OTs-14 Groza

GROZA-1

Ots-14 Groza drawing
Type Bullpup assault rifle
Place of origin Russia
Service history
In service 1994–present
Used by Russia
Wars See Conflicts
Production history
Designer V.N. Telesh
and
Y.V. Lebedev
Designed 1990s
Manufacturer TsKIB SOO
Produced 1994
Variants OTs-14-4A
OTs-14-4A-01
OTs-14-4A-02
OTs-14-4A-03
Specifications
Weight 2,7 kg
(OTs-14-4A-01 and OTs-14-4A-02)
3,6 kg
(OTs-14-4A and OTs-14-4A-03)
Length 610 mm (OTs-14-4A)
565 mm (OTs-14-4A-01)
500 mm (OTs-14-4A-02)
720 mm (OTs-14-4A-03)
Barrel length 240 mm (Groza-4)
415 mm (Groza-1)
Width 60 mm (OTs-14-4A without a grenade launcher)
75 mm (OTs-14-4A with a grenade launcher mounted)
70 mm (OTs-14-1A without a grenade launcher)
80 mm (OTs-14-1A with a grenade launcher mounted)
Height 294 mm (OTs-14-4A without a grenade launcher)
266 mm (OTs-14-4A with a grenade launcher mounted)
350 mm (OTs-14-1A without a grenade launcher)
320 mm (OTs-14-1A with a grenade launcher mounted)

Cartridge 9×39mm (Groza-4)
7.62×39mm (Groza-1)
Action Gas-operated, rotating bolt
Rate of fire 700 rounds/min (Groza-4)
750 rounds/min (Groza-1)
Muzzle velocity 300 m/s (Groza-4)
720 m/s (Groza-1)
Effective firing range 200 m (Groza-4)
300 m (Groza-1)
Maximum firing range 400 m (Groza-4)
500 m (Groza-1)
Feed system 20-round detachable box magazine (Groza-4)
30-round detachable box magazine (Groza-1)
Sights Iron sights, several optical and night vision sights

The OTs-14 Groza (ОЦ-14 "Гроза") is a Russian selective fire bullpup assault rifle chambered for the 7.62×39 round and the 9×39mm subsonic round. It was developed in the 1990s at the TsKIB SOO (Central Design and Research Bureau of Sporting and Hunting Arms) in Tula, Russia. The weapon is colloquially known as OC-14 or OTs-14 "Groza" ("Thunderstorm"). The OTs-14-4A "Groza-4" has one derivative, the TKB-0239 (ТКБ-0239), also known as OTs-14-1A "Groza-1", chambered for the 7.62×39mm round.

History

Work on the OTs-14-4A project began in December 1992. The weapon's chief designers were Valery Telesh, responsible for the GP-25 and GP-30 under-barrel grenade launchers, and Yuri Lebedev. The team set out to design an integrated and modular system that would incorporate all the best features of a close-combat long gun into a single weapon using the AKS-74U as a starting platform. Prototypes were ready for testing in less than a year and the weapon was ready for production by early 1994.

It was first presented to the public at the MILIPOL Moscow trade show in April 1994 and adopted by the Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD) shortly thereafter. The success of the OTs-14-4A in the hands of MVD personnel brought it to the attention of the Ministry of Defence (MO), who also had a requirement for such a weapon. After a period of testing, the weapon was adopted for Spetsnaz forces and some airborne and specialist front-line combat units such as combat engineers. The weapon was originally intended to have used any one of four cartridges: 5.45×39mm, 5.56×45mm NATO, 7.62×39mm or 9×39mm. That idea was dropped and the assault rifle was originally chambered in 9×39mm to meet the MVD's requirement for a close combat weapon for deployment in Chechnya, with a variant chambered in 7.62x39mm manufactured later.

Design details

Internally OTs-14 "Groza" is an exact copy of AKS-74U but in a bullpup configuration and chambered for 9x39 SP-6 subsonic ammunition. The trigger / pistol grip unit could be removed and replaced with an alternative unit integral with 40 mm grenade launcher. In that configuration, a single trigger controls with a separate barrel selector both the 40 mm grenade launcher and the rifle itself. The safety/firing mode selector of AKS-74U pattern is retained. The barrel itself can be fitted with a specially designed quick-detachable silencer. The OTs-14's carrying handle has provisions for mounting long-range optical sights, red dot sights or night vision devices. As it was meant to replaced the AKS-74U in the battalions of Spetsnaz MVD as a standard service firearm there are also variants chambered for 7.62x39mm. The idea behind this design was to have an easily modified basic version which would be used in different combat scenarios as a carbine, assault rifle with a foregrip, silenced assault rifle with detachable silencer and assault rifle with an integrated under-barrel grenade launcher.

Operating mechanism

The OTs-14-4A is a small arms weapon system based on the 5.45×39mm AKS-74U carbine. It is a selective fire, air-cooled magazine-fed rifle with a gas-actuated piston operating system and a rotary bolt locking mechanism.

Features

The OTs-14-4A shares 75% of its components with the AKS-74U. The basic components of the weapon are borrowed directly from the AKS-74U assault rifle and slightly modified, simplifying the design as a whole and making the weapon considerably cheaper. The weapon has modular design allowing for assembly of one of four weapon versions depending on the assigned mission. It is configured in a bullpup layout for increased portability and balance. The grip is displaced forward, making the assault rifle compact, suitable for concealed carrying and so well balanced that it can be fired using just one hand, like a pistol.

The weapon fires from a closed bolt and has a hammer-type firing mechanism. It has a unitary trigger; a three-position combination fire mode selector switch / manual safety on the left side of the receiver sets whether it fires either the rifle or the grenade launcher or places it in "safe". The assault rifle is equipped with iron sights contained in the carrying handle that consist of an adjustable rear aperture sight on a tangent leaf with range graduations from 50 to 200 m, and a forward post. The grenade launcher is aimed using a folding leaf sight. The weapon will also accept several optical sights, including the PSO telescopic sights which mount directly onto the carrying handle or, as on early models, onto a bracket on the left side of the receiver housing. The OTs-14-4A also has a night sight dovetail that will accept all standard night vision optics.

Accessories

It is issued in an aluminum transport case with equipment and accessories for a wide array of tactical situations.(IMAGE) Included in the case are two different grip and trigger assemblies, one for use with the modified GP-25/30 grenade launcher and another for use when the launcher is detached. When the grenade launcher is installed, the combined rifle and grenade launcher is operated with a single trigger. A selector switch on left side of the grip near the trigger guard allows the user to select between rifle or grenade barrels. When the grenade launcher is detached, it is replaced by a vertical grip. A suppressor is also included in the standard kit, as is a quick-change short barrel for use with the suppressor or for when maximum compactness is desired.

Variants

See also

Notes

  1. They may refer to it by its alternate TKB-0239 designation.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/11/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.