M75 hand grenade
M-75 anti-personnel hand grenade | |
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The picture shows both the grenade and its plastic transportation can. | |
Type | Hand grenade |
Place of origin | Yugoslavia |
Production history | |
Variants | M93 (Macedonia) |
Specifications | |
Filling | Plastic explosive |
The M75 grenade (English: Kashikara, Serbian Latin: Kašikara, Serbian Cyrillic: Кашикара) is a Yugoslav infantry-used hand grenade.[1] It is efficient in trenches, forests, bunkers etc. Its construction allows it to be detonated in snow, mud and water. The M75 grenade consists of a body, an explosive charge and a fuse. The body is made of the core, and a wrapper made out of plastic. The core is full of 3,000 steel balls. Their diameter is 2.5–3 mm. The effective killing radius of the grenade is 12–18 m, and the effective casualty radius is 30–54 m. The explosive charge is 36–38 grams of plastic explosive. The delay element, named "Bušon" in Serbian, has a delay time of 3 to 4.4 seconds. Its name comes from the Turkish word for a spoon, "Kašika". In American English, the lever of the grenade is colloquially known as the "Spoon". The M-75 hand grenade was also produced in Macedonia, where it is designated M-93.
Leftover grenades of this type (and the M-93) from the Yugoslav Wars are frequently used in bomb attacks by organised criminals in Malmö, a town which has a large immigrant population from the former Yugoslavia.[2]
References
- ↑ http://republikasrpska.forumotion.net/forum-f13/topic-t35.htm
- ↑ "Malmö värst drabbat av sprängningar i hela Skandinavien". Sydsvenskan. 23 July 2015. Retrieved 24 July 2015.