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The basic rocket is the RPO-A, which has a thermobaric warhead and is designed for attacking soft targets under moderate cover. The RPO-Z is a incendiary warhead (from зажигательный, zazhigatel'nyy, 'incendiary') designed to spread fire and ignite targets. The RPO-D is a smoke warhead (from дымовой, dymovoy, 'related to smoke').
RPO-A Shmel (one-shot disposable launcher) 93mm late 1980s–present succeeded by RPO-M RPO-A: thermobaric RPO-Z: incendiary RPO-D: smoke warhead RPO-M: 90mm reusable launcher Bur: 62mm reusable launcher MRO-A (one-shot disposable launcher) 72.5mm 2002–present MRO-A: thermobaric MRO-Z: incendiary MRO-D: smoke warhead Varna (Incendiary rocket ...
RPO "Rys" [1] [2] [3] (Russian: реактивный пехотный огнемёт «Рысь» (РПО «Рысь»), Rocket-propelled Infantry Flamethrower "Lynx") is a napalm rocket-propelled grenade launcher classified as flamethrower by Russian military. [4]
Further evolution of the RPO-A Shmel. Variants: MRO-A (thermobaric) MRO-O (WP Smoke warhead), MRO-Z (Incendiary warhead) [9] RPG-28: NPO Bazalt Russia Disposable 2011 125 mm [10] RPG-30: NPO Bazalt Russia Disposable 2013 105 mm [11] RPG-32 Barkas: NPO Bazalt — Russia Reusable 2012 72.5 mm / 105 mm JADARA is producing it as well under license ...
370mm multiple rocket launchers China: Modular 300mm/370mm/750mm ammunition system PHL-03: 300mm multiple rocket launchers 175 [40] China: PHL-XX (SR-7) 122mm/220mm multiple rocket launchers China: The SR-7 modular multiple launch rocket was observed in PLAGF service, though the designation is unknown. [44] [45] PHZ-11: 122mm/220mm multiple ...
Hand-held rocket-assisted flamethrowers. Flamethrower MRO-A in the center The MRO Borodach [ 4 ] is a Russian self-contained, disposable single shot 72.5 mm rocket launcher.
Home Guards load a rocket launcher on a static 'Z' Battery on Merseyside, July 1942. The solid-fuel 3 in (76 mm) rocket used by the Z Batteries was known as the UP-3 (Unrotated Projectile) and had been developed in the late 1930s by the Projectile Development Establishment at Fort Halstead in Kent under the direction of Alwyn Crow.
The RPG-7 [a] is a portable, reusable, unguided, shoulder-launched, anti-tank, rocket launcher. The RPG-7 and its predecessor, the RPG-2, were designed by the Soviet Union, and are now manufactured by the Russian company Bazalt. The weapon has the GRAU index (Russian armed forces index) 6G3.