fbpx
Wikipedia

Rifle grenade

A rifle grenade is a grenade that uses a rifle-based launcher to permit a longer effective range than would be possible if the grenade were thrown by hand.

The Belgian ENERGA anti-tank rifle grenade was widely adopted by Western nations.

The practice of projecting grenades with rifle-mounted launchers was first widely used during World War I and World War II and continues to the present, with the term "rifle grenade" now encompassing many different types of payloads including high explosive, fragmentation, anti-tank warheads, concussion, smoke, incendiary, and flare missiles.

Rifle grenades have largely been supplanted in the infantry fire support role by a combination of grenade launchers (typically affixed to rifles) and disposable anti-armor rockets.

History

Early use

 
Mills bomb N°23 Mk II, with rod for launch by rifle

Adaptation of grenades for use in rifles began around the 18th century, when cup-shaped dischargers were fitted to the barrels of flintlock muskets, with the grenades propelled by the force of a blank cartridge.[1] During the early 20th century a Japanese Colonel Amazawa experimented with rifle fired grenades during the Battle of Port Arthur in the Russo-Japanese War, and the idea was further used by the Spanish, though the French were the first to put it to widespread use during the trench warfare of World War I.[2]

World War I

In 1908, Frederick Marten Hale patented the rod grenade.[3][4] "A simple rod was attached to a specialized grenade, inserted into the barrel of a standard service rifle and launched using a blank cartridge."[4][3] The British did not immediately adopt the idea and entered World War I without any rifle grenades.[3][5] However, as soon as the trench warfare started, there was a sudden need for rifle grenades. The British government purchased a rodded variant of the No 2 grenade as a temporary solution.[5]

 
Mills N°36 rifle grenade, with its gas check disk for use with cup-launcher

By 1915, Hales had developed the No 3, which is commonly known as the Hales rifle grenade.[6] The Hales grenade was improved throughout World War I to make it more reliable and easier to manufacture. However, production of the grenade was slow. In order to speed rod grenades to the front, the British also made rodded versions of the Mills bomb.

Although a simple approach, launching a rod grenade "...placed an extreme amount of stress on the rifle barrel and the rifle itself, resulting in the need to dedicate specific rifles to the grenade launching role, as they quickly became useless as an accurate firearm. This led to the search for an alternative and resulted in the reappearance of the cup launcher during the latter years of World War I".[4] After World War I, the rod-type rifle grenade was declared obsolete and the remaining Hales were replaced with gas check equipped Mills Bombs shot from a rifle via a cup launcher.

 
Diagram of a Babbitt rifle grenade, as used in the Springfield 1903 rifle
 
French V-B rifle grenade, a bullet trap type. Top shows views and cutaway of the grenade, bottom shows the grenade and grenade launcher, which is affixed to the rifle. Cross-section shows that the grenade is a pass-through design, allowing the use of live ammunition. Arming tab, activated by the bullet's passage, can also be seen.
 
Lebel rifle with VB cup discharger

The French grenade, named the V-B grenade after its inventors, Viven and Bessières, was fired from the standard service rifle with the use of a special adapter and a standard cartridge, providing an effective range of around 175 to 200 yards, while the effective radius of the bursting grenade was 75 yards. The grenade had a hollow through the middle, allowing the bullet to pass through, while the muzzle blast was captured by the launching device and used to propel the grenade. The bullet, after passing through the body of the grenade, struck a small plate that ignited the primer. This then lit the fuse in the grenade, providing an eight-second delay before detonation. It could be fired from the shoulder, but due to the heavy recoil and poor balance of the rifle fitted with the grenade, it was more common to fire it with the butt of the rifle resting on the ground, and either held at an appropriate angle, or resting on a tripod. The rifle grenade was useful in offense, particularly in attacking sandbag fortified machine gun nests, as well as in defense. Eight men armed with rifle grenades could fire 150 shots in a minute, providing a heavy barrage to break up an attacker's lines.[7][8][9][10]

Upon entering World War I, the United States attempted to adopt the V-B grenade, but this was not very successful. The difference between the French and American service cartridges (8 mm vs. 7.62 mm) meant that the grenade had to be re-designed with a smaller hole, but even this was not sufficient to ensure reliable functioning, due to differences in bullet design. The American bullet would often break apart in the grenade, and this led to the V-B derived grenade design being scrapped in May 1918.[8]

The next United States attempt at a rifle grenade was to return to and develop an improved rod-grenade. The Babbitt grenade, developed by Colonel E. B. Babbitt of the U. S. Ordnance Department, used a long stem projecting from the rear of the grenade, which was slipped into the barrel of the Springfield 1903 rifle, and propelled with a special blank cartridge. The stem was calibrated with a number of grooves and a split ring, which allowed the user to set the grenade to slide a certain distance into the muzzle of the rifle. When the stem was inserted only part way, the chamber pressure upon firing was reduced, propelling the grenade a shorter distance. When fired at a 45-degree angle, ranges from 50 to 300 yards were possible; with the rifle angled at 80 degrees, ranges as short as 15 yards were possible. In addition to providing the force to propel the grenade, the gases from firing were directed through a hollow in the stem, and provided force to arm the grenade. Once armed, the grenade had a heavy plunger that would detonate the grenade upon impact.[11][12]

World War II

After World War I, the rifle grenade was steadily modified to increase its effectiveness when launched from a rifle.

In 1928, the Italian Army adopted an unusual cup-type 38.5 mm rifle grenade launcher bolted to the side of a normal Carcano 6.5 mm carbine, the Moschetto di Fanteria Mod. 91/28 con Tromboncino. In use, the rifle's bolt was removed and installed in the launcher chamber.[13] The rifle was placed butt-first against the ground, a grenade loaded down the launcher's muzzle and standard rifle round loaded into the grenade launcher's chamber.[13] When fired, the bullet was trapped, the neck of the cartridge case expanded and the gases passed into launcher's barrel through four holes providing the energy needed to launch the grenade.[13] After the grenade was launched, the chamber was opened, ejecting the spent cartridge case and making the bullet fall out.[13] The necessity of changing the rifle bolt kept the rifle out of use until the bolt could be replaced, a slow and clumsy procedure. The bolt-changing procedure could also result in lost rifle bolts in the heat of battle, putting the weapon out of action completely. As a result, this design was not adopted by any other nation. Today, it can be seen as an early, if unsuccessful ancestor of modern under-barrel grenade launchers such as the M203.

 
Japanese Type 91 50 mm grenade with screw-on propellant cartridge for use in a Type 89 grenade discharger
 
Japanese soldier demonstrating the correct use of a Type 89 discharger
 
Type 100 rifle grenade launcher
 
A member of the British Home Guard demonstrates a rifle equipped to fire a No. 68 anti-tank grenade
 
Drawings of German Schiessbecher and grenades
 
Japanese Type 2 grenade launcher and a 30 mm Type 2 hollow charge grenade (top) and a 40 mm Type 2 hollow charge grenade (bottom) used during the Second World War
 
An M7 grenade launcher with M9 rifle grenade fitted on the end of an M1 Garand rifle
 
WWII American rifle grenades (From left to right): M1 grenade adapter with Mk.2 fragmentation grenade, M22 smoke rifle grenade with impact fuze, M17 fragmentation rifle grenade with impact fuze, M2 grenade adapter with AN/M8 smoke grenade
 
Japanese troops launching practice ENERGA rifle grenades attached from Howa Type 64 rifles
 
Cutaway of M31 HEAT rifle grenade from US Army Field Manual FM 23-3 1972. The M31 warhead was adapted into the superseding M72 LAW single-shot disposable rocket system.
 
Yugoslavian SKS with 22 mm launcher attached to muzzle, plus a flip-up grenade sight
Video of U.S. troops using GREM (Simon) rifle grenade system
 
Japanese Type 06 rifle grenade attached to the barrel of a Howa Type 89 assault rifle

The Japanese military continued to experiment with rifle and hand-thrown grenades between the wars and would adopt a family of fragmentation grenades with almost universal adaptability. Introduced in 1931, the Type 91 fragmentation grenade could be thrown by hand, fired from a cup-type grenade launcher (the Type 100), discharged by a lightweight mortar-like projector (the Type 89 grenade discharger, or knee mortar).[14] or fitted with tail-fin assembly and fired from a spigot-type rifle grenade launcher.

The spigot-type grenade launchers were used by Japanese Special Naval Landing Forces to launch an anti-tank (hollow-charge) finned grenade. They were also used to propel Type 91 hand grenades fitted with tail-fin assemblies. These grenades had wood-bulleted launching cartridges stored in their tail-fin assemblies. The cartridges are fired from the rifle and the wooden bullets are trapped by the tail-fin assemblies launching and arming the grenades. These launchers are not numbered, and production figures are not available and examples of spigot grenade launchers are rarely encountered.

In 1939, the Japanese introduced the Type 89 grenade discharger, the Type 91 fragmentation grenade was fitted with a propellant base and time fuse. It did not explode upon contact, but was designed to ignite its fuse while in flight. A weak creep spring inside the grenade firing mechanism allowed the firing pin to be thrown back upon launching, igniting a time fuse with a 7-8 second delay. Using this system, the Type 91 grenades could be launched through jungle cover or through small openings without the danger of premature detonation in the event the grenade struck an object on its way to the target.[15] Although the Type 89 could be fired by a single person, it was typically operated with a crew of 3, enabling it to reach a rate of fire of about 25 rounds per minute.[16]

In 1939, The Japanese also introduced the Type 100 grenade discharger for the Type 38 and Type 99 Arisaka rifles. It launches standard Type 91 and Type 99 hand-grenades. The launcher is somewhat unusual in that rather than using the more common cup designs it is a gas trap system, meaning that it incorporates a barrel extension which taps off excess propellant gases to launch the grenade from a cup offset from the barrel. This has the advantage that standard rifle cartridges could be used along with the standard hand-grenades which simplified logistics, at the expense of increased weight and decreased efficiency. The effective range is approximately 100 yards.[17]

In 1940, Britain put the first anti-tank grenade into the field during World War II the No. 68 AT grenade, which was one of the first "of any" type anti-tank weapons with a shaped charge or high-explosive anti-tank (HEAT) type warhead. The design of the warhead was simple and could penetrate 52 mm (2.0 in) of armor in 1940.[18] The simple fins gave it some stability in the air and detonation occurred on impact.

In 1942, an attachable rifle grenade launcher called the Gewehrgranatengerät or Schiessbecher ('shooting cup') was introduced that was developed based on rifle grenade launcher models designed during World War I. The 30 mm Schiessbecher cup-type rifle grenade launcher could be mounted on any Karabiner 98k and was intended to replace all previous rifle grenade launcher models. The rifle grenade launcher could be used against infantry, fortifications and light armored vehicles up to a range of 280 m (306 yd). For these differing tasks, several specialized grenades with accompanying special propelling cartridges were developed for the 1,450,113 produced Schiessbecher rifle grenade launchers. The rifle grenade-propelling cartridges fired a wooden projectile through the barrel to the rifle grenade that, upon impact, automatically primed the rifle grenade. The Schiessbecher could be mounted on the Karabiner 98a, G98/40, StG 44 and FG 42

The Japanese would also adopt a version of the German Schiessbecher grenade launcher. The Type 2 rifle grenade launcher was an attachment for the Type 38 and Type 99 rifles that allowed them to fire special hollow charge grenades. Two grenades were produced for the launcher: a 30 mm grenade and a larger, 40 mm grenade, both designated Type 2. The launcher sits over the end of the barrel, held in place with a clamping device. A special crimped blank cartridge or wooden bullet is used to fire the grenades.

In the years just before World War II, the United States adopted the spigot-type 22 mm rifle grenade launchers. These 22 mm launchers are attached to a rifles muzzle, in the form of a detachable adapter. As with most rifle grenades, it is propelled by a blank cartridge inserted into the chamber of the rifle. A 22 mm grenade can range from powerful anti-tank rounds such as the M9 rifle grenade, to simple finned tubes with a fragmentation hand grenade attached to the end such as the M1 grenade adapter. The "22 mm" refers to the diameter of the base tube which fits over the spigot of the launcher, not the diameter of the warhead section, which is much wider.

Modern use

After World War II, many countries adopted 22 mm spigot-type launchers and anti-tank rifle grenades with shaped charge or high-explosive anti-tank (HEAT) warheads. The Belgian ENERGA anti-tank rifle grenade design in particular was widely adopted by Western nations. These post-war designs come in "standard" type which are propelled by a blank cartridge inserted into the chamber of the rifle. And, the newer "bullet trap" and "shoot through" types, as their names imply use live ammunition.[19]

The M31 HEAT rifle grenade is a fin-stabilized anti-tank rifle grenade designed in the late 1950s to replace the Belgian ENERGA rifle grenade which was adopted by the US Army and US Marines as an emergency stop-gap measure during the Korean War. Compared to the ENERGA, the M31 is slightly lighter in weight and has a smaller-diameter warhead—i.e. 75 mm vs 66 mm. Penetration for the M31 is estimated to be 200 mm / 8 inches for steel armor plating [20][21] and twice that estimate for concrete.

The bullet-trap rifle grenade became increasing popular in the post-war years, most notably the French AC58 anti-armor and APAV40 multi-purpose grenades. The 22 mm rifle grenade launchers were further simplified, becoming an integral part of the rifle itself. All current NATO rifles are capable of launching STANAG 22 mm rifle grenades from their flash hiders without the use of an adapter.[citation needed]

By the late 1960s, rifle grenades and their launchers were slowly replaced by disposable single shot rocket launchers such as the M72 LAW (light anti-tank weapon), and dedicated 40 mm grenade launchers. First seen in the United States armed forces, these 40 mm grenade launchers generally took the form of separate weapons, such as the M79 grenade launcher. Or, as an under-barrel attachment to an assault rifle, such as the M203 grenade launcher attached to an M16 rifle.

Today, there is a return to the concept of the rifle grenade, such as the SIMON breach grenade, the IMI Refaim, FN Herstal Telgren and the Japanese Type 06 advance grenades. These grenades were designed to be used by ordinary riflemen as opposed to specially trained grenadiers. For example, the MECAR rifle grenades are equipped with simple ballistic sights and have an effective range of 300 meters.[22]

Modern combined arms doctrine dictates that every infantry unit should have a certain percentage of dedicated grenadiers, or soldiers equipped with a grenade launcher or combination rifle/grenade launcher. The criticism of this doctrine is that if the grenadiers in a group are disabled or separated from the group, then the group has completely lost the grenade launcher as a heavy fire support. With the addition rifle grenades, each soldier would be equipped with a small number of rifle grenades, so every individual soldier could use some form of heavy firepower. However, all of these rifle grenades add additional weight to the soldiers war-load and as a consequence they must reduce the amount of rifle ammunition that they carry. For example, a modern French AC58 "bullet trap" rifle grenade weighs .5 kg, the equivalent of a loaded M16 STANAG magazine.

The AK-47 can mount the Kalashnikov cup-type grenade-launcher that uses standard Soviet RGD-5 hand-grenades. The soup-can shaped launcher is screwed onto an AK-47's muzzle.[23] The maximum effective range is approximately 150 meters.[24] The M16 has a similar device used to launch tear-gas hand-grenades.[25]

On 10 April 2021, during 2021 Myanmar protests, security forces killed at least 82 protesters in Bago town with rifle grenades.[26][27]

Comparison of performance

Performance of modern and historical rifle grenades
Name Introduced Length Weight Explosive fill Armor penetration (est.) Maximum range Effective range
No. 68 AT grenade 1940 178 mm 894 g 156 g Lyddite, Pentolite or RDX/Beeswax 52 mm ? m 100 m
M17 rifle grenade 1941 248 mm 667 g 57 g TNT NA 200 m ? m
M9A1 HEAT anti-tank rifle grenade 1944 285 mm 590 g 158 g TNT 100 mm 285 m 100 m
ENERGA anti-tank rifle grenade 1950 395 mm 645 g 331 g RDX & TNT 200 mm 300 m 100 m
Super Energa 425 mm 765 g 314 g PETN 275 mm 550 m 200 m
M31 HEAT rifle grenade 1950s[clarification needed] 430 mm 709 g 254 g Composition B 200 mm 185 m 115 m
APAV40 1956 352 mm 405 g 80 g hexogen-tolite 100 mm 320 m 170 m
Gewehrgranaten 58 1958 1180 g 300 to 500 mm 400 m 125 m
STRIM 40 315 mm 515 g 150 m
STRIM 65 1961 420 mm 735 g 270 g of Hexolite 120 m 70 m
BT/AT 52 400 mm 510 g
AC58 380 mm 500 g ? g hexogen-tolite 350 mm ? m ? m
Denel R1M1 1970s[clarification needed] 425 mm 720 g ? g RDX & Wax 275 mm 375 m 75 m
Rifleman's Assault Weapon 1977 305 mm 4700 g 1000g high-explosive squash head 200 mm 1500 m 300 m
Type 06 rifle grenade 2006 High-explosive anti-tank

Designs

Rod-type

The rod-type rifle grenade is a standard hand grenade with a metallic rod attached to the base. They were developed before World War I. To use:

  1. Insert the rod-type rifle grenade down the barrel of a standard rifle
  2. Insert a special blank cartridge into the rifle's chamber
  3. Place the rifle's butt-stock on the ground
  4. While holding the grenade's safety spoon with one hand, remove the safety pin with the other
  5. Place free hand on the rifle's grip and prepare to fire
  6. Release the grenade's safety spoon, quickly place said hand on the rifle's fore stock and immediately fire the rifle

If the soldier does not immediately launch the grenade, it will time out and explode. It was later found that the repeated launching of rod grenades caused damage to a rifle's barrel and the rod-type rifle grenade fell from favor.

Cup-type

The cup-type launcher replaced the rod-type rifle grenade during World War I. This soup-can shaped launcher is attached to a rifle's muzzle. The cup-type launcher could launch a standard hand-grenade or a purpose built cup-type grenade. To use:

  1. Insert a grenade into the cup launcher. When using a standard hand-grenade remove the safety pin, the cup holds the safety-spoon in place until launched
  2. Insert a special blank cartridge into the rifle's chamber
  3. Place the butt-stock of the rifle on the ground and fire from this position

"Shoot-through" type

The cup-type launcher has the advantage of using standard hand-grenades. However, the need to load a blank cartridge into the rifle's chamber in order to launch the grenade proved to be clumsy in combat. This difficulty lead to the development the French "Vivien and Bessières" shoot-through grenade (or VB grenade). As the name implies, these grenades allow for the use of standard ball ammunition. The VB grenade has a hole through the middle that permits the passage of a standard bullet; this arms the grenade, the expanding gasses launch the grenade, and the grenade explodes 8 seconds later. This removes the need to provide a special blank round to launch the grenade. To use:

  1. Insert VB grenade into the cup-type launcher
  2. Place the butt-stock of the rifle on the ground and fire from this position

Spigot-type

The 22mm type rifle grenade launcher was developed before World War II. This type of launcher is attached to a rifle's muzzle and allows for the use of a wide range of rifle grenades, from powerful anti-tank rounds to simple finned tubes with a fragmentation hand-grenade attached to the end. These rifle grenades come in "standard" type, which are propelled by a blank cartridge inserted into the chamber of the rifle; or, "bullet trap" and "shoot through" types, which allow the use of live ammunition. All modern 22mm rifle grenades explode on impact. All Standard issue NATO rifles are capable of launching STANAG type 22mm rifle grenades from their integral flash hiders without the use of an adapter. Modern bullet-trap rifle grenades such as the French APAV40 can be fired as fast as a soldier can place a grenade on an FAMAS rifle's muzzle and pull the trigger. To use:

  1. Place 22mm rifle grenade over the spigot attachment or the rifle's flash hider
  2. Aim at target and fire rifle

Other uses and similar devices

 
German propaganda rifle grenade
 
A riot control grenade in a launching cup attached to a Mossberg 500 riot shotgun
 
Launching a dummy grenade from a Mossberg M500 with a grenade launching cup attachment

During the Second World War, Nazi Germany developed and fielded a propaganda rifle grenade (Propaganda-Gewehrgranate). It was designed for front-line troops to disperse propaganda leaflets via a rifle grenade that would disperse the printed material via a small ejecting charge.[28]

The advent of less lethal grenades for riot control has led to the creation of gun launched versions of these grenades, though they are typically launched by riot shotguns, not rifles. These systems use a cup-type launcher attached to the muzzle of the gun to launch various less lethal grenade types.[29]

A golf ball launcher is a cup-type launcher which is used for sport or recreational purposes. These launchers will shoot a standard golf ball over 250 yards (230 m) with little to no recoil. These launchers are designed to replace an AR-15 type rifle's flash hider.[30]

There's also a soda/beer can launcher. Unlike the golf ball launcher that screws onto the end of the barrel, where the AR-15 family of rifles' flash hider attaches, the can launcher tube is fitted directly to the AR-15 upper receiver and is the entire barrel assembly. Both the golf ball launcher and can launcher require the use of blank ammunition.

Advantages and disadvantages

Compared to a standard hand-grenade, a rifle grenade:

  • Can be projected to a much greater distance
  • Can carry a larger, heavier payload
  • Can effectively project a shaped charge warhead which can penetrate armor
  • Has the advantage of detonating upon impact
  • Is more accurate

However, a rifle grenade:

  • Requires a rifle to launch
  • Is more complicated to use than a hand grenade.
  • Is larger and heavier than a hand grenade.
  • Produces very high levels of recoil when launched from a rifle.

Compared to a dedicated grenade launcher, a rifle grenade:

  • Can be of a variety of different sizes and shapes of warheads and payloads
  • Can be projected from any rifle fitted with an appropriate muzzle base or spigot tube fitting; in essence, every soldier armed with a rifle can be a grenadier
  • Can fire up to 10 grenades per minute for area suppression, for a modern bullet-trap rifle grenade
  • Requires a simple, smaller, and cheaper launcher attachment (or even no attachment at all) when compared to a standalone grenade launcher

However:

  • A rifle grenade will temporarily disable the normal use of the rifle
  • A dedicated grenade launcher can be fired from the shoulder without undue discomfort, something not normally possible with a rifle grenade
  • A soldier armed with a dedicated grenade launcher can carry 2 to 3 times more grenade ammo than rifle grenades
  • A dedicated grenade launcher is more accurate than a rifle grenade

Compared to a rocket launcher, a rifle grenade:

  • Has a curved trajectory, allowing indirect fire against targets in defilade, behind walls and buildings or rooftops
  • Is much lighter and does not require the user to carry a bulky launcher tube
  • Can be safely fired from inside a building whereas a Rocket Launcher cannot due to the danger of backblast

However:

  • Rocket launchers have a flatter trajectory making them more accurate "point-and-shoot" weapons
  • Rocket launchers generally have more powerful warheads
  • Rocket launchers generally have a longer effective range

See also

References

  1. ^ Tucker, Spencer C. (2015). Instruments of War: Weapons and Technologies That Have Changed History. ABC-CLIO, LLC. p. 153.
  2. ^ Cornélis De Witt Willcox; Edwin Roy Stuart. The International Military Digest Annual. p. 236.
  3. ^ a b c "A Muse of Fire: British Trench Warfare Munitions, their Invention, Manufacture and Tactical Employment on the Western Front, 1914–18" (PDF). University of Exeter. 2008-09-30. Retrieved 2021-08-01.
  4. ^ a b c "Evolution and Demise of the Rod Grenade". Inert-Ord.net. 2003-01-31. Retrieved 2013-10-06.
  5. ^ a b Saunders, Weapons of the Trench War, p.97-99
  6. ^ Saunders, Weapons of the Trench War, p.98
  7. ^ Walter Hines Page; Arthur Wilson Page (1918). The World's Work: A History of Our Time. Doubleday, Page & Co. p. 501.
  8. ^ a b United States War Dept. America's Munitions 1917-1918. pp. 208–209.
  9. ^ Anne Cipriano Venzon; Anne Venzon; Paul L. Miles (1999). The United States in the First World War: An Encyclopedia. Taylor & Francis. p. 172.
  10. ^ Robert B. Asprey. At Belleau Wood. p. 19.
  11. ^ United States Army. Ordnance Dept, Ordnance (1917). Description and Instructions for the Use of Rifle and Hand Grenades. Washington, Govt. print. off.
  12. ^ William Harvey Tschappat (1917). Text-book of Ordnance and Gunnery. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. p. 511.
  13. ^ a b c d G.A.T. "Moschetto modello 1891 per t.s." www.il91.it. Retrieved 11 April 2018.
  14. ^ George, John B. (LTC), Shots Fired In Anger, NRA Press (1981), ISBN 0-935998-42-X, p. 343
  15. ^ George, John B. (LTC) (1981). Shots Fired In Anger. NRA Press. p. 350. ISBN 0-935998-42-X.
  16. ^ . Archived from the original on December 9, 2004. Retrieved March 25, 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  17. ^ http://www.lonesentry.com/articles/jp_rifle_grenade/index.html Model 100 Grenade Launcher Produced in Two Types" from Intelligence Bulletin, Dec. 1944
  18. ^ R F Eather, BSc & N Griffithe, OBE MSc - Some Historical Aspects of the Development of Shaped Charges - Ministry of Defence, Royal Armament Research and Development Establishment - 1984 - page 6 - AD-A144 098
  19. ^ Margiotta, Franklin D.; Sullivan, Gordon R. (1997). Brassey's Encyclopedia of Land Forces and Warfare. Brassey's. p. 40. ISBN 1-57488-087-X.
  20. ^ US Army publication September 30, 1977 "FM-7 The Mechanized Infantry Platoon/Squad Section B-21" specification for M72A2 LAW variant which uses a warhead almost identical to the M31 HEAT
  21. ^ Note - before the publication of FM-7 September 1977, various penetration specifications were given for the M72A2 and the M31 HEAT. Anywhere from 250 to 305 mm. In the mid 1970s the US Army decided in field test to truly determine the armour penetration under battlefield conditions again Russian tanks captured in 1973. The result was 200 mm (7.9 in) the proceeding penetration specification is stated as it appears in FM-7 1977.
  22. ^ SPRL, Antalys. "Mecar rifle grenades". www.mecar.be. Retrieved 11 April 2018.
  23. ^ Figure 54 of the US Army Operator's Manual for the AK-47 Assault Rifle. En.wikisource.org. Retrieved on 2011-09-27
  24. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2005-03-02. Retrieved 2011-12-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  25. ^ "ImageShack - Best place for all of your image hosting and image sharing needs". ImageShack. Retrieved 11 April 2018.
  26. ^ "Myanmar security forces with rifle grenades kill over 80 protesters - monitoring group". Reuters. 10 March 2021. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  27. ^ "Myanmar security forces with rifle grenades kill over 80 protesters - monitoring group".
  28. ^ "German Propaganda Rifle Grenade, WWII Tactical and Technical Trends, No. 43, January 27, 1944". Lone Sentry. Retrieved 2013-10-06.[permanent dead link]
  29. ^ Military Police Instruction Company (14 August 2007). "Instructor Outline Civil Disturbance Lesson Plan". United States Marine Corps.[permanent dead link] (Word document)
  30. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-10-13. Retrieved 2011-12-23.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

External links

  • Carcano Model 91/28 with Tromboncino

rifle, grenade, rifle, grenade, grenade, that, uses, rifle, based, launcher, permit, longer, effective, range, than, would, possible, grenade, were, thrown, hand, belgian, energa, anti, tank, rifle, grenade, widely, adopted, western, nations, practice, project. A rifle grenade is a grenade that uses a rifle based launcher to permit a longer effective range than would be possible if the grenade were thrown by hand The Belgian ENERGA anti tank rifle grenade was widely adopted by Western nations The practice of projecting grenades with rifle mounted launchers was first widely used during World War I and World War II and continues to the present with the term rifle grenade now encompassing many different types of payloads including high explosive fragmentation anti tank warheads concussion smoke incendiary and flare missiles Rifle grenades have largely been supplanted in the infantry fire support role by a combination of grenade launchers typically affixed to rifles and disposable anti armor rockets Contents 1 History 1 1 Early use 1 2 World War I 1 3 World War II 1 4 Modern use 1 5 Comparison of performance 2 Designs 2 1 Rod type 2 2 Cup type 2 3 Shoot through type 2 4 Spigot type 3 Other uses and similar devices 4 Advantages and disadvantages 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory EditEarly use Edit Mills bomb N 23 Mk II with rod for launch by rifle Adaptation of grenades for use in rifles began around the 18th century when cup shaped dischargers were fitted to the barrels of flintlock muskets with the grenades propelled by the force of a blank cartridge 1 During the early 20th century a Japanese Colonel Amazawa experimented with rifle fired grenades during the Battle of Port Arthur in the Russo Japanese War and the idea was further used by the Spanish though the French were the first to put it to widespread use during the trench warfare of World War I 2 World War I Edit In 1908 Frederick Marten Hale patented the rod grenade 3 4 A simple rod was attached to a specialized grenade inserted into the barrel of a standard service rifle and launched using a blank cartridge 4 3 The British did not immediately adopt the idea and entered World War I without any rifle grenades 3 5 However as soon as the trench warfare started there was a sudden need for rifle grenades The British government purchased a rodded variant of the No 2 grenade as a temporary solution 5 Mills N 36 rifle grenade with its gas check disk for use with cup launcher By 1915 Hales had developed the No 3 which is commonly known as the Hales rifle grenade 6 The Hales grenade was improved throughout World War I to make it more reliable and easier to manufacture However production of the grenade was slow In order to speed rod grenades to the front the British also made rodded versions of the Mills bomb Although a simple approach launching a rod grenade placed an extreme amount of stress on the rifle barrel and the rifle itself resulting in the need to dedicate specific rifles to the grenade launching role as they quickly became useless as an accurate firearm This led to the search for an alternative and resulted in the reappearance of the cup launcher during the latter years of World War I 4 After World War I the rod type rifle grenade was declared obsolete and the remaining Hales were replaced with gas check equipped Mills Bombs shot from a rifle via a cup launcher Diagram of a Babbitt rifle grenade as used in the Springfield 1903 rifle French V B rifle grenade a bullet trap type Top shows views and cutaway of the grenade bottom shows the grenade and grenade launcher which is affixed to the rifle Cross section shows that the grenade is a pass through design allowing the use of live ammunition Arming tab activated by the bullet s passage can also be seen Lebel rifle with VB cup discharger The French grenade named the V B grenade after its inventors Viven and Bessieres was fired from the standard service rifle with the use of a special adapter and a standard cartridge providing an effective range of around 175 to 200 yards while the effective radius of the bursting grenade was 75 yards The grenade had a hollow through the middle allowing the bullet to pass through while the muzzle blast was captured by the launching device and used to propel the grenade The bullet after passing through the body of the grenade struck a small plate that ignited the primer This then lit the fuse in the grenade providing an eight second delay before detonation It could be fired from the shoulder but due to the heavy recoil and poor balance of the rifle fitted with the grenade it was more common to fire it with the butt of the rifle resting on the ground and either held at an appropriate angle or resting on a tripod The rifle grenade was useful in offense particularly in attacking sandbag fortified machine gun nests as well as in defense Eight men armed with rifle grenades could fire 150 shots in a minute providing a heavy barrage to break up an attacker s lines 7 8 9 10 Upon entering World War I the United States attempted to adopt the V B grenade but this was not very successful The difference between the French and American service cartridges 8 mm vs 7 62 mm meant that the grenade had to be re designed with a smaller hole but even this was not sufficient to ensure reliable functioning due to differences in bullet design The American bullet would often break apart in the grenade and this led to the V B derived grenade design being scrapped in May 1918 8 The next United States attempt at a rifle grenade was to return to and develop an improved rod grenade The Babbitt grenade developed by Colonel E B Babbitt of the U S Ordnance Department used a long stem projecting from the rear of the grenade which was slipped into the barrel of the Springfield 1903 rifle and propelled with a special blank cartridge The stem was calibrated with a number of grooves and a split ring which allowed the user to set the grenade to slide a certain distance into the muzzle of the rifle When the stem was inserted only part way the chamber pressure upon firing was reduced propelling the grenade a shorter distance When fired at a 45 degree angle ranges from 50 to 300 yards were possible with the rifle angled at 80 degrees ranges as short as 15 yards were possible In addition to providing the force to propel the grenade the gases from firing were directed through a hollow in the stem and provided force to arm the grenade Once armed the grenade had a heavy plunger that would detonate the grenade upon impact 11 12 World War II Edit After World War I the rifle grenade was steadily modified to increase its effectiveness when launched from a rifle In 1928 the Italian Army adopted an unusual cup type 38 5 mm rifle grenade launcher bolted to the side of a normal Carcano 6 5 mm carbine the Moschetto di Fanteria Mod 91 28 con Tromboncino In use the rifle s bolt was removed and installed in the launcher chamber 13 The rifle was placed butt first against the ground a grenade loaded down the launcher s muzzle and standard rifle round loaded into the grenade launcher s chamber 13 When fired the bullet was trapped the neck of the cartridge case expanded and the gases passed into launcher s barrel through four holes providing the energy needed to launch the grenade 13 After the grenade was launched the chamber was opened ejecting the spent cartridge case and making the bullet fall out 13 The necessity of changing the rifle bolt kept the rifle out of use until the bolt could be replaced a slow and clumsy procedure The bolt changing procedure could also result in lost rifle bolts in the heat of battle putting the weapon out of action completely As a result this design was not adopted by any other nation Today it can be seen as an early if unsuccessful ancestor of modern under barrel grenade launchers such as the M203 Japanese Type 91 50 mm grenade with screw on propellant cartridge for use in a Type 89 grenade discharger Japanese soldier demonstrating the correct use of a Type 89 discharger Type 100 rifle grenade launcher A member of the British Home Guard demonstrates a rifle equipped to fire a No 68 anti tank grenade Drawings of German Schiessbecher and grenades Japanese Type 2 grenade launcher and a 30 mm Type 2 hollow charge grenade top and a 40 mm Type 2 hollow charge grenade bottom used during the Second World War An M7 grenade launcher with M9 rifle grenade fitted on the end of an M1 Garand rifle WWII American rifle grenades From left to right M1 grenade adapter with Mk 2 fragmentation grenade M22 smoke rifle grenade with impact fuze M17 fragmentation rifle grenade with impact fuze M2 grenade adapter with AN M8 smoke grenade Japanese troops launching practice ENERGA rifle grenades attached from Howa Type 64 rifles Cutaway of M31 HEAT rifle grenade from US Army Field Manual FM 23 3 1972 The M31 warhead was adapted into the superseding M72 LAW single shot disposable rocket system Yugoslavian SKS with 22 mm launcher attached to muzzle plus a flip up grenade sight source source source source source source source source source source Video of U S troops using GREM Simon rifle grenade system Japanese Type 06 rifle grenade attached to the barrel of a Howa Type 89 assault rifle The Japanese military continued to experiment with rifle and hand thrown grenades between the wars and would adopt a family of fragmentation grenades with almost universal adaptability Introduced in 1931 the Type 91 fragmentation grenade could be thrown by hand fired from a cup type grenade launcher the Type 100 discharged by a lightweight mortar like projector the Type 89 grenade discharger or knee mortar 14 or fitted with tail fin assembly and fired from a spigot type rifle grenade launcher The spigot type grenade launchers were used by Japanese Special Naval Landing Forces to launch an anti tank hollow charge finned grenade They were also used to propel Type 91 hand grenades fitted with tail fin assemblies These grenades had wood bulleted launching cartridges stored in their tail fin assemblies The cartridges are fired from the rifle and the wooden bullets are trapped by the tail fin assemblies launching and arming the grenades These launchers are not numbered and production figures are not available and examples of spigot grenade launchers are rarely encountered In 1939 the Japanese introduced the Type 89 grenade discharger the Type 91 fragmentation grenade was fitted with a propellant base and time fuse It did not explode upon contact but was designed to ignite its fuse while in flight A weak creep spring inside the grenade firing mechanism allowed the firing pin to be thrown back upon launching igniting a time fuse with a 7 8 second delay Using this system the Type 91 grenades could be launched through jungle cover or through small openings without the danger of premature detonation in the event the grenade struck an object on its way to the target 15 Although the Type 89 could be fired by a single person it was typically operated with a crew of 3 enabling it to reach a rate of fire of about 25 rounds per minute 16 In 1939 The Japanese also introduced the Type 100 grenade discharger for the Type 38 and Type 99 Arisaka rifles It launches standard Type 91 and Type 99 hand grenades The launcher is somewhat unusual in that rather than using the more common cup designs it is a gas trap system meaning that it incorporates a barrel extension which taps off excess propellant gases to launch the grenade from a cup offset from the barrel This has the advantage that standard rifle cartridges could be used along with the standard hand grenades which simplified logistics at the expense of increased weight and decreased efficiency The effective range is approximately 100 yards 17 In 1940 Britain put the first anti tank grenade into the field during World War II the No 68 AT grenade which was one of the first of any type anti tank weapons with a shaped charge or high explosive anti tank HEAT type warhead The design of the warhead was simple and could penetrate 52 mm 2 0 in of armor in 1940 18 The simple fins gave it some stability in the air and detonation occurred on impact In 1942 an attachable rifle grenade launcher called the Gewehrgranatengerat or Schiessbecher shooting cup was introduced that was developed based on rifle grenade launcher models designed during World War I The 30 mm Schiessbecher cup type rifle grenade launcher could be mounted on any Karabiner 98k and was intended to replace all previous rifle grenade launcher models The rifle grenade launcher could be used against infantry fortifications and light armored vehicles up to a range of 280 m 306 yd For these differing tasks several specialized grenades with accompanying special propelling cartridges were developed for the 1 450 113 produced Schiessbecher rifle grenade launchers The rifle grenade propelling cartridges fired a wooden projectile through the barrel to the rifle grenade that upon impact automatically primed the rifle grenade The Schiessbecher could be mounted on the Karabiner 98a G98 40 StG 44 and FG 42The Japanese would also adopt a version of the German Schiessbecher grenade launcher The Type 2 rifle grenade launcher was an attachment for the Type 38 and Type 99 rifles that allowed them to fire special hollow charge grenades Two grenades were produced for the launcher a 30 mm grenade and a larger 40 mm grenade both designated Type 2 The launcher sits over the end of the barrel held in place with a clamping device A special crimped blank cartridge or wooden bullet is used to fire the grenades In the years just before World War II the United States adopted the spigot type 22 mm rifle grenade launchers These 22 mm launchers are attached to a rifles muzzle in the form of a detachable adapter As with most rifle grenades it is propelled by a blank cartridge inserted into the chamber of the rifle A 22 mm grenade can range from powerful anti tank rounds such as the M9 rifle grenade to simple finned tubes with a fragmentation hand grenade attached to the end such as the M1 grenade adapter The 22 mm refers to the diameter of the base tube which fits over the spigot of the launcher not the diameter of the warhead section which is much wider Modern use Edit After World War II many countries adopted 22 mm spigot type launchers and anti tank rifle grenades with shaped charge or high explosive anti tank HEAT warheads The Belgian ENERGA anti tank rifle grenade design in particular was widely adopted by Western nations These post war designs come in standard type which are propelled by a blank cartridge inserted into the chamber of the rifle And the newer bullet trap and shoot through types as their names imply use live ammunition 19 The M31 HEAT rifle grenade is a fin stabilized anti tank rifle grenade designed in the late 1950s to replace the Belgian ENERGA rifle grenade which was adopted by the US Army and US Marines as an emergency stop gap measure during the Korean War Compared to the ENERGA the M31 is slightly lighter in weight and has a smaller diameter warhead i e 75 mm vs 66 mm Penetration for the M31 is estimated to be 200 mm 8 inches for steel armor plating 20 21 and twice that estimate for concrete The bullet trap rifle grenade became increasing popular in the post war years most notably the French AC58 anti armor and APAV40 multi purpose grenades The 22 mm rifle grenade launchers were further simplified becoming an integral part of the rifle itself All current NATO rifles are capable of launching STANAG 22 mm rifle grenades from their flash hiders without the use of an adapter citation needed By the late 1960s rifle grenades and their launchers were slowly replaced by disposable single shot rocket launchers such as the M72 LAW light anti tank weapon and dedicated 40 mm grenade launchers First seen in the United States armed forces these 40 mm grenade launchers generally took the form of separate weapons such as the M79 grenade launcher Or as an under barrel attachment to an assault rifle such as the M203 grenade launcher attached to an M16 rifle Today there is a return to the concept of the rifle grenade such as the SIMON breach grenade the IMI Refaim FN Herstal Telgren and the Japanese Type 06 advance grenades These grenades were designed to be used by ordinary riflemen as opposed to specially trained grenadiers For example the MECAR rifle grenades are equipped with simple ballistic sights and have an effective range of 300 meters 22 Modern combined arms doctrine dictates that every infantry unit should have a certain percentage of dedicated grenadiers or soldiers equipped with a grenade launcher or combination rifle grenade launcher The criticism of this doctrine is that if the grenadiers in a group are disabled or separated from the group then the group has completely lost the grenade launcher as a heavy fire support With the addition rifle grenades each soldier would be equipped with a small number of rifle grenades so every individual soldier could use some form of heavy firepower However all of these rifle grenades add additional weight to the soldiers war load and as a consequence they must reduce the amount of rifle ammunition that they carry For example a modern French AC58 bullet trap rifle grenade weighs 5 kg the equivalent of a loaded M16 STANAG magazine The AK 47 can mount the Kalashnikov cup type grenade launcher that uses standard Soviet RGD 5 hand grenades The soup can shaped launcher is screwed onto an AK 47 s muzzle 23 The maximum effective range is approximately 150 meters 24 The M16 has a similar device used to launch tear gas hand grenades 25 On 10 April 2021 during 2021 Myanmar protests security forces killed at least 82 protesters in Bago town with rifle grenades 26 27 Comparison of performance Edit Performance of modern and historical rifle grenades Name Introduced Length Weight Explosive fill Armor penetration est Maximum range Effective rangeNo 68 AT grenade 1940 178 mm 894 g 156 g Lyddite Pentolite or RDX Beeswax 52 mm m 100 mM17 rifle grenade 1941 248 mm 667 g 57 g TNT NA 200 m mM9A1 HEAT anti tank rifle grenade 1944 285 mm 590 g 158 g TNT 100 mm 285 m 100 mENERGA anti tank rifle grenade 1950 395 mm 645 g 331 g RDX amp TNT 200 mm 300 m 100 mSuper Energa 425 mm 765 g 314 g PETN 275 mm 550 m 200 mM31 HEAT rifle grenade 1950s clarification needed 430 mm 709 g 254 g Composition B 200 mm 185 m 115 mAPAV40 1956 352 mm 405 g 80 g hexogen tolite 100 mm 320 m 170 mGewehrgranaten 58 1958 1180 g 300 to 500 mm 400 m 125 mSTRIM 40 315 mm 515 g 150 mSTRIM 65 1961 420 mm 735 g 270 g of Hexolite 120 m 70 mBT AT 52 400 mm 510 gAC58 380 mm 500 g g hexogen tolite 350 mm m mDenel R1M1 1970s clarification needed 425 mm 720 g g RDX amp Wax 275 mm 375 m 75 mRifleman s Assault Weapon 1977 305 mm 4700 g 1000g high explosive squash head 200 mm 1500 m 300 mType 06 rifle grenade 2006 High explosive anti tankDesigns EditRod type Edit The rod type rifle grenade is a standard hand grenade with a metallic rod attached to the base They were developed before World War I To use Insert the rod type rifle grenade down the barrel of a standard rifle Insert a special blank cartridge into the rifle s chamber Place the rifle s butt stock on the ground While holding the grenade s safety spoon with one hand remove the safety pin with the other Place free hand on the rifle s grip and prepare to fire Release the grenade s safety spoon quickly place said hand on the rifle s fore stock and immediately fire the rifleIf the soldier does not immediately launch the grenade it will time out and explode It was later found that the repeated launching of rod grenades caused damage to a rifle s barrel and the rod type rifle grenade fell from favor Cup type Edit The cup type launcher replaced the rod type rifle grenade during World War I This soup can shaped launcher is attached to a rifle s muzzle The cup type launcher could launch a standard hand grenade or a purpose built cup type grenade To use Insert a grenade into the cup launcher When using a standard hand grenade remove the safety pin the cup holds the safety spoon in place until launched Insert a special blank cartridge into the rifle s chamber Place the butt stock of the rifle on the ground and fire from this position Shoot through type Edit The cup type launcher has the advantage of using standard hand grenades However the need to load a blank cartridge into the rifle s chamber in order to launch the grenade proved to be clumsy in combat This difficulty lead to the development the French Vivien and Bessieres shoot through grenade or VB grenade As the name implies these grenades allow for the use of standard ball ammunition The VB grenade has a hole through the middle that permits the passage of a standard bullet this arms the grenade the expanding gasses launch the grenade and the grenade explodes 8 seconds later This removes the need to provide a special blank round to launch the grenade To use Insert VB grenade into the cup type launcher Place the butt stock of the rifle on the ground and fire from this positionSpigot type Edit The 22mm type rifle grenade launcher was developed before World War II This type of launcher is attached to a rifle s muzzle and allows for the use of a wide range of rifle grenades from powerful anti tank rounds to simple finned tubes with a fragmentation hand grenade attached to the end These rifle grenades come in standard type which are propelled by a blank cartridge inserted into the chamber of the rifle or bullet trap and shoot through types which allow the use of live ammunition All modern 22mm rifle grenades explode on impact All Standard issue NATO rifles are capable of launching STANAG type 22mm rifle grenades from their integral flash hiders without the use of an adapter Modern bullet trap rifle grenades such as the French APAV40 can be fired as fast as a soldier can place a grenade on an FAMAS rifle s muzzle and pull the trigger To use Place 22mm rifle grenade over the spigot attachment or the rifle s flash hider Aim at target and fire rifleOther uses and similar devices Edit German propaganda rifle grenade A riot control grenade in a launching cup attached to a Mossberg 500 riot shotgun Launching a dummy grenade from a Mossberg M500 with a grenade launching cup attachment During the Second World War Nazi Germany developed and fielded a propaganda rifle grenade Propaganda Gewehrgranate It was designed for front line troops to disperse propaganda leaflets via a rifle grenade that would disperse the printed material via a small ejecting charge 28 The advent of less lethal grenades for riot control has led to the creation of gun launched versions of these grenades though they are typically launched by riot shotguns not rifles These systems use a cup type launcher attached to the muzzle of the gun to launch various less lethal grenade types 29 A golf ball launcher is a cup type launcher which is used for sport or recreational purposes These launchers will shoot a standard golf ball over 250 yards 230 m with little to no recoil These launchers are designed to replace an AR 15 type rifle s flash hider 30 There s also a soda beer can launcher Unlike the golf ball launcher that screws onto the end of the barrel where the AR 15 family of rifles flash hider attaches the can launcher tube is fitted directly to the AR 15 upper receiver and is the entire barrel assembly Both the golf ball launcher and can launcher require the use of blank ammunition Advantages and disadvantages EditCompared to a standard hand grenade a rifle grenade Can be projected to a much greater distance Can carry a larger heavier payload Can effectively project a shaped charge warhead which can penetrate armor Has the advantage of detonating upon impact Is more accurateHowever a rifle grenade Requires a rifle to launch Is more complicated to use than a hand grenade Is larger and heavier than a hand grenade Produces very high levels of recoil when launched from a rifle Compared to a dedicated grenade launcher a rifle grenade Can be of a variety of different sizes and shapes of warheads and payloads Can be projected from any rifle fitted with an appropriate muzzle base or spigot tube fitting in essence every soldier armed with a rifle can be a grenadier Can fire up to 10 grenades per minute for area suppression for a modern bullet trap rifle grenade Requires a simple smaller and cheaper launcher attachment or even no attachment at all when compared to a standalone grenade launcherHowever A rifle grenade will temporarily disable the normal use of the rifle A dedicated grenade launcher can be fired from the shoulder without undue discomfort something not normally possible with a rifle grenade A soldier armed with a dedicated grenade launcher can carry 2 to 3 times more grenade ammo than rifle grenades A dedicated grenade launcher is more accurate than a rifle grenadeCompared to a rocket launcher a rifle grenade Has a curved trajectory allowing indirect fire against targets in defilade behind walls and buildings or rooftops Is much lighter and does not require the user to carry a bulky launcher tube Can be safely fired from inside a building whereas a Rocket Launcher cannot due to the danger of backblastHowever Rocket launchers have a flatter trajectory making them more accurate point and shoot weapons Rocket launchers generally have more powerful warheads Rocket launchers generally have a longer effective rangeSee also EditTromboncino M28 Italian combination carbine and grenade launcher of 1928 Kbkg wz 1960 Dilagrama m 65 Hand mortar Mk 2 grenade Bazooka Rocket propelled grenadeReferences Edit Tucker Spencer C 2015 Instruments of War Weapons and Technologies That Have Changed History ABC CLIO LLC p 153 Cornelis De Witt Willcox Edwin Roy Stuart The International Military Digest Annual p 236 a b c A Muse of Fire British Trench Warfare Munitions their Invention Manufacture and Tactical Employment on the Western Front 1914 18 PDF University of Exeter 2008 09 30 Retrieved 2021 08 01 a b c Evolution and Demise of the Rod Grenade Inert Ord net 2003 01 31 Retrieved 2013 10 06 a b Saunders Weapons of the Trench War p 97 99 Saunders Weapons of the Trench War p 98 Walter Hines Page Arthur Wilson Page 1918 The World s Work A History of Our Time Doubleday Page amp Co p 501 a b United States War Dept America s Munitions 1917 1918 pp 208 209 Anne Cipriano Venzon Anne Venzon Paul L Miles 1999 The United States in the First World War An Encyclopedia Taylor amp Francis p 172 Robert B Asprey At Belleau Wood p 19 United States Army Ordnance Dept Ordnance 1917 Description and Instructions for the Use of Rifle and Hand Grenades Washington Govt print off William Harvey Tschappat 1917 Text book of Ordnance and Gunnery John Wiley amp Sons Inc p 511 a b c d G A T Moschetto modello 1891 per t s www il91 it Retrieved 11 April 2018 George John B LTC Shots Fired In Anger NRA Press 1981 ISBN 0 935998 42 X p 343 George John B LTC 1981 Shots Fired In Anger NRA Press p 350 ISBN 0 935998 42 X Japanese Ordnance Material of WW II Archived from the original on December 9 2004 Retrieved March 25 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link http www lonesentry com articles jp rifle grenade index html Model 100 Grenade Launcher Produced in Two Types from Intelligence Bulletin Dec 1944 R F Eather BSc amp N Griffithe OBE MSc Some Historical Aspects of the Development of Shaped Charges Ministry of Defence Royal Armament Research and Development Establishment 1984 page 6 AD A144 098 Margiotta Franklin D Sullivan Gordon R 1997 Brassey s Encyclopedia of Land Forces and Warfare Brassey s p 40 ISBN 1 57488 087 X US Army publication September 30 1977 FM 7 The Mechanized Infantry Platoon Squad Section B 21 specification for M72A2 LAW variant which uses a warhead almost identical to the M31 HEAT Note before the publication of FM 7 September 1977 various penetration specifications were given for the M72A2 and the M31 HEAT Anywhere from 250 to 305 mm In the mid 1970s the US Army decided in field test to truly determine the armour penetration under battlefield conditions again Russian tanks captured in 1973 The result was 200 mm 7 9 in the proceeding penetration specification is stated as it appears in FM 7 1977 SPRL Antalys Mecar rifle grenades www mecar be Retrieved 11 April 2018 Figure 54 of the US Army Operator s Manual for the AK 47 Assault Rifle En wikisource org Retrieved on 2011 09 27 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2005 03 02 Retrieved 2011 12 22 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link ImageShack Best place for all of your image hosting and image sharing needs ImageShack Retrieved 11 April 2018 Myanmar security forces with rifle grenades kill over 80 protesters monitoring group Reuters 10 March 2021 Retrieved 10 March 2021 Myanmar security forces with rifle grenades kill over 80 protesters monitoring group German Propaganda Rifle Grenade WWII Tactical and Technical Trends No 43 January 27 1944 Lone Sentry Retrieved 2013 10 06 permanent dead link Military Police Instruction Company 14 August 2007 Instructor Outline Civil Disturbance Lesson Plan United States Marine Corps permanent dead link Word document Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2011 10 13 Retrieved 2011 12 23 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link External links EditCarcano Model 91 28 with Tromboncino Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rifle grenade amp oldid 1150193736, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.