This document summarizes ammunition used in various 37mm Russian cannons from the late 19th century through the mid 20th century. It describes ammunition for the 37mm Hotchkiss revolver and rapid-loading guns, the 37mm N-37 aircraft cannon, 37mm NS-37 aircraft cannon, and the 37mm Russian M1939 AAA gun. For each cannon, it provides details on ammunition types, weights, velocities, and construction, including diagrams and photographs. The document indicates the ammunition was manufactured in several Eastern bloc countries.
This document summarizes ammunition used in various 37mm Russian cannons from the late 19th century through the mid 20th century. It describes ammunition for the 37mm Hotchkiss revolver and rapid-loading guns, the 37mm N-37 aircraft cannon, 37mm NS-37 aircraft cannon, and the 37mm Russian M1939 AAA gun. For each cannon, it provides details on ammunition types, weights, velocities, and construction, including diagrams and photographs. The document indicates the ammunition was manufactured in several Eastern bloc countries.
This document summarizes ammunition used in various 37mm Russian cannons from the late 19th century through the mid 20th century. It describes ammunition for the 37mm Hotchkiss revolver and rapid-loading guns, the 37mm N-37 aircraft cannon, 37mm NS-37 aircraft cannon, and the 37mm Russian M1939 AAA gun. For each cannon, it provides details on ammunition types, weights, velocities, and construction, including diagrams and photographs. The document indicates the ammunition was manufactured in several Eastern bloc countries.
This document summarizes ammunition used in various 37mm Russian cannons from the late 19th century through the mid 20th century. It describes ammunition for the 37mm Hotchkiss revolver and rapid-loading guns, the 37mm N-37 aircraft cannon, 37mm NS-37 aircraft cannon, and the 37mm Russian M1939 AAA gun. For each cannon, it provides details on ammunition types, weights, velocities, and construction, including diagrams and photographs. The document indicates the ammunition was manufactured in several Eastern bloc countries.
Please note that these pages are no longer updated and contain partially obsolete data. For comprehensive and up to date information, please refer to my new book "Soviet Cannon" at www.russianammo.org. Compared to this webpage with its 69 pages, the book and the enclosed CD-Rom offer a total of almost 900 pages.
37x94R 37mm Hotchkiss Revolver- and Rapid-Loading Gun
With the appearance of the first torpedoboats in the late 1870s the Navies of the world realized the need for a quick fireing gun against those torpedo boats. The Hotchkiss cannons were developed and produced in France by Benjamin B. Hotchkiss and were later also licence built by Armstrong in England. The 37mm Hotchkiss cannons spread all over the world, their use was documented at least in 28 different countries. !n 1880 the French 37mm Hotchkiss revolver cannon was introduced to service in Russia. Later, the 37mm Hotchkiss rapid-loading cannon joined service. !n 1918 about +000 37mm cannons were listed in the Russian army. Sadly, no precise technical data is known about the Russian ammunition in this caliber, the projectiles all have a weight arround 500g and a muzzle velocity of about +00mfs (estimated). Russian rounds all have a destinctive brass driving band 12mm - 12,5mm wide. Some rounds have a second driving band 6,5mm wide and spaced 12,5mm in front of the lower band. Ammunition used in the Hotchkiss revolver gun and Hotchkiss rapid-loading gun:
USSR Designation US Abbreviation Bullet Weight [g| Nuzzle velocity [mfs| Description Common Shell APHE ~ 500 ~ +00 APHE shell with brass base fuze (right hand thread) and black powder charge. l= 9+mm (without fuze) Steel Shell APHE ~ 500 ~ +00 APHE shell with two driving bands and steel base screw (right hand thread). !nternal fuze inserted in base screw. l=92mm (without base screw) Armour Piercing AP ~ 500 ~ +00 Solid AP shot with two driving bands, l=82mm Explosive Shell HE ~ 500 ~ +00 HE shell with time fuze. The time fuze has a knurled ring for time adjustment. l=95mm (including fuze)
Partial cutaway drawings of the rounds listed above. Drawings from ECRA special bulletin 1990, cortesy of the German "Wehrtechnikmuseum" in RoethenbachfPegnitz.
Picture of the first round with brass base fuze. l=93,6mm, m=+17g (without charge and without base fuze) ol=166,8mm, headstamp: 0,311 1 { !.Z. anchor { G T { 2 1916 !mprinted in the projectile base: G S 17 1+ (5)
37x155 37mm N-37 aircraft cannon
The short recoil operated N-37 aircraft cannon was based on the wartime NS-37 but considerably reduced in powder and weight. !t was introduced in 19+6 to replace the older NS-37 because the task of destroying mainly tanks and ground targets was obsolete and propper air to air combat probabilities with higher rate of fire were needed. The rate of fire of the N-37 is +00-+50rpm, ammunition is fed in linked steel belts. The gun weights 103kg without ammunition load and was 1 of 5 15f08f2013 10:57 2+60mm long, barrel length was 1310mm. The NiG-15 and -17 carried one gun each with +0 rounds of ammunition load, the N-37 may still be in use today in underwing gun-pods. Cartridge cases are brass and filled with 127g of +f1 FL propellant, they use the same percussion primer as the +5mm antitank rounds use. Naximum armor penetration of the AP shell was 50mm. 20 cartridges of older manufacture were packed in a wooden box and separated by wooden spacers, these boxes weighted +0kg. Later, 10 cartridges were packed in a sealed metal container and 3 of those containers were overpacked in a wooden box weighting 56kg. Cartridge belt links are packed in +00 pieces separately in a wooden box that weighted 60kg. Ammunition was manufactured by the Czech Republic, Poland and Russia. Ammunition used in the N-37:
USSR Designation US Abbreviation Bullet Weight [g| Nuzzle velocity [mfs| Description OZT HE!-T 735 670 Conventional HE!-T shell filled with 37g of HE!, self-destruction nose fuzes A-37, A-37U or B-37 fitted OFZ HE! 729 670 As above but without tracer and filled with +9g of HE! BR APHE 73+ 670 Base fuzed APHE shell filled with 36,1g of HE, AD-37 base fuze BZT AP-T 735 670 Pointed AP shell with ballistic windshield cap (no incendiary!), tracer element is sometimes not fitted This type is also used as TP-T training round UB-37 TP Airburst 726 670 As HE! shell but with self destruction fuze without impact action, light blue colored fuze tip. For aerial target practice, self destructs between 9 and 12 sek.
Left picture: 37x155 Czech OZSv (HE-T) shell, m=735g, l=175mm, ol=288mm, vo=670mfs, 127g of 7f1 FL smokeless powder, high explosive: 25g TNT, Narkings on fuze: A-37 18-56 fut 23-56 evr, Narkings on shell: 27-fut-12-57-O !n black on the case: SvED OZSv, headstamp: hsu { 3 { 57 { 57 37x155 Czech AP-T shell, m=735g, l=165mm, ol=285mm, vo=670mfs, 127g of F+f1 smokeless powder, tracer is not fitted. Narkings on shell: 22-fut-53 . < 13 Brass cartridge case, headstamp: hsu { 8 { 56 { 56, !n black on the case (wrong case, this case is from a HET shell): Nk 37 LK OZSv Nc tp 2,6x1,0f32 - F+f1 nma 2f55 1+ 56 - evr cartridge Czech designation of caliber type of shell (HET) type and measurements of powder manufacturer, Lot-No.fyear of powder Lot-No., year - assembler of round
Right picture: 3 different Russian, one Czech and one East-German inert drill round.
37x198 37mm NS-37 aircraft cannon
This cartridge was developed for the Shpitalny Sh-37 cannon, but this cannon was very unreliable and only a small test batch was fitted to LaGG-3 and !l-2 fighters for trials. The experimental Sh-37 was replaced by the more reliable NS-37 in 19+2, the gun was mainly developed by A. Nudelman and A. Suranov at the "Precision Engineer Design Bureau" called "OKB-16" later on. As ammunition for the Sh-37 with cartridge case dimension 37x198 was readily developed and in production that time, the NS-37 adopted this caliber. The NS-37 was called 11-P-37 in prototype state, it had a rate of fire of 250-260rpm and weighted 150kg. The recoil operated cannon was intended to engage German tanks and armored vehicles, as well as to destroy hostile aircraft with a single hit. The AP shells were belt fed and could penetrate +0mm up to an angle of +5; 2 of 5 15f08f2013 10:57 the NS-37 cannon was 3+10mm long and had a barrel length of 2300mm. !t was fixed to the LaGG-3 in the engine vee and on the !l-2 in underwing pods, and on the Su-8 in underbelly mounts. But most NS-37 cannons were mounted between the cylinder banks of the engine of the Yak-9T fighter, ammunition load was 32 rounds. !t was used in air to air and air to ground combat successfully, about 8000 cannons were built. Rate of fire was quite low for air combat and recoil was so violent that pilots were trained to fire only three-round bursts. So no wonder that this gun was soon replaced by the N-37 with less powerful ammunition as described above. Ammunition used in the NS-37:
USSR Designation US Abbreviation Bullet Weight [g| Nuzzle velocity [mfs| Description OFZ HE or HE! 735 900 Similar in shape to early N1939 HE-T shells (ogive body) but without tracer. BT AP-T 760 880 Penetrated 50mm of armor at 200m Probably, target practice and drill rounds were used. A special tungsten carbide core AP projectile has been developed, however none has been discovered so far, so it may not have been itroduced to service.
37x252SR 37mm Russian M1939 AAA
This caliber was developed from the Swedish 25mm Bofors AA gun sold to Russia in the 1930s. The design was a joint task by L. A. Loktev and N. N. Loginov in the Design Bureau of Artillery Plant No. 8 at Kaliningrad. The N1939 had certain similarities with the later +0mm Bofors Lf60 AA gun like clip feeding and a similar carriage. The N1939 was introduced in Autumn 1939 and is a AA cannon of 2,1 tons weight (without optional shield) and fitted with a barrel 27+0mm long. Rate of fire was 160 to 180rpm, its ammunition was fed in 5-round charger clips. Naximum range was 9500m horizontally and effective vertical range 3000m, the AA gun was operated by 8 men and had a fire unit of ammunition of 200 rounds. The N1939 was recoil operated and air cooled, it was also modified after the war to water cooled cannons designated 70-K as single barrel and v-11N as double barrel cannon. Two Naval versions were also used in WW!!, a single and a twin barrel mounting designated 3,7cmf67 N1939. The towed N1939 AA gun was still widely used after the war, as well in the Soviet Union, its associated states, Yugoslavia and China and it is still in service. The twin barrel gun was also made for export and is still in service in Algeria and Egypt. China built its own versions as single barrel Type 55, as twin barrel Type 65 and 7+ and as advanced twin barrel P793 anti aircraft gun with modernized fire control system. Cartridge cases are brass with a Kv-2U percussion primer screw, the powder charge is held in place by a cardboard assembly. The propellant consists of 7f1+ nitrocellulose powder with a by-charge of black powder, the inner walls of the case are coated with waxed paper, that acts as phlegmatiser. A piece of lead-tin wire is located inside the case to act as decoppering agent, because driving bands are copper. !n Naval service 30 rounds are packed in a gray lacquered wooden box measuring 6+0x++0x230mm and weighting 50kg, that has various descriptive letters painted on. 20 round boxes are known as well, they measure 925x355x185mm and weigh +2kg. The projectiles are identical with the shells for the N-37 gun. AP shells are able to penetrate 37mmf60f500m or 28mmf90f1500m of RHA. The AP shell has two pronounced grooves that help to control the compression of the shell on impact on hard armor. Ammunition is manufactured by China, Egypt, Pakistan, Poland, Yugoslavia and Russia. China and Poland also manufacture steel cartridge cases. The ammunition used post WW!!:
USSR Designation US Abbreviation Bullet Weight [g| Nuzzle velocity [mfs| Description UOR-167 HE-T 735 866 Old type, filled TNT with NG-37 fuze UOR-167N HE-T 735 866 Filled 3+g A-!X-2, with B-37 fuze UBR-167 AP-T 760 866 Old type with small tracer UBR-167 AP-T 760 866 New type with larger tracer UBU-167 TP SD 726 866 Airburst practice shell with UTSCH-37 self destruction fuze. Blue fuze tip UP-167 TP-T 735 866 !nert Bitumen filled shell, dummy fuze !nert drill rounds are used as well.
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The above picture was kindly provided by Harry Galloway, it shows different live and inert drill rounds.
40mm GP-25 Kostyor grenade launcher
This caliber is no fixed cartridge, but it has a propelling section with percussion primer to the rear. Actually, two types of ammunition are used in te GP-25 launcher, that may be attached underbarrel to the AKN and AK-7+ assault rifles. The launcher is similar to the US N203 launcher, but the GP-25 is a rifeled muzzle loader, it is 280mm long, weights 1,2kg and maximum range is +00m. The grenade launcher is locked in position under the assault rifle barrel behind the trigger guard and attached to the muzzle adaptor at the front. The GP-25 is now replaced by the improved GP-30 Obuvka launcher. The GP-30 weights 1,5kg, fires with a double action trigger and has a sighting range of +00m. Also developed is a six barrel grenade rifle 6GP-30 that has a extendable stock and a revolving breech that is preliminary wound by a spring to achieve a firing rate of 15-18 rdsfmin. The grenade rifle is 510mm long, 680mm with extended stock and weights 6kg. The grenade launchers fire vOG-25 and vOG-25P standard fragmentation rounds. The latter model is provided with an expelling charge which ensures the rebound of the grenade on impact and its airburst to effectively defeat a screened target. !n addition, a special purpose Gvozd gas grenade can also be used to enhance the weapon versatility. The first type of shell is the vOG-25, a steel shell with outer obturations that look like a driving band, but these are actually the fragmentation grooves. This body is filled with +8g of high explosive and closed with an impact nose fuze, a light alloy cap covers the fuze except from the tip. The impact fuze remains sensitive even on snow, bog and water surface. A short cylinder protrudes out of the base, this is the propelling section, filled with P-200 propellant. A central percussion cap is surrounded by ten small nozzle holes that provide a highflow pressure boost. This grenade uses the vNG-N or vNG-K nose fuze. The second shell is the vOG-25P, it has a larger obturated steel body filled with 37g of explosive and has a rebated truncated cone as front assembly. On impact, this assembly makes the shell jump up into the air again, detonating in a height between 1 and 2 meters, producing a lethal radius of 5m. This grenade uses the vNG-P nose fuze. All fuze types self destruct after a time period of 1+ - 19 sec. Ammunition is manufactured by Russia.
USSR Designation US Abbreviation Bullet Weight [g| Nuzzle velocity [mfs| Description vOG-25 HE FRAG 250 76,5 Grooved steel body filled with +8g of HE, vNG-N or vNG-K nose fuze partly covered by sheet metal cap vOG-25P HE Airburst 278 75 Rebounding fragmentation shell filled with 37g of HE and fitted with vNG-P nose fuze GRD-+0 Smoke 250 75 Smoke shell (Probaly the same as a reported "Gvozd" gas grenade?) ? TP 250 76,5 !nert practice shell Drill rounds exist as well, of course.
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Four drill grenades and one vOG-25P, the cap has been removed on the third grenade from the right.
40.6mm Djakonoff rifle grenade
This WW!! caliber consists of only one type of shell that is projected by the Djakonoff 30 rifle grenade assembly that could be fixed to the muzzle of all standard 7.62mm rifles. The shell, type "vGD" consists of a steel envelope that may have fragmentation grooves or not. The envelope is closed on the top with an ogive cap and to the rear with the driving band and fuze assembly. A central tube leads through the entire shell, to allow the use of standard ball ammunition for projecting. Three studs on the driving band located on the lower third of the shell transmit the spin of the grenade projector. Below the driving band is a ring with imprinted numbers for adjustment of the delay time of the powder burning fuze. The base of the shell is recessed to act as seal against the powder gases, this recess also takes an optional additional powder charge for greater range. The detonator cap reaches deep inside the shell, between the outer wall and the central tube.
Technical data: The shell is 115mm long and weights 350g, it has a HE filling of 50g of TNT. !f other types of HE are used, the gray cap is painted in other colors. The muzzle velocity is 5+mfs with a standard 7,62 Nosin Nagant ball rifle cartridge, with an additional powder charge of 2,5g of smokeless powder in a silk bag, the muzzle velocity was 110mfs. The according maximum ranges were 300m and 900m. The powder delay time fuze could be adjusted between 3 and 12 sec., the fuze is ignited by the hot powder gases. The shell produces about 3+0 fragments on detonation, that form a deadly radius of about 50m. Each shell is single packed in a sealed metal container, 32 or 50 of these containers are overpacked in a wooden box, the weight of the larger box was 30kg.
Legend: m= mass of projectile, om= mass of complete round, pm=mass of propellant, l= length of projectile, ol= overall length of complete round, Vo= muzzle velocity, cartridge case headstamps are given in the clockwise system, the clock-sections divided by "|" for better reading. The "|" does not mean an imprinted line in the headstamp. Example: symbol at 12 oclock | 3 oclock | 6 oclock | 9 oclock
Please note that these pages are no longer updated and contain partially obsolete data. For comprehensive and up to date information, please refer to my new book "Soviet Cannon" at www.russianammo.org. Compared to this webpage with its 69 pages, the book and the enclosed CD-Rom offer a total of almost 900 pages. < Previous Page < Home > Next Page > 5 of 5 15f08f2013 10:57