50 cal and 14.5 Russian

Here is a 14.5 projo:

IMG_1051.jpg


IMG_1049.jpg


400px-14%2C5_x_114.jpg



.50 BMG case drawing:


50bmg_inch_mm.gif
 
Last edited:
"...14.5 used in situations like the 50 cal is?..." Yep. It's bigger than a .50 BMG though. More like a .60 calibre MG. The Warsaw Pact also had/have a 12.7 MG. That one is close to a .50 BMG.
 
Russians also have a MG that fires the 14.5.

Uses a 1000 grain projectile at 3200 fps. (Its basically a 20mm necked down to 14.5mm)

The 50 BMG uses a 650 grain projectile at 2800 fps
 
Our friendly Wikipedia also has some info on the 14.5mm round:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/14.5x114mm


To continue with the aside about Russian/Soviet weapons.

There are two Soviet built MG's that fire the 12.7mm round, the DShK from WW2 and the more modern NSV. The DShK is found on mounted on older Soviet MBT's like the T54/55/62 and some of the older open topped BTR series. The NSV is found mounted on the newer models and some of the upgrade packages. Far as I know, both fit the same mounts and accept the same ammo in regards to cartridge and belt. Both are more or less equal to the M2HB we use.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DShK
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NSV

The 14.5mm KPV is found in the "turret" of the BTR 60/70/80, the BRDM2 and the AA gun family known as the ZPU 1/2/4. It has other uses too, just like any good weapon. The 14.5mm round was (near as I can tell) first used in the PTRS as an anti-tank weapon. Later, a big a_s sight was applied to it to make it useful as a sniper rifle. I find it rather amusing that (according to Wikipedia..) the PTRS-41 was used as the model for the SKS later on..

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KPV
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PTRS-41

*Disclaimer..* I'm not a particularly big fan of Wikipedia. For two reasons. One, we had a course go though about a year and a half ago, I heard a story about a guy and his buddies who had changed the information on one of the pages refering to a country on an oil platform in the North sea. Meaning, if you disagree with what is written, you can change it ( I know, you need an account etc, but it's a FREE account IIRC).

And two, about the same time as that, there was a big stink down in the US about one of the "verifiers". He claimed to be a professor of something important at a private college in the midwest that no one had ever heard of. Turns out, he was a High school graduate about to start his first year of college.
 
I owned both a PTRS and an SKS and I can tell you the SKS action is mechanically almost identical to the PTRS... The PTRS is easy to shoot and the recoil is quite mild... Of course, the rifle's 50 pounds helps!! So does the recoil pad on the butt...
 
Back
Top Bottom