Model 1914 grenade

The Model 1914 grenade (Ручная граната образца 1914 года > Ruchnaya granata obraztsa 1914 goda, "Hand Grenade Pattern of year 1914") is a Russian stick concussion grenade (fragmentation grenade via an optional jacket) that was used during World War I and World War II.

Model 1914 grenade
Russian model 1914 stick hand grenade
TypeHand grenade
Place of originRussian Empire / Soviet Union
Service history
Used byRussian Empire, Soviet Union
WarsWorld War I, World War II
Production history
DesignerVladimir Rdultovsky[1]
Designed1914
Produced1914-?
VariantsM1914/30 (different explosive), M1917 (chemical grenade based on M1914's design)
Specifications
Mass500g (M1914), 590g (M1914/30),[2] 780g with fragmentation sleeve
Length235mm
Diameter45mm

FillingPicric Acid (M1914), TNT (M1914/30)[3]
Detonation
mechanism
Time-fuse, 4-5 seconds[2]

Operation

The M1914 is a time-delayed grenade. To activate it, the user must hold the grenade with the safety pin between two fingers, move the safety catch so that it is away from the hammer's front, then throw it. The safety pin is released as soon as the grenade is thrown.

History

Origins

The M1914 is a heavily modified Model 1912 grenade. The head of the grenade went from a box to a cylinder, the wooden handle was removed in favor of a welded sheet of metal and the belt hook was removed.[3]

World War I

The M1914 was one of the few grenades used the conflict that was in service before the war started. It was used throughout the war, along with the Stender grenade, by Russian forces until Russia withdrew from the conflict in 1917.

Inter-war

In 1930, the M1914 was modified to use a different explosive, TNT. TNT was a common explosive in Soviet grenades at the time, as seen in grenades such as the F1 grenade and RGD-33 grenade.

World War II

The M1914/30 also saw use in World War II, but it was eventually replaced by the RGD-33 grenade as the Soviet's primary stick grenade.[3] The Axis forces used captured M1914/30 grenades, which they classified as the HG 336(r), or Handgranate 336 (russische).

Post-World War II

After World War II, the M1914 was completely retired in favor of other designs, such as the RGD-5 grenade. However, inert versions of the M1914 were used for training up until the 1980s.[4]

Variants

M1914/30

The M1914/30 is a variant of the M1914 that uses TNT instead of Picric Acid. Otherwise, it is exactly the same as the M1914.[3]

M1917 Chemical

The M1917 is a modified and larger M1914 that expels chemical gas when it "detonates". The primary chemical agent in this grenade is 500g of Chloropicrin, which is an irritant.[3] The M1917 can be told apart from the M1914 because it is larger than the M1914 and has a skull and crossbones on it with the Russian word for chemical underneath the image.[3]

Fragmentation Sleeve

The M1914 has an optional fragmentation sleeve that turns the M1914 into a fragmentation grenade.[5] The sleeve's pattern was later used on the RGD-33 grenade's fragmentation sleeve.

gollark: You should probably get a used one, or a tablet and keyboard.
gollark: Actually, yes.
gollark: TempleOS also has a really cool design - everything is written in JITed HolyC and can interoperate easily, and you can embed links and 3D models and such in files.
gollark: Plus it has networking and more than 640x480 pixels.
gollark: Windows cannot receive messages from God and is thus bad.

See also

  • List of Russian weaponry

References

  1. "Рдултовский Владимир Иосифович". Retrieved 11 November 2014.
  2. "Early Russian and Soviet Hand Grenades". Retrieved 11 November 2014.
  3. "Russian Gas Hand Grenade (WWI) - Inert-Ord.net". Retrieved 11 November 2014.
  4. LEXPEV. "Stickgrenade practice". Archived from the original on 3 February 2015. Retrieved 11 November 2014.
  5. LEXPEV. "M 1914". Archived from the original on 3 February 2015. Retrieved 11 November 2014.

Sources

  • А. А. Благонравов, М. В. Гуревич. Боеприпасы стрелкового вооружения. Патроны, ручные и ружейные гранаты. Их устройство. Ленинград, издание военно-технической академии РККА имени тов. Дзержинского, 1932. - 210 стр.

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