PTRS-41
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PTRS-41 | |
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PTRS |
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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, Chinese Civil War |
Production history | |
Designer | Sergei Gavrilovich Simonov |
Designed | 1941 |
Produced | 1941-1945 |
Variants | General specifications |
Specifications | |
Weight | 20.3 kg |
Length | 2,020 mm |
Barrel length | 1,219 mm |
Crew | 2 |
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Cartridge | 14.5x114mm |
Muzzle velocity | 1,012 m/s |
Effective range | 400 m |
Maximum range | 800 m |
Feed system | 5-round magazine |
The PTRS-41 is the semi-automatic cousin of the PTRD anti-tank rifle.
Contents |
[edit] Design
In the years between the World Wars, the Soviet Union began experimenting with different types of armour-piercing anti-tank cartridges. Finding the 12.7x108mm insufficient, they began development of what would become the 14.5x114mm armor piercing round. Famous Soviet weapons designers such as Vasily Degtyaryov and Sergei Gavrilovich Simonov designed rifles to accommodate this cartridge. In 1938, Simonov designed the PTRS-41, a magazine fed, anti-tank rifle with a scaled down version of it becoming the SKS rifle.
The five round clip was loaded into the receiver and held under pressure by a swing magazine under the receiver. On firing the last round the bolt is held open, and the magazine release catch can only be operated when the bolt is locked back. The PTRS is gas operated. It has a tendency to jam when dirty, and the 14.5 mm cartridge produces significant residue, blocking the gas port. The 14.5 mm armour-piercing bullet had a muzzle velocity of 1012 m/s and good ballistics. It could penetrate an armour plate up to 40 mm thick at a distance of 100 meters.
[edit] History
The rifle entered mass production in 1941 and was widely used on the Eastern front in World War II. While it was heavy and had a terrible muzzle flash, it was a cheap and simple weapon, thus ensuring its place in the Soviet arsenal. It performed well against early German tanks, but was more useful in attacking supply trucks and other soft-skinned vehicles once the armour thickened on the German tanks.
The 14.5 mm antitank rifles were put to a variety of other uses. Besides tanks and armoured vehicles, they were used to destroy mortars, gun, and machine gun emplacements, some ambitious gunners even shot at aircraft.
During World War II, a number of these rifles were captured by the Germans and used by them. The Germans used the designation Panzerbüchse 784(r) or PzB 784(r).
The PTRS and rifles like it were given to the Chinese and North Koreans during the Korean War, where they were used against light tanks and other vehicles as well as serving as long range sniper rifles.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
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Side-arms |
TT pistol | Nagant M1895 |
Rifles & carbines |
AVS-36 | SVT-40 | Mosin-Nagant |
Submachine guns |
PPD-40 | PPSh-41 | PPS |
Grenades |
F1 | RGD-33 | RG-41 | RG-42 | RPG-40 | RPG-43 | RPG-6 |
Machine guns & other larger weapons |
M1910 Maxim | DS-39 | DP | SG-43 Goryunov | DShK | PTRD | PTRS ROKS-2/ROKS-3 |
Cartridges used by the USSR during WWII |
7.62x25mm Tokarev | 7.62x38mmR | 7.62x39mm | 7.62x54mmR | 12.7x108mm | 14.5x114mm |