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Difference between revisions of "ROKS flamethrowers"

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'''ROKS''' (''Rantseviy Ognemyot Klyueva-Sergeeva'', literally "Knapsack Flamethrower by Klyuev and Sergeev") is a series of Soviet man-portable flamethrowers. The first model, ROKS-1, was designed in early 1930s but wasn't put into service. The second version ROKS-2 was issued in mid-1930s and used by Soviet Army in Winter War and WW2. In 1942 it was replaced with the improved ROKS-3.
 
'''ROKS''' (''Rantseviy Ognemyot Klyueva-Sergeeva'', literally "Knapsack Flamethrower by Klyuev and Sergeev") is a series of Soviet man-portable flamethrowers. The first model, ROKS-1, was designed in early 1930s but wasn't put into service. The second version ROKS-2 was issued in mid-1930s and used by Soviet Army in Winter War and WW2. In 1942 it was replaced with the improved ROKS-3.
  
The fuel and gas tanks (capacity: 9 litres (2.4 US gal)) of ROKS flamethrowers were concealed in a metal casting, resembling an ordinary soldier knapsack, and the flame projector resembled a standard [[Mosin Nagant Rifle]], so the operator of the flamethrower generally looked the same as other soldiers until the weapon fires. The fuel was propelled by pressurized nitrogen gas and ignited by firing specially modified 7.62x25mm TT cartridges. The effective firing range was 25 m (27.3 yards), and maximum around 45 m (50 yards).
+
The fuel and gas tanks (capacity: 9 litres (2.4 US gal)) of ROKS flamethrowers were concealed in a metal casting, resembling an ordinary soldier knapsack, and the flame projector resembled a standard [[Mosin Nagant Rifle]], so the operator of the flamethrower generally looked the same as other soldiers until the weapon fires. The fuel was propelled by pressurized nitrogen gas and ignited by firing specially modified 7.62x25mm TT cartridges: this was a necessity as gas torch-ignited flamethrowers perform poorly in extremely cold conditions. The effective firing range was 25 m (27.3 yards), and maximum around 45 m (50 yards).
  
 
Outside of USSR, ROKS flamethrowers were issued by Finnish army (as Liekinheitin M/41-r) and in post-WW2 era by North Korea. They were replaced in Soviet service by the [[LPO-50 flamethrower]] in the 1950s.
 
Outside of USSR, ROKS flamethrowers were issued by Finnish army (as Liekinheitin M/41-r) and in post-WW2 era by North Korea. They were replaced in Soviet service by the [[LPO-50 flamethrower]] in the 1950s.

Revision as of 04:31, 24 October 2018

ROKS (Rantseviy Ognemyot Klyueva-Sergeeva, literally "Knapsack Flamethrower by Klyuev and Sergeev") is a series of Soviet man-portable flamethrowers. The first model, ROKS-1, was designed in early 1930s but wasn't put into service. The second version ROKS-2 was issued in mid-1930s and used by Soviet Army in Winter War and WW2. In 1942 it was replaced with the improved ROKS-3.

The fuel and gas tanks (capacity: 9 litres (2.4 US gal)) of ROKS flamethrowers were concealed in a metal casting, resembling an ordinary soldier knapsack, and the flame projector resembled a standard Mosin Nagant Rifle, so the operator of the flamethrower generally looked the same as other soldiers until the weapon fires. The fuel was propelled by pressurized nitrogen gas and ignited by firing specially modified 7.62x25mm TT cartridges: this was a necessity as gas torch-ignited flamethrowers perform poorly in extremely cold conditions. The effective firing range was 25 m (27.3 yards), and maximum around 45 m (50 yards).

Outside of USSR, ROKS flamethrowers were issued by Finnish army (as Liekinheitin M/41-r) and in post-WW2 era by North Korea. They were replaced in Soviet service by the LPO-50 flamethrower in the 1950s.

ROKS-2 flamethrower
ROKS-3 flamethrower

Specifications

(1941 - 1950s)

  • Type: Flamethrower
  • Weight: 50 lbs (22.7 kg)
  • Feed System: One 2.4 gallon tank
  • Fire Modes: Stream

Film

Title Actor Character Note Date
Across the Gobi and the Khingan (Govi Khyangand tulaldsan ni) A Soviet soldier Mockup 1981
Trackman (Putevoy Obkhodchik) Aleksey Dmitriev Trackman Mockup 2007
Dmitriy Orlov Grom
A Woman in Berlin A Soviet soldier Mockup 2008

Video Game

Title Appear As Mods Notation Release Date
Company of Heroes 2 ROKS-3 2013

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