Razven, on 15 May 2009, 5:49, said:
Well, to drive the discussion back on topic, I remember hearing a bunch of Marines testing several weapons, a "Get to know what the enemy is holding so you'd know what to expect" kind of lesson. They said RPGs currently used are not accurate and tend to generally fly everywhere, a true hit is more likely a lucky shot at all while the Carl Gustavs they had hit the target (a van) with every aimed shot.
But that's only with the RPG-7, I'm sure more modern RPGs are rather accurate.
The Taliban would disagree, who used them to consistently down a large number of hovering Russian helicopters in Afghanistan and are no slouch in ambushing armoured patrols with them today. The Chechens also made heavy use of the weapons, where they were devastatingly effective at immobilising Russian forces in the streets of Grozny (they would target the top or tracks of the lead and trailing tank in each formation, thereby trapping the entire formation where they would be massacred by a further barrage of RPGs from both sides at high and low angles). They're not the world's most precise weapon I'll agree but if you point them in a direction experience shows that whatever you point them at has a decent chance of going up in flames if you have a bit of experience.
WNxMastrefubu, on 15 May 2009, 5:51, said:
how many rpg's are there if there up to rpg-7?
They're actually up to RPG-32.
WNxMastrefubu, on 15 May 2009, 7:40, said:
TehKiller, on 14 May 2009, 17:39, said:
@TPAM: ha?
@TPATPAM: RPG-7's aint that innacurate. The only problem is that for a light AT weapon they are quite heavy so its actually hard to keep stability while firing
not ha, i dnt know much about rpg's
Not a stupid question actually. The only deployed RPG-series weapon before the RPG-7 was actually the RPG-2, a late WWII weapon that was more or less a copy of the German Panzerfaust. Since then they have also deployed:
- The RPG-16, essentially a heavier RPG-7 which was used extensively in Afghanistan,
- The RPG-18, which is a single-shot disposable weapon that is effectively an analogue of the M72 LAW
- The RPG-22, a larger version of the RPG-18
- The RPG-26, a bigger still RPG-22,
- The RPG-27, an even bigger RPG-26 with a tandem warhead,
- The RPG-29, an enormous weapon that's reloadable like a RPG-7 but ten times meaner, which fires a warhead that is one of the most powerful threats to an armoured vehicle in an urban environment or in another situation of limited mobility and abundant enemy cover that exists today...
- And the RPG-30/2, a brand-new design which is disposable like the LAW/RPG-18/22/26/27 but in the case of the RPG-32 has a novel new precursor rocket (a small dart-like thing fired from a secondary tube just before the main one; it's designed to defeat anti-missile defences and ERA by 'taking the hit' and allowing the actual grenade to slip right past).
The RPG-29 has proven capable of penetrating the lower front armour of a Challenger 2 in Iraq (the driver unfortunately lost some of his toes) and has seriously damaged an Abrams and may have been involved in Lebanon in 2006, where Hezbollah inflicted heavy casualties on Israeli tanks (though this is most widely attributed to an ATGM, the AT-14, instead) and is actually significantly more powerful than the RPG-30 or 32. It's also a massive and unwieldy weapon, but the Russian Army have adopted it for its sheer power.
None of them, however, are recoilless rifles.
TehKiller, on 15 May 2009, 7:39, said:
on a side note: I dont know much about the Carl Gustav but since seeing the terminology SRAW on it does it mean its a wire guided weapon?
No, the Carl Gustav is unguided, though it uses rifling and a higher spin to achieve a decent ballistic accuracy. I'm also unsure where you got the SRAW designation from; that actually refers to the 'Short Range Attack Weapon' FGM-172 Predator, a completely different and much more modern rocket launcher notably seen in the Tom Cruise remake of
War of the Worlds.
Edit: List-ised for easier reading.
Edited by CommanderJB, 15 May 2009 - 03:18.