M60 rifle grenade

Yugoslavia manufactured two types of rifle grenade, both with the nomenclature of M60. The M60 anti-personnel rifle grenade bore a resemblance to the French M52 rifle grenade. The M60 anti-tank rifle grenade bore a resemblance to the STRIM 65, also of French origin. It could penetrate 200mm of armour.[1]

Each was propelled by being mounted atop a rifle's 22 mm grenade launching adapter, and being launched by a ballistite (blank) cartridge.

Instalaza grenade and other rifle grenades as encountered during the South African border war in Angola and Namibia.
M60 anti-personnel
Typerifle grenade
Place of originYugoslavia[1]
Service history
Used byBangladesh
Colombia
El Salvador
Iraq
SWAPO
Yugoslav Army
ZANLA
Specifications
Mass520 grams
Length307 mm
Diameter30 mm

Maximum firing range400 meters
Filling weight67 grams


M60 anti-tank
Typerifle grenade
Place of originYugoslavia[1]
Service history
Used bySWAPO
Yugoslav Army
Specifications
Mass602 grams
Length390 mm
Diameter60 mm

Maximum firing range150 meters
Filling weight235 grams


Sources and references

  1. Archer, Denis H R, ed. (1976). "Grenades". Jane's Infantry Weapons (Second Edition) 1976. London: Macdonald and Jane's. p. 467. ISBN 978-0354005319.
gollark: In what language?
gollark: Maybe you could make some sort of fancy tool to automatically try and flatten stuff into fewer dimensions. Although this *may* be somewhat impossible.
gollark: So it's stored as... a mapping from dimension to position instead?
gollark: What do you mean "vector list storage"? Does it run-length-encode dimensions a bit or just use resizæble arrays for position?
gollark: I guess I can just tweak the PotatOS Privacy Policy to allow it, yes.

Article (in Spanish) with reference to several Yugoslav rifle grenades


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.