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Old 03-29-2023, 11:12 AM
Homer Homer is offline
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In T2K Poland circa July of 2000, the easy answer might be, “Anything is better than nothing”!

That said, the RPG-7 in its Soviet/WARPAC form is a pretty good piece of kit for a variety of applications. It’s fairly light, ammo is varied, plentiful and fairly light; as long as you understand weapon/ammo limitations it can be effective against a range of targets. You can even fire an RPG “indirect” against an area target if you’re good enough at math! The three factors against the RPG are: 1. no soft launch limits use of covered/urban firing positions; 2.crosswind can severely affect the projectiles accuracy; and 3. inexperienced or panicked operators have a tendency to leave the fuse safety cap on causing the round to dud.

The PZF3 is a heavier, less varied (only HEAT, Tandem HEAT, and HESH) RPG. It’s got soft launch, a longer ranged and more accurate projectile made to destroy modern tanks, and it has better human factor engineering (inertial fuse rather than manual cap). That said, the round is heavy and it wasn’t as widespread, with Germany and Italy being the main users in the late 90s. The earlier PZF44 was also fielded, but the lighter ammunition gave effects more akin to an RPG round. If I could sustain it, the PZF3 would be better for fighting tanks and field fortifications than the RPG, especially in a city,

For disposables, the AT4/LAW80 class weapons far outshine the M72/RPG18 interns of accuracy, target effects, and range. But, they’re heavy and would have been less plentiful than the older and smaller weapons. One AT4 round is going to add a lot to the burden of the carrier; but the M72 is much lighter. It’s not abnormal to see them carried in twos or threes by several members of a patrol for volley firing In an anti armor ambush.

Basis of issue will vary. By OB, RPG7 type launchers were issued one to every MR, Airborne, and Naval Infantry squad. Scout cars, AT carriers, and recon assault co vehicles all had one per. There were also provisions of armed border troops and internal troops to have them. RPG-18 type weapons seemed prioritized to airborne, naval infantry, and troops in mountains before MR troops. Special purpose and deep recon troops would have access as required.

I’ll caveat on the example of western fielding with a couple of examples.
In training AT4s are one per squad (a rifleman usually has it; the other lucky rifleman carries a SKEDCO and an aid bag) with extra rounds held in tracks or unit trains depending on unit. M72s were envisaged as one per every rifle carrying squad member with extras stored elsewhere. That said both are issued and managed like ammunition.

Anecdotally, a light/airborne/air assault infantry unit fighting without tank support issues and carries as many AT4s as possible. Every combat vehicle in the D Co or AT Plt will usually have at least one strapped to the gunner’s hatch or in reach of the commander for use against hard/“worthwhile” targets. You’ll also see them with the non combat vehicles like the mortars or C2/log elements for firepower or to replenish line units. Two-to-four AT4s is typical for a squad load for offensive ops (pretty much anybody not on a weapons team or carrying a special weapon/equipment) balanced out with demo and grenades. Since they can be used to create a breach and clear the first room, they see a lot of use. Defensively, AT4s can be pre stocked in fighting positions, with others cached nearby. They’re employed as a direct fire weapon on the fire plan and normally integrated into the fire plan to achieve synergistic effects with the MG, SAWs, GLs, and JAV/Flaggin.

M72s are a similar concept, but smaller and lighter. Reading up on Grenada, most line platoon Rangers jumped a LAW in addition to their other gear with the airland gun jeeps coming in festooned with them. In operational employment of the law, they can be used as an “every man” weapons, with an entire plt less weapons squad, PL/PSG, and specialists carrying at least one, with 2-3 being common depending on mission and terrain considerations. LAWs don’t have the power of an AT4, so they’re going to be used in multiples a lot of times. They types can even be mixed, with AT4 for houses and walls while the LAW is used for weapons positions and light skins like technicals or cars/trucks.

Supply being equal, ammo issue can vary widely by unit. Some units strictly control it, issuing basic load and no more with crew served ammo, mortar rounds, AT4s, grenades, etc according to policy guidance or oporder. Others have policies like issuing double basic load (in mags or as reloads varies by unit) and a normal minimum allocation by team/squad of AT4s, grenades, etc (“everybody carries a 60mm round, drop it off in your way up”). Anecdotally there are units that have policies that then place the pallets of ammo in the unit area along with a stack of NBC bags, kit bags, straps and 550 so you can “anything after the minimum, help yourself, you're grownups”. Anecdotally, replacements in such units normally show up with duffle bags and rucks crammed with whatever extra ammo, batteries, and consumables was available (or resourced from other units) to take forward.
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