Error creating thumbnail: File missing Join our Discord!
If you have been locked out of your account you can request a password reset here.

Novitsky-Fyodorov Grenade: Difference between revisions

From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Actually, now that I'm looking at it, I'm starting to think these are two separate versions of the Novitsky-Fyodorov - the head design seems completely different.)
(Funny squished grenade.)
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[File:Novitsky–Fyodorov.jpg|thumb|right|150px|Novitsky-Fyodorov "Ten-pounder" grenade.]]
[[File:Novitsky–Fyodorov.jpg|thumb|right|150px|Novitsky-Fyodorov "Ten-pounder" grenade.]]
[[File:Novitsky-Fyodorov Drawing.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Novitsky-Fyodorov grenade (illustration). Note the weighted ropes.]]
[[File:Novitsky–Fyodorov Drawing.jpg|thumb|right|150px|Novitsky-Fyodorov grenade (illustration). Note the weighted ropes.]]


The '''Novitsky-Fyodorov''' (Граната Новицкого-Фёдорова; ''Granata Novitskogo-Fyodorova'', slang: ''десятифунтовка'', ''desyatifuntovka'', which means "ten-pounder") is an Imperial Russian hand grenade. The first version was designed by Capt. Novitsky and appeared in 1914; in 1916, it was improved by ''Praporshchik'' (2nd Lt.) Fyodorov. Due its extremely large weight (10 pounds) and very long fuse (12 seconds) it could not be used against soldiers, but was an ideal weapon against all sorts of stationary military equipment, such as pillboxes, etc. For effective destruction of barbed wire, the grenade was fitted with 0.8m (2 ft, 7.9 in) weighted ropes that tangle with wire and ensure detonation in the center of the wire rather than on the ground. Later, these qualities (long delay and very high explosive power) made it popular among safecrackers.
The '''Novitsky-Fyodorov''' (Граната Новицкого-Фёдорова; ''Granata Novitskogo-Fyodorova'', slang: ''десятифунтовка'', ''desyatifuntovka'', which means "ten-pounder") is an Imperial Russian hand grenade. The first version was designed by Capt. Novitsky and appeared in 1914; in 1916, it was improved by ''Praporshchik'' (2nd Lt.) Fyodorov. Due its extremely large weight (10 pounds) and very long fuse (12 seconds) it could not be used against soldiers, but was an ideal weapon against all sorts of stationary military equipment, such as pillboxes, etc. For effective destruction of barbed wire, the grenade was fitted with 0.8m (2 ft, 7.9 in) weighted ropes that tangle with wire and ensure detonation in the center of the wire rather than on the ground. Later, these qualities (long delay and very high explosive power) made it popular among safecrackers.

Latest revision as of 21:04, 4 October 2023

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
Novitsky-Fyodorov "Ten-pounder" grenade.
Novitsky-Fyodorov grenade (illustration). Note the weighted ropes.

The Novitsky-Fyodorov (Граната Новицкого-Фёдорова; Granata Novitskogo-Fyodorova, slang: десятифунтовка, desyatifuntovka, which means "ten-pounder") is an Imperial Russian hand grenade. The first version was designed by Capt. Novitsky and appeared in 1914; in 1916, it was improved by Praporshchik (2nd Lt.) Fyodorov. Due its extremely large weight (10 pounds) and very long fuse (12 seconds) it could not be used against soldiers, but was an ideal weapon against all sorts of stationary military equipment, such as pillboxes, etc. For effective destruction of barbed wire, the grenade was fitted with 0.8m (2 ft, 7.9 in) weighted ropes that tangle with wire and ensure detonation in the center of the wire rather than on the ground. Later, these qualities (long delay and very high explosive power) made it popular among safecrackers.

It is hard to estimate the full number of produced grenades, but there were no less than 90,000 M1914s and no less than 350,000 M1916s produced. Production stopped in 1918, and the stores were expended only in the late 1920s.

Note: As very few samples survived to the present day, Novitsky-Fyodorov grenades are more likely to appear in old movies, filmed in early decades of the 20th century.

Specification

(1914-1918)

  • State: Russian Empire
  • Full weight: 5 lbs (2.3 kg) (M1916)
  • Explosive charge weight: 3.6 lbs (1.7 kg) (M1916)
  • Body Length: 5.3 in (13.5 cm)
  • Full Length: 13.7 in (34.9 cm)

The Novitsky-Fyodorov Grenade and variants can be seen in the following films, television series, video games, and anime used by the following actors:

Film

Title Actor Character Note Date
Young Eagles (Noored kotkad) Arnold Vaino Tammekänd 1927