to this article, you may need to seek help from the author(s) of this page. |
Aktiengesellschaft | |
Traded as | BKAG |
Industry | Firearms |
Founded | 1953 |
Founder | Eduard Keckler Gustav Alberg Jochen Weirich |
Headquarters | , |
Key people | CEO: Franz Gruber |
Revenue | ₰157 million (2019) |
₰11.1 million | |
₰11.9 million | |
Total assets | ₰211 million |
Total equity | ₰121.3 million |
Number of employees | 2,750 |
Biltz & Keckler is a Ostlander defense manufacturing company that manufactures handguns, rifles, submachine guns, and grenade launchers primarily for the Bodentruppen, the ground forces component of the Reichstreitkräfte. It was founded by Eduard Keckler, a firearms designer and engineer who worked for Reich Ausrüstung Gesellschaft before breaking from the company over design and creative differences. He founded Blitz & Keckler in 1949 along with Gustav Alberg and Jochen Weirich. The company is headquartered in Valfitz.
B+K has a history of innovation in firearms, being one of the first firearms firms to incorporate polymers in weapon designs, and also developed modern polygonal rifling, noted for its high accuracy, increased muzzle velocity and barrel life. In addition, it is the sole producer of roller-delayed blowback firesrms within Ostlichtor, a system of firearms operation actually conceptualized by Keckler while working for RAG, and first developed by Keckler as part of B+K. The system of operation was first introduced on the company's Biltz & Keckler Sturmgewehr 61 assault rifle, which was adopted by the Bodentruppen in 1964, and standaerized across the Reichstreitkräfte in 1967.
History
Initially, Gustav Alberg proposed the name "Blitz" for the entity he, Keckler and Weirich were creating. However, Keckler opposed the idea, preferring instead to include, at the very least, his own surname in the firm's title. In 1951, Keckler agreed to the name Blitz and Keckler, and that the company's logo would feature a prominent lightning bolt with a minimalized "H".