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

RPG-7: Difference between revisions

From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 31: Line 31:
=== Television ===
=== Television ===


* Enemy forces in ITV's Ultimate Force
* Enemy forces in ''[[Ultimate Force]]''


=== Anime ===
=== Anime ===

Revision as of 02:02, 15 April 2009

The RPG (Rocket Propelled Grenade, actual Russian abbreviation РПГ stands for ручной противотанковый гранатомёт - hand anti-tank grenade launcher) Launcher as been utilized by both Soviet/Russian soldiers but all other Communist bloc countries and client states/groups throughout the world. Developed from the RPG-2 (also known as the B40 rocket in Vietnam), the RPG-7 is seen all over the world - from the warzones of Africa and the Middle East to Central and South America.

The Chinese made their own version of the rocket - the Type 69 RPG, which differed in that there was only one pistol grip. The second pistol grip of the RPG-7 was replaced by a upper handle. Also the Type 69 has an integral lightweight bipod that folds against the body of the tube. In movies, many times the Type 69 RPG is seen rather than the Russian RPG-7.

RPG-7

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
RPG-7 70mm

The real Soviet built RPG-7 launcher has never really appeared in many U.S. films (until recently). There were no real de-watted examples in most of the movie prop houses (or armories). In films like Red Dawn and Back to the Future the RPG-7s are fully fabricated fakes, made out of aluminum, plastic fibreglass or wood. The only true RPG-7s that appeared in films were foreign ones that used foreign armorers. Currently the expensive Airsoft RPG-7 replica or the bad Resin fake one or the fake one used by the U.S. military for training purposes, are seen quite a bit in movies and films when it doesn't fire. When the RPG fires, it is a fabricated fake, designed to fire a pyrotechnic special effects rocket. One of the reasons why these items are hard to obtain is restrictions imposed by the ATF.

The Russian RPG-7 anti-tank rocket launcher (or a fabricated copy) has appeared being used by the following actors in the following films, television series, anime, and video games used by the following actors:

Film

  • Cuban and Russian soldiers and the "Wolverines" in Red Dawn


Television

Anime

Video Games

Type 69

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
Chinese Type 69 RPG 40mm

The Type 69 anti-tank rocket launcher is a Chinese copy of the RPG-7, manufactured by Norinco, that is often seen in many Hollywood movies, sometimes impersonating its Russian cousin. The vast majority of RPG-7 launchers in cinema and television is the Chinese Type 69 launcher, not the original Soviet RPG-7 since it is near impossible to get. It has been used by the following actors in the following films and television series:

Film

Television

Video Games