PTRD

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PTRD

A PTRD.
Type Anti-tank rifle
Place of origin Soviet Union
Service history
In service 1941—?
Used by Soviet Union, North Korea, China
Wars World war II, Korean War
Production history
Designer N/A
Designed 1941
Number built N/A
Variants PTRS
Specifications
Weight 17.3Kg
Length 2020mm
Barrel length N/A
Width N/A
Height N/A
Crew N/A

Cartridge 14.5 x 114 mm
Caliber 14.5mm
Action Recoil
Rate of fire N/A
Muzzle velocity 78.7 in
Effective range N/A
Maximum range N/A
Feed system Single shot, no magazine.
Sights N/A

The PTRD-41 (Shortened from Russian, Protywotankovoye Rushyo Degtyaryova) was an anti-tank rifle produced and used from early 1941 by the Soviet Red Army during World War II. It was a single-shot weapon that fired 14.5 x 114 mm tungsten core rounds. Although unable to penetrate the frontal armor of German tanks, it was effective against the thinner sides of early-war German tanks and self-propelled guns. The 14.5 mm armor-piercing bullet had a muzzle velocity of 1012 m/s. It could penetrate an armor plate up to 35 to 40mm thick at a distance of 100 meters. It also had good ballistics. In 1941, most German tanks had side armor thinner than 40mm.

It and the similar PTRS were the only individual anti-tank weapon available until the arrival of Lend-Lease bazookas from the USA later in the war. PTRD users would attempt to hit weak spots such as tank tracks and view ports to damage tanks that had armor too thick to be vulnerable. The PTRD was still effective against lesser armored vehicles like light tanks, transports and unarmored vehicles such as trucks. A major weakness of the PTRD was that it was a single shot weapon that gave off an immense muzzle flash, thus giving away the units firing position. On the other hand, AT rifle teams were very easily concealed. The PTRD was eventually replaced by the RPG series of AT rocket launchers.

Beside World War II the PTRD was also used extensively by North Korean and Chinese armed forces in the Korean War.

After World War II, the PTRD was modified with a BMG 50 barrel and a scope to become one of the world's first BMG 50 cal sniper rifles.

Due to the effectiveness of Soviet anti-tank rifles early in the war, the Germans responded with the "Schürzen" ("skirt") armor plates added to the Panzer III, Panzer IV. The PTRD and PTRS were also effective against armored vehicles, such as the SdKfz 251 and SdKfz 222 in World War II.


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Soviet infantry weapons of World War II
Side-arms
TT-33 | Nagant M1895
Rifles & carbines
AVS36 | SVT40 | Mosin-Nagant
Submachine guns
PPD-40 | PPSh-41 | PPS-43
Grenades
F1 | RGD-33 | RG-41 | RG-42 | RPG-43
Machine guns & other larger weapons
M1910 Maxim | DS-39 | DP | SG-43 Gorunov | DShK | PTRD | PTRS
ROKS-2/ROKS-3
Cartridges used by the USSR
7.62 x 25 mm TT | 7.62 x 38 R | 7.62 x 54 mm R | 14.5 x 114 mm
In other languages