AGS-17
The AGS-17 'Plamya' is a Soviet-designed automatic grenade launcher in service worldwide.
Description
The AGS-17 is a heavy infantry support weapon designed to operate from a tripod or mounted on an installation or vehicle. The AGS-17 fires 30 mm grenades in either direct or indirect fire to provide suppressive and lethal fire support against soft-skinned or fortified targets.The weapon uses a blowback mechanism to sustain operation. Rounds are fired through a removable rifled barrel.
The standard metal ammunition drum contains 29 linked rounds.
The tripod is equipped with fine levelling gear for indirect fire trajectories.
Development
Development of the AGS-17 started in the USSR in 1965 by the OKB-16 design bureau, under the leadership of Alexander F. Kornyakov.This lightweight weapon was to provide infantry with close to medium range fire support against enemy personnel and unarmored targets, like trucks, half-tracks, jeeps and sandbag-protected machine-gun nests. The first prototypes of the new weapon entered trials in 1969, with mass production commencing in 1971. The AGS-17 was widely operated and well-liked by Soviet troops in Afghanistan as a ground support weapon or as a vehicle weapon on improvised mounts installed on armoured personnel carriers and trucks.
A special airborne version of the AGS-17, the AG-17A, was developed for installation on helicopters, including the Mi-24 Hind in gun pods and the Mil Mi-8 on door mounts. This weapon had a thick aluminium jacket on the barrel and used a special mount and an electric remotely controlled trigger.
It is still in use with the Russian army as a direct fire support weapon for infantry troops; it is also installed in several vehicle mounts and turrets along with machine guns, guided rocket launchers and sighting equipment. It is being replaced by the AGS-30 launcher, which fires the same ammunition, but weighs only 16 kg unloaded on the tripod and has an upgraded blowback action.
Variants
- AG-17A - remotely controlled aircraft-mounted version with an electric trigger mechanism.
- AGS-17D - remotely controlled vehicle-mounted version with an electric trigger mechanism.
Ammunition
The Bulgarian weapons manufacturer Arcus produces AR-ROG hand grenades based on VOG-17 cartridges and , which is also a Soviet design of fuse. Similar improvised grenades are known as "khattabkas".
- VOG-17M
- IO-30
- IO-30TP
- VOG-30
- VOG-30D
- VUS-30
Users
Current
- : Imported
- : A modernized version, the AGL-30M, produced locally by Arsenal AD with documentation from DSO Metalhim.
- : Produced by Norinco based on captured examples from Mujahideen groups.
- : Used during Cenepa War 1995.
- : Produced under license.
- : Designated the M93.
- : Designated the M93 Produced under license.
- : Used by the Sudanese Armed Forces, some captured by the Sudan People's Liberation Movement-North
- : Made under license in Z125 Factory. Known under the Vietnamese industrial name of SPL-17.
Former
- : designated 30 KrKK AGS-17, replaced by the HK GMG in 2005.
- : Used in the 1990s, now replaced by the HK GMG.
- : Passed on to successor states.