![]() |
Hand grenades
I've noticed some inconsistency in a field of HE kill of hand grenades:
UK 87 Mills Bomb - HE kill 5 France: 87 Hand Grenade - 6 Soviet Union 87 F-1 Grenade - 3 Germany 87 Handgranate - 6 USA 87 Mk. II Grenade - 5 Poland 80 Granaty - 3 81 F-1 Grenade (Soviet) - 3 82 Grenade F1 M.15 (French) - 3 86 Granat wz.24 Ob - 8 (range 2!) 87 Granat wz.24 Za - 4 Italy 87 Bomba a Mano - 6 Information on grenades is usually scarce, but it seems, that Mills bomb, French and Soviet F1 and US Mk 2 were all similar fragmentation defensive grenades, weighting some 600 g, with some 60 g of explosive (possibly Mills bomb was somewhat heavier - I've found info on 69 g of explosive). On the other hand, most common German Stielhandgranate was weak offensive grenade, with no fragmentation shell as a standard. Therefore, it seems to me, that Mills should have kill=6, French, Soviet, US grenades - 6 or 5, and German - 3. I have no info on Italian grenades, but I assume it's similar. Only the Polish OOB makes a difference between defensive and offensive grenades - maybe a good idea, but I feel it is rather splitting a hair. We have a defensive 86 Granat wz.24 Ob, which definitely should be similar to the ones above and have normal range 1, and an offensive 87 Granat wz.24 Za, which also has too much kill (4) for a thin shell. There is also generic 80 Granaty with kill=3, used only by some bunkers. Weapon 82 Grenade F1 M.15 should be equal to French defensive grenades. Anyway, I suggest to rename Polish 86 Granat wz.24 Ob to "Granat obronny" (=defensive) without detailed mark designation, especially, that basic Polish defensive grenades were wz.33, introduced in 1933 only. Similarly 87 Granat wz.24 Za could be renamed to "Granat zaczepny" (=offensive). "Ob" and "Za" are not valid abbreviations. Edit: further suggestions as for Polish grenades are in a appropriate thread. Michal |
Re: Hand grenades
Here's the info I have on grenades:
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/...ndgrenades.png I wouldn't pay too much attention to the effective radius (as it's from different sources) other than to note the already understood difference between offensive and defensive grenades, and that the Soviet F-1 was poor quality. Defensive grenades should have a higher HEK with no PEN Offensive grenades should have a lower HEK with 1 PEN If the designers went with generic grenades, then perhaps they should all get something like HEK 5 PEN 1 Cross |
Re: Hand grenades
NB - the 100yd danger distance from the Mills bomb is from the large and solid base plug that could be projected quite far from the explosion.
Andy |
Re: Hand grenades
Quote:
Official manuals consider safe radius 200 m, on the Russian Wikipedia they quote examples of injuries at 70-80 m for own soldiers without good cover. Michal |
Re: Hand grenades
Quote:
The quality of the filler could be the main issue. However, I only have primary sources for the German, US and British grenades, so your info may well be right that the F-1 was as effective as western frags. The poor quality grenades could have been the tin can RG-42. That said, to Andy's point, there's difference between 'effective radius' and 'deadly/safe radius'. I don't doubt that a F-1 could kill an unlucky man at 80m. Cross |
Re: Hand grenades
Here's a British War Office document that published grenade test results.
Of particular interest in the difference between the UK No.36 defensive grenade with baratol filler, and the US MkII defensive grenade with EC filler (more stable but less powerful than TNT). Pity they didn't also test the F-1, but the F-1 did use TNT. This document also makes you wonder what criteria various sources use for 'effective radius'. https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/...ectiveness.png Cross |
Re: Hand grenades
Interesting. I'm not sure if I understand correctly all what they mean, but would it mean, that a German stick grenade has the same 45% chances of incapacitation at 9 feet, as Mills bomb at 10 feet? Only one feet more?
How much radius is 1550 and 350 sq.ft? In a meantime, I've found an article in Russian on F-1 http://army.armor.kiev.ua/hist/granatarif.shtml The author (clearly with some military experience) says, that 200 m safe radius from a manual must be a sure safe radius, multiplied by 2 for greater certainty. At 50-70 m there were found fragments, but only big ones, like 1/4 of shell. A probable field of hitting fragments is 78-82 sq.m - some 5 m radius. All in all, it seems to me, that grenades are not that efficient, as raw figures say, and probably it concerns most grenades, not only F1. Michal |
Re: Hand grenades
Quote:
Quote:
350 SqFt = 10.5 ft (3.2m) Cross |
Re: Hand grenades
As an interesting side-note: the Norwegian army did not have any hand grenades during the war. But I guess you could treat them (being in game) as improvised grenades, or perhaps even British/French supplied ones.
|
Re: Hand grenades
Quote:
As for improvised grenades: the problem with improvised thrown explosives is that you need a reliable time detonator/fuze -- and in other armies it was quite often a hand grenade... Engineers might have separate time fuzes available, but not ordinary infantry units. |
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:40 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.1
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©1999 - 2025, Shrapnel Games, Inc. - All Rights Reserved.