Caliber: 4.5x40R
Weight: 950 g empty
Length: 244 mm
Barrel length: 203 mm
Capacity: 4 rounds in separate barrels
 The SPP-1 (Spetsialnyj Podvodnyj Pistolet = Special Underwater 
Pistol) has been developed in late 1960s by the TSNIITOCHMASH 
organization on request from the Soviet Navy. The SPP-1 was intended for
 Soviet combat divers ("frogmen"). Later the SPP-1 has been modified to 
SPP-1M, with several internal upgrades, and is still used by Russian 
Navy special forces, as well as offered for export through Russian 
Governments' military sales organization, RosOboronExport.
 SPP-1 is a non-automatic, manually operated handgun with four barrels. 
Barrels are hinged to the frame in the same manner as on break-open 
shotguns. For reloading, barrel cluster is tipped to expose chambers, 
and four cartridges are inserted into barrels. To speed up ejection and 
reloading cycle, cartridges are loaded using flat clips, made from 
steel. The double-action trigger unit consists of a striker, mounting on
 a rotating base, so during the each trigger pull the striker is cocked 
and simultaneously rotated to the next, unfired barrel. The single 
lever, located at the left side of the frame, controls the safety and 
reloading. It has three positions, top for "Reloading" (barrel release),
 middle for "Safe" and bottom for "Fire".
 To be effective underwater, SPP-1 uses special proprietary ammunition, 
with rimmed bottlenecked cases 40mm long, sealed from water. Unusually 
long bullets are made from mild steel, and are drag-stabilized 
underwater; on air, bullets are not stabilized at all, so the effective 
range "above the air" is limited, but the "lethality range" is about 15 
to 20 meters. When underwater, lethality range degrades with the 
increase of the depth: at 5 meters depth, the effective range is about 
17 meters; at 20 meters depth, the effective range is only about 11 
meters.


 09.27
09.27
 Jack The Ripper
Jack The Ripper
 

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