MON-100
[Image:MON-100 2 (ORDATA).jpg|300px|thumb|MON-100 Landmine]
The MON-100 is a circular, sheet metal bodied, directional type of anti-personnel mine designed and manufactured in the early 1960s by the Soviet Union. It is designed to wound or kill by fragmentation and resembles a large bowl.
The mine is reported to be deployed in Angola, Mozambique, South Africa and Zambia.
Design
The MON-100 mine body has a smooth, well finished appearance with a webbing handle mounted on the upper edge. It is usually attached to a mounting shackle by wing nuts on either side of the mine body. The concave face of the mine has a detonator cavity in its center.The mine contains 2 kg of explosive to propel 450 steel rod fragments to a lethal range of 100 m, at maximum range the spread of the fragmentation is 9.5 m. The mine alone weighs 5 kg but with the shackle and mounting spike the weight is 7.53 kg. The MON 100 can be command actuated using a PN manual inductor attached by demolition cable to an EDP-R electric detonator. It can also be actuated by a variety of booby trap switches including:
- MUV series pull
- MVE-72 electric breakwire
- VP13 seismic controller.
Specifications
[Image:MON-100 1 (ORDATA).jpg|upright=1.36|thumb|MON-100 cutaway to show components]- Country of origin: Soviet Union
- Mine action:
- Material: Sheet metal
- Shape: Circular
- Colour: Green, olive
- Total weight: 5 kg
- Explosive content: 2 kg TNT
- Operating pressure :
- Length: n/a
- Width: 82.5 mm
- Height: n/a
- Diameter: 236 mm
- Fuse #1: Command detonated using PN manual inductor attached by demolition cable to an EDP-R electric detonator
- Fuse #2:
- *MUV Series Mechanical Pull or
- *MVE-72 Electric Breakwire or
- *VP13 Seismic Controller.