Vidhwansak


Vidhwansak is an Indian multi-caliber anti-materiel rifle or large-caliber sniper rifle manufactured by Ordnance Factory Tiruchirappalli. It can be used in the anti-materiel role for destroying enemy bunkers, lightly armoured vehicles, radar systems, communication equipment, parked aircraft, fuel storage facilities, etc. It is also effective in long-range sniping, counter sniping, and ordnance disposal roles.

Development

The Ordnance Factory Tiruchirapalli in association with the Defence [Research and Development Organisation] developed an anti-materiel rifle Vidhwansak in November 2005. It is almost an exact copy of the Denel NTW-20 rifle. After all-terrain and all-weather trials, the user trials began in March 2006. Production began in February 2007.
After trials, the Border Security Force ordered 100 Vidhwansaks for use in the border areas. These were supplied by October 2008. The rifle has also been offered to the Indian Army and the National Security Guards. However, the Indian Army chose not to bring the Vidhwansak into use as it did not meet the weight requirements.
It is being sold at the cost of Rs 10 lakh as compared to the Denel NTW-20 AMR, which costs Rs 23 lakhs as of 2011. Due to indigenisation of this weapon, foreign exchange worth over 90 million USD would be saved.

Features

Vidhwansak is a manually operated, rotating bolt-action rifle. The barrel along with the receiver recoil inside the chassis frame against a damping system. The rifle is fed from a detachable box magazine that is inserted from the left side. The rifle can be quickly disassembled and can be carried in two man-portable packs, each weighing about. A muzzle brake is fitted on the end of the barrel which absorbs an estimated 50–60% of recoil. This is further supplemented by a buffered slide in the receiver.
The Vidhwansak is equipped with an 8× magnification, long-eye-relief telescopic sight with parallax adjustment. A 12× ballistic scope can also be attached.
The rifle has an effective range of , while shots can be achieved even up to. The rifle is magazine fed and reloaded through manual bolt action.

Variants

The Vidhwansak can be easily converted between the three calibers: 12.7 mm, 14.5 mm, and 20 mm, this is done by replacing the barrel, bolt, and magazine, which takes about one minute in the field, without the need for any specialized tools.

Specifications

The following are current specifications of the Vidhwansak AMR:

Users