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M26 grenade

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M26 grenade
M61, a variant of the M26 (manufactured in May 1969)
TypeHand grenade
Place of originUnited States
Service history
In service1950s–present
Used by
  • Chile
  • Brazil
  • United States
  • Israel
  • United Kingdom
  • Australia
  • Canada
  • Philippines
  • Portugal
  • South Africa
  • West Germany
WarsKorean War
Vietnam War
Six-Day War
Yom Kippur War
Falklands War
Syrian Civil War
Production history
Produced1950s–present
Specifications
Mass16 oz. [454 g][1][2]
Length99 mm[1] [3 7/8 inches]
Diameter57 mm[1] [2 1/4 inches]

FillingComposition B
Filling weight5.75 oz. [164 g][1]
Detonation
mechanism
M204-series Timed Friction Fuse [3]

The M26 is a fragmentation hand grenade developed by the United States military. It entered service in 1952 and was first used in combat during the Korean War, replacing the Mk 2 of World War II. The M26 series was the primary fragmentation grenade used by American forces in the Vietnam War. It was replaced by the M33 series grenade. Its distinct lemon shape led it to being nicknamed the "lemon grenade" (compare the Russian F1 and American Mk 2 "pineapple" grenades).

History

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Ethiopian Soldiers from the Kagnew Battalion, 7th Inf. Div., in Korea, 1953

The M26 series was created after World War II to meet criticisms of the Mk 2. Rather than relying on a cast body to produce fragments like the Mk 2 the M26 had a thin sheet-metal body and the fragments were instead created by a notched wire coiled up inside which produced smaller fragments but a greater number traveling at a higher velocity and distributed them more evenly than the Mk 2, giving it a larger effective casualty producing radius.[4] The fragments were also more consistently sized posing less of a risk of a stray fragment traveling further than intended and endangering the user.[4] Its Composition B filler was considered safer than the flaked or granular TNT filling used in the Mk 2. The M26 is lighter than the Mk 2 at 16 ounces to the Mk 2's 21 ounces It also benefited from the M204A1 fuse introduced late in Mk 2 production, which creates no noise, smoke, or sparks when ignited which could give away the user's position, unlike the earlier M5/M6/M10/M11 fuzes used on the Mk2 for the majority of World War II.[4]

Development of what would become the M26 began in January 1949.[5] After passing an expedited service test in February 1952 it replaced the Mk 2 as the US military's standard fragmentation hand grenade. The M26 first saw combat in the Korean War. Massive World War II production meant the Mk 2 remained as limited standard issue with the US Army and US Marines throughout the 1960s and the US Navy into the 1970s.[6] The M26 series was the primary fragmentation grenade used by American forces in the Vietnam War.

The M26 series (M26/M61) began to be replaced by the M33 series grenade (M33/M67) in 1969.[7]

The grenades were stored inside two-part cylindrical fiberboard shipping tubes (Container M289) and were packed 25 or 30 to a crate.

Variants

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Live Variants

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T38E1

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The T38E1 was the final experimental variant which was approved and redesignated as the M26.

M26

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The M26 was the original variant of the M26 series. Initially it used the M204A1 fuze originally introduced towards the end of Mk 2 production. Later M26 production used the updated M204A2 fuze.[4]

M26A1

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The M26A1 is an M26 that has the fragmentation coil redesigned to have a square rather than circular cross-section and has deeper serrations to aid in fragmentation. It also added a small tetryl booster charge on its fuze to completely detonate the explosive filler (displaced to 5.5 ounces (160 g) because of the added booster charge) and used the updated M204A2 fuze. It was adopted in American service in 1958.

M26A2

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The M26A2 is similar to the M26A1 but wider and shorter, without tetryl booster pellets, instead containing 6.3 ounces of Composition B filler (0.8 ounces more than the M26A1) and a larger  5⁄8-inch (16 mm) fuze well capable of accepting either the M215 delay fuze or the M217 impact fuze.[4][[6][8] The M215 delay fuze is functionally interchangeable with the M213 Fuze used on the M33 series grenades except with a curved safety lever like the M204A2 fuze rather than the angular lever of the M213.[6] The M217 impact fuze has the word "IMPACT" embossed on the safety lever.[1] Earlier models had a red-painted lever with the word "IMPACT" painted on with black paint.[7][3]

M56

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The M56 is the M26A2 with the M215 delay fuze with the addition of a safety clip.[8]

M57

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The M57 is the M26A2 with the M217 impact fuze with the addition of a safety clip.[6]

M61

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M61 showing the additional safety clip

The M61 is the M26A1 with the addition of a safety clip (informally referred to as a "jungle clip").[6] The safety clip is a bent spring steel wire which loops around the neck of the fuze body and passes over the safety lever holding it down.[6] This acts as a redundant safety preventing the grenade from detonating even if the safety pin were to be accidentally pulled such as if snagged on jungle vegetation. The user rotates the safety clip off the safety lever with the thumb of their non-throwing hand at the same time as they pull the pin with their index finger. Existing stocks of M26 and M26A1s were converted to M61s with the addition of the safety clip.[9]

M1A2 Grenade Projection Adapter

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The M26 series (with the exception of those with M217 impact fuzes) can be fired from any rifle with a NATO-standard 22mm muzzle by use of the M1A2 Grenade Projection Adapter which was originally developed for the Mk 2.[4]

Practice Variants

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T39

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The T39 was the experimental practice version redesignated as M30.[4]

M30

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The M30 is the practice version of the M26 grenade. It had a cast-iron body with a plastic base plug. It had a filler of 21 grains of black powder and used the M10A2/M10A3/M10A4 or M205A1/M205A2 series of fuzes. Its body is painted light blue with markings in white; earlier variants had a brown band across the middle.[4][8] The body was embossed with the symbols "RFX55" for its manufacturer Richmond Foundry and Manufacturing Company. When the grenade detonated, the overpressure made the plug pop out with a loud noise and released a plume of white smoke.[4] The body is reusable.[4] It was originally the basis for an experimental hand grenade that was never put into production.{{Citation needed}}

M50

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The M50 was a "live fire" conversion of the M30 Practice grenade for use on training ranges. It sealed the base plug, used the M204A1 fuze, and replaced the low-explosive black powder filler with high-explosive Composition B. It allowed the training of recruits with greater safety because it lacked the fragmentation coil of the M26 and had a smaller blast radius. This also used up obsolete ordnance by utilizing worn M30 bodies as its base.

M52

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The M52 is the practice version of the M2A2 with M217 impact fuze. It uses the M225 fuze.[10]

M62

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The M62 is the practice version of the M61, it is a M30 with the addition of a safety clip.[8] Later versions of the M62 had a larger  5⁄8-inch (16 mm) fuze well and used the M228 fuze.[9] Its body and lever are painted blue to identify it as a practice grenade.

M66

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The M66 is the practice version of the M57, it is a M52 with a safety clip.

L2 (United Kingdom)

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A British L2-A2 fragmentation grenade

The L2 series (with a green shell) is the British version of the M26; it has a 4.4 second fuze. The L2 was like the early M26 (except it used the L25 series fuze), the L2A1 was like the product-improved M26A1, and the L2A2 was a variant of the L2A1 with a redesigned fuze well for ease of mass production.[11]
The L3 series (with a light blue shell and a black powder filler) is the Practice grenade variant.[11][12]
The L4 series (with a dark blue shell, non-functional fuze, and no filler) is the inert Drill grenade variant.[11][12]

DM41 (West Germany)

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West German DM41 fragmentation grenade filled with Composition B. This example has been dissected to reveal the fragmentation sleeve and explosive charge

The DM41 or DM41A1 is a West German copy of the M26A1 hand grenade, manufactured by Diehl Defence of Nuremberg. Production ended around 1975 when the DM51 explosive fragmentation hand grenade was adopted by the Bundeswehr.[13]

Users

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  •  Australia: Australia adopted the M26, but it has been replaced by the F1 grenade.[14]
  •  Brazil: Used by the Brazilian Army.[12]
  •  Canada: Canada adopted the M61, but it has since been replaced by the C13 grenade, a Canadian-made version of the M67 grenade.[15]
  •  Colombia: Used by the Colombian Army. Produced by Military Industry of Colombia.[16]
  •  Germany: Used by the West German Bundeswehr until the DM51 grenade was adopted circa 1975.[13]
  •  Israel: The M26A2 was adopted in Israel as the M26, and is still in use in that country.[17] Its variant added an improved safety fuze in 2012, aimed to ensure the grenade will not explode if struck by an enemy bullet.[18]
  •  Japan: Used by the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force, ex-US Army stock.
  •  Nigeria: British L2 series supplied to Nigerian government forces during the Nigerian Civil War.[19]
  •  North Korea: Used by North Korean Special forces.[20]
  •  Philippines: Used by Armed Forces of the Philippines and Philippine National Police-Special Action Force
  •  Portugal: Portugal adopted the M26A1 and produced it under license as the M312.[21]
  •  Rwanda: South African M26 grenades supplied to the Rwandan government in October 1992.[22]
  •  South Africa: South Africa produced the M963, itself a variant of the Portuguese M312, under license.[23] Production would later comprise a copy of the standard M26 grenade designated as the M26 HE Hand Grenade, a blue training version with a reusable aluminium body designated as the M26 Practice Hand Grenade, and an inert training version designated as the M26 Drill Hand Grenade,[24] with these designs remaining in production[25] and in South African military and police service.[26][27]
  •  South Vietnam:[28] South Vietnam received the M26 grenade as US aid. Production and sales of the M26 continued to South Vietnam even after the US military adopted the M26A1 / M61 and M33 / M67.
  •  United Kingdom: The L2 series replaced the M36 Mills Bomb in British service. It was replaced by the L109A1 grenade during the 2000s.[29]
  •  United States: The M26 was introduced during the Korean War. It was limited standard issue at the beginning of the Vietnam War and was soon replaced by the M26A1 / M61 (1958), M26A2 / M57 (1960), and M33 / M67 (1968) as standard issue.

References

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  1. ^ a b c d LEXPEV. "M26, M26A1 & M61". Lexpev.nl. Retrieved 2014-05-03.
  2. ^ "Hand Grenades". Inetres.com. Retrieved 2014-05-03.
  3. ^ "Table 1: Authorized Hand Grenades". Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2013-03-19. Training Manual TM-9-1330-200-12 Grenades. Table 1: Authorized Hand Grenades3
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Technical Manual 9-1330-200 / Navy Ordnance Pamphlet 3833 Grenades, Hand and Rifle. Department of the Army, Department of the Navy. 24 June 1966.
  5. ^ Report of Project Nr. 2601 (Arctic), Grenade, Hand, Fragmentation, M26. Army Field Forces Artic Test Branch. 30 April 1954.
  6. ^ a b c d e US Army Technical Manual 9-1330-200 / US Navy Ordnance Pamphlet 3833 1st Revision Volume 1 / US Marine Corps Technical Manual 1330-15/1: Grenades, Hand and Rifle. Department of the Army, Department of the Navy. 17 September 1971.
  7. ^ Army Buildup Progress Report. Deputy Secretary of the General Staff (Coordination And Reports). 5 February 1969.
  8. ^ a b c d Field Manual 23-30 Grenades and Pyrotechnic Signals. Department of the Army. 16 December 1969.
  9. ^ a b Field Manual 23-30 Grenades and Pyrotechnic Signals. Department of the Army. 27 December 1988.
  10. ^ Horton, 2LT Gerald M. (February 1968). Service Test of Practice Hand Grenade, XM52 with Fuze, XM225 Final Report.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  11. ^ a b c Military Factory L2 Anti-Personnel Fragmentation Hand Grenade
  12. ^ a b c "M26". Archived from the original on 2015-11-17. Retrieved 2013-02-24.
  13. ^ a b "DM 41".
  14. ^ LEXPEV. "Australian grenades". Lexpev.nl. Retrieved 2014-05-03.
  15. ^ LEXPEV. "Canadian grenades". Lexpev.nl. Retrieved 2014-05-03.
  16. ^ "Granada IMC MG M26 HE – Indumil".
  17. ^ LEXPEV. "M-26". Lexpev.nl. Retrieved 2014-05-03.
  18. ^ http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/154626#.UaPin5zi6F1 Learning from Tragedy, IDF Develops Safer Hand Grenade (4/9/2012), Israel National News
  19. ^ Jowett, Philip (22 September 2016). Modern African Wars (5): The Nigerian-Biafran War 1967–70. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 9781472816092.
  20. ^ "북괴군 특작부대, 무장공비 사용화기, 장비".
  21. ^ LEXPEV. "Portuguese grenades". Lexpev.nl. Retrieved 2014-05-03.
  22. ^ Smyth, Frank (January 1994). "Arming Rwanda - The Arms Trade and Human Rights Abuses in the Rwandan War" (PDF). hrw.org. Human Rights Watch Arms Project. Retrieved 9 April 2022.
  23. ^ LEXPEV. "South African grenades". Lexpev.nl. Retrieved 2014-05-03.
  24. ^ A/3/O8/PL GREN Training with Grenades. SA Army Headquarters. February 1980.
  25. ^ Denel Land Systems. "Grenade Datasheets" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 September 2006. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  26. ^ "Fact File: M26 fragmentation hand grenade". DefenceWeb. Archived from the original on 4 May 2014. Retrieved 3 May 2014.
  27. ^ "SAP Special Task Force". www.sapstf.org.
  28. ^ McNab, Chris (2002). 20th Century Military Uniforms (2nd ed.). Kent: Grange Books. p. 308. ISBN 1-84013-476-3.
  29. ^ LEXPEV. "L2 serie". Lexpev.nl. Retrieved 2014-05-03.
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