SVT-40
The SVT-40 (Samozaryadnaya Vintovka Tokareva, obr. 1940 goda, or "Tokarev self-loading rifle, model of 1940") is a gas-operated, semi-automatic battle rifle chambered in 7.62×54mmR, designed by Soviet engineer Fedor Tokarev as an improvement over the earlier SVT-38 to provide infantry with rapid fire capability beyond the bolt-action Mosin-Nagant.[1][2][3] Adopted by the Red Army in April 1940 following trials during the Winter War against Finland, the SVT-40 featured a short-stroke gas piston system with a tilting bolt, a detachable 10-round box magazine, and a wooden stock without a pistol grip, weighing approximately 3.85 kg (8.5 lb) unloaded and measuring 1,226 mm (48.3 in) in overall length with a 625 mm (24.6 in) barrel.[1][2][3] Its design included a muzzle brake—initially with six baffles, later simplified to two—to reduce recoil, achieving a muzzle velocity of about 840 m/s (2,756 ft/s) and an effective range of 500 meters, with a cyclic rate of 25 rounds per minute in semi-automatic fire.[1][2][3] Production ramped up across Soviet factories like Tula, Izhevsk, and Podolsk, reaching approximately 1.5 million units by 1945, though wartime disruptions from the 1941 German invasion limited output and shifted priority to simpler Mosin-Nagants.[1][2][3] In combat during World War II, it was primarily issued to non-commissioned officers, marksmen, and elite units like Soviet marines, proving effective in trained hands for its firepower but suffering reliability issues in harsh conditions due to its complexity and sensitivity to dirt, leading to its partial replacement by 1943.[1][2][3] Variants included the select-fire AVT-40 (introduced in 1942 but largely abandoned for fragility under automatic fire) and a short-barreled SKT-40 carbine, while captured examples influenced Axis designs and saw use by Finnish and German forces.[1][2][3] Post-war, surplus SVT-40s were exported to allies like China and North Korea, with limited civilian imports to the West in the 1950s and 1990s, though its legacy endures as a precursor to modern assault rifles through its gas system innovations.[1][2]Design and Features
Specifications
The SVT-40 is a gas-operated, semi-automatic rifle chambered in 7.62×54mmR caliber, with a muzzle velocity of 830 m/s, featuring an integral muzzle brake to mitigate recoil (initially with six baffles, later simplified to two).[1] Its effective range is approximately 500 meters.[1]| Specification | Value |
|---|---|
| Overall length | 1,226 mm (48.3 in)[4] |
| Barrel length | 625 mm (24.6 in)[4] |
| Weight (unloaded) | 3.85 kg (8.5 lb)[4] |
| Magazine capacity | 10-round detachable box magazine[4] |
| Rate of fire | Semi-automatic; practical rate of 25 rounds per minute[1] |