Lance-grenade individuel Mle F1 (LGI Mle F1)

LGI

Training grenade being loaded into an LGI
Type mortar / grenade launcher
Place of origin  France
Service history
Used by  France
 Monaco[1]
Specifications
Weight 4.8 kg
Length 605 mm
Crew 1

Cartridge 51 mm grenade
Rate of fire up to 30 rounds per minute
Effective firing range 675 metres

The lance-grenade individuel Mle F1 (LGI, "individual grenade launcher") is a French close-support weapon infantry weapon designed to be used by one man, which provides soldiers with a lightweight indirect-fire support weapon akin to a small mortar. In many ways it is a modernized version of the Type 89 grenade discharger used by the Japanese Army during World War II.

French squads are divided into a 300-meter fireteam each armed with a FAMAS 5.56 mm assault rifle and carrying an AT4 anti-tank weapon and a 600-meter fireteam with a FN Minimi another FAMAS and a LGI.

The mortar uses bombs with a method of propulsion called FLY-K, a closed combustion chamber to capture all the propulsion gases. The propellant charge is inserted into the stabilizing tail of each projectile so the weapon transmits the ignition impulse to the grenade via an enclosed internal system. This concept assures little in the way of noise, muzzle flash, smoke and without a significant thermal signature. The noise made on firing is only 52 dB, making it hard to detect the launching point and high rates of sustained fire are possible as the weapon does not heat up.

The LGI can fire anti-personnel, anti-materiel, blinding, smoke and illumination rounds.

Specifications

Ammunition

An Infrared bomb is in development that will allow Accurate Night shooting when used with a Night Vision Device (NVD).

See also

External links

References

  1. Giletta, Jacques (2005). Les Gardes Personnelles des Princes de Monaco (1st ed.). Taurus Editions. ISBN 2 912976-04-9.
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