RPD SOG

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US

RPD SOG
Gunner
100 / 200
Damage Base Headshot × Chest × Stomach × Leg × Arm × Bayonet Rifle Grenades Reload Speed
Partial Empty
42 ×2.3 = 96.6 ×1 = 42 ×0.95 = 39.9 ×0.6 = 25.2 ×0.55 = 23.1 NO NO 5.5 Seconds 6.2 Seconds
Designation Weapon Type Fire Modes Fire Rate Bullet Spread ° Range Modifier Muzzle Velocity Projectile weight Weight
RPD LMG Auto 700 RPM 11.23° & 6.92° ADS 0.925 735 m/s 7.9g (121.9 gr) 6.9 kg (15.2 lbs)
Full name Caliber Place of Origin Date Manufacturer Barrel Length Total Length Weapon Script Name
ручной пулемёт Дегтярёва 7.62x39mm Soviet Union 1944 State Factories <20.5 in (<520 mm) 40.8 in (1,037 mm) weapon_rpd_sog



The RPD is a Soviet light machine gun chambered in 7.62×39mm (M43), developed as a belt-fed squad automatic weapon for the intermediate cartridge. It feeds from non-disintegrating belts carried in a distinctive drum container and is optimized for mobile infantry support fire. The RPD is best known for bridging the gap between earlier magazine-fed light machine guns and later squad automatic weapons within the Kalashnikov-era small-arms family.

HISTORY

Development of the RPD began during World War II as the Soviet Union moved toward an intermediate cartridge to modernize infantry firepower. Several designers submitted prototypes, and Vasily Degtyaryov’s design was selected and refined into the RPD (Ruchnoy Pulemyot Degtyaryova). Although late-war prototypes existed, the weapon was adopted after the war and entered wider production and distribution in the early 1950s, providing squads with sustained automatic fire in the new 7.62×39mm chambering.

During the Vietnam War, the RPD and especially Chinese-produced copies were widely fielded by the People's Army of Vietnam and the Việt Cộng as a standard light machine gun. Its combination of controllable automatic fire, belt-fed endurance, and relatively compact handling suited ambushes and small-unit actions in dense terrain. Over time it was supplemented and increasingly replaced in some roles by newer designs such as the RPK and later general-purpose machine guns, but it remained a common and recognizable weapon in the conflict.

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