
PTRD-41 - Wikipedia
It is a single-shot weapon which fires the 14.5×114 mm round, which was able to penetrate German tanks such as the Panzer III and early models of the Panzer IV. Although unable to penetrate the frontal armor of late-war German tanks, it could penetrate their thinner side and top armor at close ranges as well as thinly armored self-propelled ...
PTRS-41 - Wikipedia
14.5mm anti-tank rifles PTRD-41 and PTRS-41. The PTRS-41 was produced and used by the Soviet Union during World War II. In the years between the World Wars, the Soviet Union began experimenting with different types of armour-piercing anti-tank cartridges.
Meet the PTRD: The Soviet Anti-Tank Rifle That Terrified Hitler
Jan 11, 2020 · The first operational antitank rifle was the German Mauser 1918 T-Gewehr. It fired a 13.2mm round, roughly .525 caliber, and could penetrate 22mm of armor at 100 meters.
PTRD - Military Wiki | Fandom
The PTRD-41 (Shortened from Russian, ProtivoTankovoye Ruzhyo Degtyaryova; "Degtyaryov Anti-Tank Rifle") was an anti-tank rifle produced and used from early 1941 by the Soviet Red Army during World War II. It was a single-shot weapon which fired a 14.5x114mm round. Although unable to penetrate...
The PTRS Vs. PTRD, 1944 | thefirearmblog.com
Oct 24, 2015 · Its semiautomatic action, and en-bloc clip loading gave the infantry five rounds of high velocity heavy AT rifle ammunition on tap, that could be fired as fast as the trigger could be pulled and the target reacquired. By comparison, the contemporary single-shot Degtyarev PTRD seems downright crude.
THE PTRD & PTRS ANTI-TANK RIFLES - Small Arms Review
Sep 1, 2002 · Designed during a dark moment for the Soviet Union during WWII and likely the largest “small arms” round ever to be fielded, the 14.5mm cartridge along with the PTRD and PTRS anti-tank rifles, performed as planned and gave the under-equipped Soviet infantryman a fighting chance against German armor.
Degtyaryov PTRD-41 Anti-Tank Rifle | World War II Database
Produced from early 1941, they were effective against the thin side armor of German tanks and self-propelled guns; the tungsten core rounds were not able to penetrate the thicker frontal armor of tanks.
PTRD-41 - Quartermaster Section
The PTRD-41 (Protivo Tankovoye Ruzhyo Degtyaryova) was the first anti-tank rifle to be issued to the troops in world war two. The Russians had apparently captured a number of Polish anti-tank rifles in 1939 and saw them as a useful weapon in dealing with enemy armour.
PTRD-41 | World War II Wiki | Fandom
The PTRD-41 was an anti-tank rifle that was used by the Soviet Union during World War II. It fired a 14.5mm round and only required a crew of one to two men in order to operate effectively. It was of a more simplistic design than its fellow anti-tank rifle the PTRS-41 and was used to a …
PTRD anti-tank rifle - Imperial War Museums
The PTRD, designed by V A Degtyarev, was a single shot weapon with a breech which was automatically opened by the recoiling barrel. It was simpler to manufacture than the PTRS, so was able to enter service in time for the Battle of Moscow in December 1941.
- Some results have been removed