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Breda Mod.35
TypeOffensive type grenade
Place of originItaly
Service history
In service1935–1945
Used byRoyal Italian Army
Production history
ManufacturerBreda Meccanica Bresciana
VariantsBreda Mod. 40
Specifications
Mass200 g (7.1 oz)
Height96 mm (3.8 in)
Diameter58 mm (2.3 in)

FillingTNT or dinitronaphthalene
Filling weight63 g (2.2 oz)
Detonation
mechanism
Percussion on impact

The Breda Mod. 35 is a hand grenade issued to the Royal Italian Army during World War II.

Description

Entered into service in 1935, the Breda Mod. 35, together with the SRCM Mod. 35 and the OTO Mod. 35 represented the new generation of hand grenades with which the Royal Italian Army faced the Second World War. It is an offensive type hand grenade, made up of an aluminium cylindrical body with the two trunk-conical shaped ends of, painted red and loaded with 63 g (2.2 oz) of TNT-dinitronaphthalene that at the time of the explosion projects splinters in a radius of 10 m (33 ft). The device consists of the charge carrier, the detonator, the capsule and the needle carrier. It has two safeties, an ordinary one consisting of a rubber flap attached to a plate with two branches, and an automatic one consisting of headphones, cross bar and brass tape delay.

At the moment of use the ordinary security is flipped and the grenade thrown, the headset is reversed causing the disrolling of delay tape, finally dragging the crossbar to safety. At this time the bomb is ready to explode, as soon as the collision with the ground overcomes the resistance of the antagonist spring, it causes the advancement of the pin that strikes the capsule, triggering the explosion.

Versions

See also

Bibliography