RGD-5

RGD-5
RGD-5 hand grenade with UZRGM fuze fitted
TypeHand grenade
Place of originSoviet Union
Service history
In service1954–present
WarsVietnam War
Six-Day War
The Troubles
Yom Kippur War
Soviet–Afghan War
Iran–Iraq War
Invasion of Kuwait
Gulf War
First Chechen War
Kosovo War
Second Chechen War
Iraq War
Russo-Georgian War
First Libyan Civil War
Syrian Civil War
Russo-Ukrainian War
Specifications
Mass310 g (11 oz)
Length114 mm (4.5 in)
Diameter58 mm (2.3 in)

Effective firing range15–20 m (49–66 ft)
Maximum firing range30 m (98 ft)
FillingTrinitrotoluene
Filling weight110 g (3.9 oz)
Detonation
mechanism
3.2 to 4.2 seconds. pyrotechnic delay fuse
Blast yield~350 fragments

The RGD-5 (Ruchnaya Granata Distantsionnaya, English "Hand Grenade Remote") is a post–World War II Soviet anti-personnel fragmentation grenade, designed in the early 1950s. The RGD-5 was accepted into service with the Soviet Army in 1954. It was widely exported, and is still in service with many armies in the Middle East and the former Soviet bloc.