Rifle Grenades: Difference between revisions
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Rifle Grenades can be chosen over regular grenades for the following weapons and classes. | Rifle Grenades can be chosen over regular grenades for the following weapons and classes. | ||
<br> | <br> | ||
[[F1 | [[F1/N60 Rifle Grenades]] are available for the VC. | ||
<br> | <br> | ||
[[M17 Rifle Grenades]] are available for the US. | [[M17 Rifle Grenades]] are available for the US. | ||
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|[[File:Flag_vc_new.png|50px]]<br><strong>[[VC]]</strong> || [[File:Kbkg60 rg.png|250px]]<br><b>[[Kbkg 60]]</b> || [[File:Weapon kar98k_riflegrenade.svg|250px]] || [[File:Class_Assault.png|50px]] <b>[[Assault]]<br> || 1 / 2 || 140 || 350 | |[[File:Flag_vc_new.png|50px]]<br><strong>[[VC]]</strong> || [[File:Kbkg60 rg.png|250px]]<br><b>[[Kbkg 60]]</b> || [[File:Weapon kar98k_riflegrenade.svg|250px]] || [[File:Class_Assault.png|50px]] <b>[[Assault]]<br> || 1 / 2 || 140 || 350 | ||
|- | |- | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Flag_us_new.png|50px]]<br><strong>[[US]]</strong> || [[File:M1g rg.png|250px]]<br><b>[[M1 Garand]]</b> || [[File:Weapon m1903_riflegrenade.svg|250px]] || [[File:Class_Assault.png|50px]] <b>[[Assault]]</b> || 1 / 2 || 140 || 350 | |[[File:Flag_us_new.png|50px]]<br><strong>[[US]]</strong> || [[File:M1g rg.png|250px]]<br><b>[[M1 Garand]]</b> || [[File:Weapon m1903_riflegrenade.svg|250px]] || [[File:Class_Assault.png|50px]] <b>[[Assault]]</b> || 1 / 2 || 140 || 350 | ||
|- | |||
|[[File:Flag_us_new.png|50px]]<br><strong>[[US]]</strong> || [[File:M14 rg.png|250px]]<br><b>[[M14]]</b> || [[File:Weapon m1903_riflegrenade.svg|250px]] || [[File:Class_Assault.png|50px]] <b>[[Assault]]</b> || 1 / 2 || 140 || 350 | |||
|- | |||
|[[File:Flag_us_new.png|50px]]<br><strong>[[US]]</strong> || [[File:1903 rg.png|250px]]<br><b>[[M1903 Springfield]]</b> || [[File:Weapon m1903_riflegrenade.svg|250px]] || [[File:Class_Assault.png|50px]] <b>[[Assault]]</b><br> [[File:Class_sniper.png|50px]] <b>[[Sniper]]</b><br> | |||
|| 1 / 2 || 140 || 350 | |||
|- | |||
|[[File:Flag_us_new.png|50px]]<br><strong>[[US]]</strong> || [[File:M1c rg.png|250px]]<br><b>[[M1A1 Carbine]]</b> || [[File:Weapon m1903_riflegrenade.svg|250px]] || [[File:Class_medic.png|50px]] <b>[[Medic]]</b><br>[[File:Class_radioman.png|50px]] <b>[[Radioman]]</b><br> || 1 / 2 || 140 || 350 | |||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Flag_us_new.png|50px]]<br><strong>[[US]]</strong> || [[File:M2c rg.png|250px]]<br><b>[[M2 Carbine]]</b> || [[File:Weapon m1903_riflegrenade.svg|250px]] || [[File:Class_Assault.png|50px]] <b>[[Assault]]</b> || 1 / 2 || 140 || 350 | |[[File:Flag_us_new.png|50px]]<br><strong>[[US]]</strong> || [[File:M2c rg.png|250px]]<br><b>[[M2 Carbine]]</b> || [[File:Weapon m1903_riflegrenade.svg|250px]] || [[File:Class_Assault.png|50px]] <b>[[Assault]]</b> || 1 / 2 || 140 || 350 | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File: | |[[File:Flag_vc_new.png|50px]]<br><strong>[[VC]]</strong> || [[File:Mas36RG.png|250px]]<br><b>[[MAS-36]]</b> || [[File:Weapon kar98k_riflegrenade.svg|250px]] || [[File:Class_Assault.png|50px]] <b>[[Assault]]</b><br> [[File:Class_sniper.png|50px]] <b>[[Sniper]] || 1 / 2 || 140 || 350 | ||
|- | |||
|[[File:Flag_vc_new.png|50px]]<br><strong>[[VC]]</strong> || [[File:Mas49 rg.png|250px]]<br><b>[[MAS-49]]</b> || [[File:Weapon kar98k_riflegrenade.svg|250px]] || [[File:Class_Assault.png|50px]] <b>[[Assault]]</b> || 1 / 2 || 140 || 350 | |||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Flag_vc_new.png|50px]]<br><strong>[[VC]]</strong> || [[File:M38 rg.png|250px]]<br><b>[[Mosin-Nagant M38]]</b> || [[File:Weapon kar98k_riflegrenade.svg|250px]] || [[File:Class_Assault.png|50px]] <b>[[Assault]]</b> || 1 / 2 || 140 || 350 | |[[File:Flag_vc_new.png|50px]]<br><strong>[[VC]]</strong> || [[File:M38 rg.png|250px]]<br><b>[[Mosin-Nagant M38]]</b> || [[File:Weapon kar98k_riflegrenade.svg|250px]] || [[File:Class_Assault.png|50px]] <b>[[Assault]]</b> || 1 / 2 || 140 || 350 | ||
| Line 32: | Line 40: | ||
|| 1 / 2 || 140 || 350 | || 1 / 2 || 140 || 350 | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File: | |[[File:Flag_vc_new.png|50px]]<br><strong>[[VC]]</strong> || [[File:Sks rg.png|250px]]<br><b>[[SKS]]</b> || [[File:Weapon kar98k_riflegrenade.svg|250px]] || [[File:Class_medic.png|50px]] <b>[[Medic]]</b><br>[[File:Class_radioman.png|50px]] <b>[[Radioman]]</b><br> || 1 / 2 || 140 || 350 | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[File:Flag_vc_new.png|50px]]<br><strong>[[VC]]</strong> || [[File:Type63 rg.png|250px]]<br><b>[[Type 63]]</b> || [[File:Weapon kar98k_riflegrenade.svg|250px]] || [[File:Class_Assault.png|50px]] <b>[[Assault]]<br>|| 1 / 2 || 140 || 350 | |[[File:Flag_vc_new.png|50px]]<br><strong>[[VC]]</strong> || [[File:Type63 rg.png|250px]]<br><b>[[Type 63]]</b> || [[File:Weapon kar98k_riflegrenade.svg|250px]] || [[File:Class_Assault.png|50px]] <b>[[Assault]]<br>|| 1 / 2 || 140 || 350 | ||
| Line 44: | Line 47: | ||
<hr> | |||
Rifle grenades are grenades launched from the muzzle of a rifle using a rifle-mounted launcher or projection adapter, giving them much greater range than a hand-thrown grenade. They are typically fin-stabilized and propelled by a special grenade cartridge (or, in some designs, by systems that allow use of live ball ammunition), and they can carry a variety of payloads such as high explosive, smoke, and anti-armor warheads. By the Vietnam War era, rifle grenades were still present in some inventories, but dedicated 40mm grenade launchers increasingly filled the squad fire-support role once they became widely available. | |||
==DEFINITION & CHARACTERISTICS== | |||
A rifle grenade is a grenade intended to be fired from a rifle by fitting it to a muzzle launcher or to a projection adapter. In U.S. doctrine, rifle grenades are fin-stabilized and launched by a special gas-producing grenade cartridge loaded into the rifle’s chamber; separate projection adapters can also be used to launch certain hand grenades from rifles equipped with a grenade launcher. | |||
;Common traits | |||
* '''Role:''' Close fire support against personnel, fortifications, and (for HEAT types) light armor; also used for screening/signaling with smoke or similar payloads. | |||
* '''Typical payloads:''' High explosive/fragmentation, smoke, illumination/signaling, and anti-armor (HEAT) warheads. | |||
* '''Typical launch methods:''' Muzzle launchers/adapters fitted to the rifle; propelled by dedicated grenade cartridges (or, depending on system, bullet-trap/shoot-through methods). | |||
* '''Typical “fire modes”:''' Single-shot per launch; rate of fire depends on loading steps, sighting, and ammunition handling. | |||
* '''Common engagement ranges:''' Generally short-to-mid indirect/direct fire in the low hundreds of meters, depending on grenade type, launcher, and elevation. | |||
* '''Notable tradeoffs:''' Longer reach and heavier effects than hand grenades without a separate launcher weapon, but slower to employ, requires special ammunition/attachments, and can disrupt normal rifle handling while the launcher is mounted. | |||
==HISTORY== | |||
Rifle grenades expanded rapidly in the World War I era as armies looked for portable explosive effects beyond throwing distance, leading to cup launchers and “shoot-through” systems like France’s Viven-Bessières (VB) grenade that could be launched with live ball ammunition. By the years before World War II, spigot-type muzzle launchers (including the 22mm family) enabled a wide range of grenade designs, from simple adapters that projected a hand grenade to purpose-built anti-armor rifle grenades. | |||
In the Vietnam War era, rifle grenades were still encountered, including U.S. rifle grenade systems and dedicated anti-armor rifle grenades such as the M31 HEAT. At the same time, U.S. development programs explicitly sought a more accurate and longer-range explosive projectile than rifle grenades while remaining more portable than a mortar, contributing to the fielding of the 40×46mm system and weapons like the M79; under-barrel launchers such as the M203 later allowed a grenadier to keep a rifle while still providing organic explosive fire support. By the later Vietnam period, muzzle-launched rifle grenades were increasingly being phased out in favor of disposable anti-armor rockets for anti-vehicle work and 40mm launchers for squad-level fire support. | |||
===Sources=== | |||
* [https://www.militarynewbie.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/TM-9-1330-200-12-Operators-Organizational-Maintenance-Manual-For-Grenades.pdf TM 9-1330-200-12: Operator’s & Organizational Maintenance Manual for Grenades | U.S. Army Technical Manual (PDF)] | |||
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rifle_grenade Rifle grenade (overview, launcher types, history) | Wikipedia] | |||
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VB_rifle_grenade VB rifle grenade (shoot-through system background) | Wikipedia] | |||
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M31_HEAT_rifle_grenade M31 HEAT rifle grenade (Vietnam-era U.S. rifle grenade context) | Wikipedia] | |||
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M79_grenade_launcher M79 grenade launcher (Project Niblick context vs rifle grenades) | Wikipedia] | |||
<hr> | |||
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<div style="text-align:center; font-weight:bold;">Real-Life Photos</div> | |||
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<gallery mode="packed" heights="400px"> | |||
File:|Caption (optional) | |||
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<hr> | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible" style="border:1px solid #ccc; padding:5px; width:100%;"> | |||
<div style="text-align:center; font-weight:bold;">Videos</div> | |||
<div class="mw-collapsible-content" style="margin-top:0.5em;"> | |||
| | {{#ev:youtube|3YYWxi9ZeRU}} | ||
}} | {{#ev:youtube|161JT0WRVf4}} | ||
{{#ev:youtube|daBwCMgOpu0}} | |||
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[[Category:Weapons]] | |||
[[Category:Weapon types]] | |||
Latest revision as of 04:34, 4 March 2026
Rifle Grenades can be chosen over regular grenades for the following weapons and classes.
F1/N60 Rifle Grenades are available for the VC.
M17 Rifle Grenades are available for the US.
| Factions | Weapon | Icon | Classes | Ammo | Explosion | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Damage | Radius | |||||
VC |
Karabiner 98k |
1 / 2 | 140 | 350 | ||
VC |
Kbkg 60 |
1 / 2 | 140 | 350 | ||
US |
M1 Garand |
1 / 2 | 140 | 350 | ||
US |
M14 |
1 / 2 | 140 | 350 | ||
US |
M1903 Springfield |
1 / 2 | 140 | 350 | ||
US |
M1A1 Carbine |
1 / 2 | 140 | 350 | ||
US |
M2 Carbine |
1 / 2 | 140 | 350 | ||
VC |
MAS-36 |
1 / 2 | 140 | 350 | ||
VC |
MAS-49 |
1 / 2 | 140 | 350 | ||
VC |
Mosin-Nagant M38 |
1 / 2 | 140 | 350 | ||
VC |
Mosin-Nagant M91/30 |
1 / 2 | 140 | 350 | ||
VC |
SKS |
1 / 2 | 140 | 350 | ||
VC |
Type 63 |
1 / 2 | 140 | 350 | ||
Rifle grenades are grenades launched from the muzzle of a rifle using a rifle-mounted launcher or projection adapter, giving them much greater range than a hand-thrown grenade. They are typically fin-stabilized and propelled by a special grenade cartridge (or, in some designs, by systems that allow use of live ball ammunition), and they can carry a variety of payloads such as high explosive, smoke, and anti-armor warheads. By the Vietnam War era, rifle grenades were still present in some inventories, but dedicated 40mm grenade launchers increasingly filled the squad fire-support role once they became widely available.
DEFINITION & CHARACTERISTICS
A rifle grenade is a grenade intended to be fired from a rifle by fitting it to a muzzle launcher or to a projection adapter. In U.S. doctrine, rifle grenades are fin-stabilized and launched by a special gas-producing grenade cartridge loaded into the rifle’s chamber; separate projection adapters can also be used to launch certain hand grenades from rifles equipped with a grenade launcher.
- Common traits
- Role: Close fire support against personnel, fortifications, and (for HEAT types) light armor; also used for screening/signaling with smoke or similar payloads.
- Typical payloads: High explosive/fragmentation, smoke, illumination/signaling, and anti-armor (HEAT) warheads.
- Typical launch methods: Muzzle launchers/adapters fitted to the rifle; propelled by dedicated grenade cartridges (or, depending on system, bullet-trap/shoot-through methods).
- Typical “fire modes”: Single-shot per launch; rate of fire depends on loading steps, sighting, and ammunition handling.
- Common engagement ranges: Generally short-to-mid indirect/direct fire in the low hundreds of meters, depending on grenade type, launcher, and elevation.
- Notable tradeoffs: Longer reach and heavier effects than hand grenades without a separate launcher weapon, but slower to employ, requires special ammunition/attachments, and can disrupt normal rifle handling while the launcher is mounted.
HISTORY
Rifle grenades expanded rapidly in the World War I era as armies looked for portable explosive effects beyond throwing distance, leading to cup launchers and “shoot-through” systems like France’s Viven-Bessières (VB) grenade that could be launched with live ball ammunition. By the years before World War II, spigot-type muzzle launchers (including the 22mm family) enabled a wide range of grenade designs, from simple adapters that projected a hand grenade to purpose-built anti-armor rifle grenades.
In the Vietnam War era, rifle grenades were still encountered, including U.S. rifle grenade systems and dedicated anti-armor rifle grenades such as the M31 HEAT. At the same time, U.S. development programs explicitly sought a more accurate and longer-range explosive projectile than rifle grenades while remaining more portable than a mortar, contributing to the fielding of the 40×46mm system and weapons like the M79; under-barrel launchers such as the M203 later allowed a grenadier to keep a rifle while still providing organic explosive fire support. By the later Vietnam period, muzzle-launched rifle grenades were increasingly being phased out in favor of disposable anti-armor rockets for anti-vehicle work and 40mm launchers for squad-level fire support.
Sources
- TM 9-1330-200-12: Operator’s & Organizational Maintenance Manual for Grenades | U.S. Army Technical Manual (PDF)
- Rifle grenade (overview, launcher types, history) | Wikipedia
- VB rifle grenade (shoot-through system background) | Wikipedia
- M31 HEAT rifle grenade (Vietnam-era U.S. rifle grenade context) | Wikipedia
- M79 grenade launcher (Project Niblick context vs rifle grenades) | Wikipedia