Carl Gustaf 20 mm recoilless rifle

Carl Gustaf 20 mm recoilless rifle
20 mm pansarvärnsgevär m/42
TypeMan-portable anti-tank system/anti-tank rifle
Place of originSweden
Service history
In service1942–???
Used bySee Users
WarsThe Troubles
Production history
Designed
  • M1: 1940-1942 [1]
Produced1942-1944[2]
No. built1000[1]
Specifications
Mass11 kg (24 lb)[1]
Length1,450 mm (57 in)[1]
CrewTwo (gunner and loader), could be used by a single operator[3]

Cartridge20×180mmR Bofors
Caliber20 mm
Actionrecoilless, single-shot
Muzzle velocity900–950 m/s (3,000–3,100 ft/s)[3]
Effective firing rangeiron sights are calibrated to 300 meters
Maximum firing rangeAmmunition-dependent, usually 400 to 1,000 m (1,300 to 3,300 ft)
Feed systemHinged breech[3]
SightsOpen (iron) sights; Meopta ZF-4 optical sight[3]

The Carl Gustaf 20 mm recoilless rifle, service name 20 mm pansarvärnsgevär m/42 (20 mm pvg m/42), meaning "20 mm antitank rifle model 1942", was the first recoilless rifle produced by Carl Gustafs Stads Gevärsfaktori. The weapon had a penetration of just over 4 cm RHA with its standard solid shot armour piercing projectile and quickly became obsolete against modern armour, leading to the development of higher caliber recoilless guns, eventually resulting in the Carl Gustaf 84 mm recoilless rifle in 1948.

Design

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The Carl Gustaf 20 mm pvg m/42 fired the 20×180mm rimmed cartridge which had two cutouts in the bottom of the casing. A seal covered these cutouts and when the cartridge was discharged, this seal was blown out to the back of the weapon, expelling some of the propellant gases rearward and counteracting the effects of recoil produced by the projectile accelerating down the barrel.[1][4][3] The breech plate had to be replaced after firing twenty rounds of armor-piercing ammunition or after forty rounds of practice on high-explosive.[3]

Unlike comparable anti-tank rifles of the era the 20 mm pvg m/42 was shipped with both high-explosive and armor-piercing projectiles.[3] The AP round was tungsten-cored[3] and had a tracer variant known as the slpprj m/42. The impact-fuzed HE projectile was known as the sgr m/43.[2] The 20 mm pvg m/42 being a recoilless rifle was also much lighter and more portable than contemporary 20 mm anti-tank rifles.[3] The 20 mm pvg m/42 was equipped with iron sights ranged to 300 metres and a detachable Meopta ZF-4 optical sight.[3]

The 20 mm pvg m/42 was the world's first shoulder-fired recoil-less weapon, and laid the ground work for the development of the more well-known Carl Gustaf 8.4cm recoilless rifle, which continues to see widespread military service.[1]

Service history

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By 1942 the armor penetration of the 20 mm pvg m/42 and anti-tank rifles was generally inadequate in the face of improvements in tank armor. Despite this, orders for 3,219 ATRs were placed, with deliveries between August 1942 and July 1944. The first 500 were faulty, and used only for training until they were repaired. By the end of World War II only 1,000 had been delivered.[2]

The Provisional Irish Republican Army acquired at least one 20 mm pvg m/42 recoilless rifle and first used the weapon in the summer of 1983, carrying out a number of attacks on British Army and Royal Ulster Constabulary fortified observation posts and armored vehicles in Belfast.[5][6]

Users

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Carl Gustaf recoilless weapon family

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See also

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References

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Printed sources

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  • AMREG, Ammunitionsregister, Armén, 1942 års utgåva, ändringar 1948 (in Swedish). Stockholm, Sweden: Royal Swedish Army Materiel Administration (KAF). 1948.

Footnotes

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g "Carl Gustav m/42". Modern Firearms. October 27, 2010. Archived from the original on Nov 17, 2023.
  2. ^ a b c Williams, Anthony G; Mackenzie, Bob (April 3, 2009) [February 1999]. "Transitional Anti-tank Rifle: The Carl Gustav m/42". The Cartridge Researcher. Military Guns & Ammunition. Archived from the original on Nov 11, 2022.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Forgotten Weapons (Apr 21, 2017). "Carl Gustav m/42: A 20mm Recoilless Antitank Rifle". YouTube. Archived from the original on Dec 18, 2023.
  4. ^ "Swedish Anti Tank Rifles 1921 - 1995". Göta Vapenhistoriska Sällskap. 2017-11-18. Archived from the original on Nov 17, 2023.
  5. ^ a b "Anti-tank weapon fired at RUC men", Belfast Telegraph, 29 August 1983.
  6. ^ a b "A Review of IRA Military Operations During The Period June-October 1983". Iris. November 1983. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
  7. ^ "37 mm granatgevär fm/43 – några smärre noteringar" (PDF). 2017. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 7, 2023. Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  8. ^ "47 mm granatgevär fm/1945". Armémuseum / DigitaltMuseum. Archived from the original on Nov 7, 2023. Retrieved 2023-04-14.