Degtyarov PTRD anti-tank rifle
| Type / action | Single shot bolt action | 
| Caliber | 14.5x114 | 
| Weight unloaded | 17.3 kg | 
| Length | 2000 mm | 
| Barrel length | 1350 mm | 
| Magazine capacity | - | 
| Armor penetration (Range / Angle / Penetration) | with BS-41 projectile: 100 m / 90o / 40 mm; 300 m / 90o / 35 mm | 
   The PTRD (ПТРД - ПротивоТанковое Ружье Дегтярева -  Degtyarov anti-tank rifle) was rapidly developed by famous Russian arms  designer Fedor Degtyarov during the late summer of 1941, when Red Army  issued the urgent requirements for a man-portable and inexpensive  anti-tank weapon, suitable for infantry use. Developed, produced and  used concurrently with Simonov PTRS anti-tank rifle,  it became an important asset of the Soviet infantry during the earlier  stages of the Great Patriotic war. This weapon used a powerful round,  especially designed for anti-tank role, which fired armor-piercing  projectiles of 14.5mm caliber (see 14.5x114 entry in Ammunition section for  details). With improved BS-41 armor-piercing bullets with tungsten  cores the PTRD was able to penetrate of up to 40 mm of steel armor at  100 meters range. The same bullet also easily penetrated log and sand  entrenchments, brick walls and other battlefield obstacles, to provide  fire support for infantry. About 190 000 of these rifles were  manufactured in USSR in 1941 and 1942, when rapid evolution of German  armor made these anti-tank rifles obsolete. Nevertheless, many PTRD  rifles were used as ancillary anti-tank and infantry support equipment  until the end of the war, and few also saw the action during the war in  Korea.
  The Degtyarov PTRD anti-tank rifle is a manually operated, single shot  rifle. It uses conventional rotary bolt cation with single-piece bolt  that has two radial locking lugs at the front. One unusual feature of  the PTRD action is its self-ejection: the barrel was allowed to slide  back under recoil, compressing the spring buffer located in the shoulder  stock. Upon recoil, the bolt handle struck the cam plate, located on  the right side of the stock. This plate forced the bolt handle to rotate  up and unlock the bolt. After this, the barrel recoil movement was  stopped and the heavy bolt was allowed to recoil under its own inertia,  to open up the action and extract and eject fired case. Once the  ejection was complete, the shooter had to manually load a fresh round  into the chamber and manually close the bolt for the next shot. To  provide additional recoil mitigation, barrel was equipped with massive  muzzle brake, and the shoulder stock had shock-absorbing pad. Degtyarov  PTRD anti-tank rifle was fitted with simple iron sights with dual  setting, for ranges between 100 - 400 and 400 - 1000 meters, although  the rifle was considered to be effective only up to 300 - 400 meters.  Line of sight was offset to the left to provide more comfortable  shooting position and clear shooter's face from recoiling bolt. To  provide better stability, rifle was fitted with folding bipod, and a  carrying handle was attached to the barrel.


 21.42
21.42
 Jack The Ripper
Jack The Ripper
 
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