OTs-38 Stechkin silent revolver

The OTs-38 Stechkin is a 5-shot, double-action revolver, in production and service since 2002,[1] chambered in the silent 7.62×41mm SP-4 cartridge.[2]

OTs-38 Stechkin silent revolver
OTs-38 in Interpolitex-2011
TypeRevolver
Place of originRussia
Service history
In service2002
Used byRussia
Syria
Production history
DesignerIgor Yakovlevich Stechkin
Designed2001
ManufacturerKBP Instrument Design Bureau
Unit cost$567.80
Produced2002
Specifications
Mass820g (1 lb 13 oz) (without laser and empty), 880g (1 lb 15 oz) (with laser and empty)
Length191mm (7.5 in)
Width40mm (1.6 in)
Height140mm (5.5 in)

Cartridge7.62×41 mm SP-4
ActionDouble-action Revolver
Effective firing range50m
Feed system5 round cylinder, loaded by full moon clips
SightsFixed front and rear, optional integral laser sight

Design

The effective range of fire for the OTs-38 Stechkin is 50 m. The fired cases are kept in the cylinder, thus ensuring the absence of sound of ejected cases. The cartridge employs a captive piston, creating a gas seal, so there is no flash or loud report upon discharge.[3]

As the cartridge is rimless, the cylinder is fed via full moon clips. The SP-4 cartridges emit no report or flame because the propellant gases are retained in the case. The OTs-38 revolver is claimed to be effectively silent, as the sound level of the live and dry firing is practically identical.

S&W QSPR

This system is virtually identical to that employed by the Quiet Special Purpose Revolver (QSPR) a variant of the commercially available Smith & Wesson Model 29 .44 Magnum revolvers, rebuilt to fire specially manufactured dedicated integrally silenced ammunition:

Early prototypes had very short smooth-bore barrels with 0.40 inch (10 mm) bore and matching chambers, but later versions have longer barrels of up to four inches (100 mm). QSPR ammunition (which pioneered the captive piston propellant gas containment system) ejected fifteen tungsten balls from the special cartridges, weighing 7.5 grain (0.5 grams) each, exiting at a muzzle velocity of around 730 fps (222ms) for a muzzle energy of roughly 135 ft-lbs (185J).

This load was tailored to wound at up to 100 ft (30 m), and have a practical, and potentially fatal, effect at ranges below 30 ft (10 m), deemed sufficient for the QSPR's intended and narrow application: clearing the confined and dimly-lit to pitch-black tunnels encountered by “tunnel rats" during the Vietnam War. No sights were fitted.

The acoustic signature of QSPR rounds was around 110 dB (similar to a traditionally silenced .22LR pistol), the captive piston totally eliminated muzzle flash (vital when most engagements occurred in near or total darkness). While effective, only 250 QSPRs were manufactured; production was discontinued after the US withdrawal from Vietnam.

OTs-38

In contrast to its virtually stock predecessor, the later OTs-38 is innovative to a degree unusual even in special purpose weapons:

  • The cylinder pivots out to the right-hand side.
  • A manual safety catch that allows the pre-cocked hammer to be set on manual safety, enabling the revolver to be carried cocked. (The mechanism also prevents accidental discharge with the cylinder open or not fully closed, with the revolver dropped or struck.)
  • The barrel is mounted below the axis pin (the gun fires from the lowest cylinder chamber), so recoil is directed straight into the shooter's hand, rather than exerting a torque that raises the muzzle. This improves both accuracy and the maximum rate of fire.

The OTs-38 is fitted with an integral laser sight located above the cylinder axis (where a conventional revolver has its barrel) powered by three D-0.03D batteries.[4]

Users

See also

References

  1. "ОЦ-38". Archived from the original on 2015-05-21. Retrieved 2015-01-25.
  2. Jones, Richard (2009). Jane's Infantry Weapons 2009-2010. Jane's Information Group. p. 65. ISBN 978-0-7106-2869-5.
  3. "OTs-38 Stechkin 7.62 mm silent revolver". Jane's Information Group. March 31, 2010. Retrieved 2009-06-16.
  4. "9-мм автоматический пистолет ОЦ-38". KBP. Archived from the original on June 10, 2009.

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