Why Russia Is So Excited About Its 'Plastic' Bullets

July 18, 2020 Topic: Security Blog Brand: The Reboot Tags: RussiaRussian Armed ForcesAmmunitionNATOInnovation

Why Russia Is So Excited About Its 'Plastic' Bullets

While the use of plastic driving bands may be old hat to NATO militaries, it’s easy to see why the Russian military is getting excited over them.

 

Here's What You Need To Remember: Russian ammunition has traditionally used copper-lead bands. Pribor’s announcement cites the same benefits of plastic driving bands that the United States already got when they switched over: increased barrel life and better barrel performance during rapid fire.

Recently Russian concern SPA Pribor announced it had developed plastic based ammunition for light artillery. While this may appear to be impressive and innovative at first, the trick is in the wording. Only a small portion of the ammunition is plastic.

 

The majority of Pribor’s new 30mm ammunition is still made of metal. The case is still fully metal, unlike some polymer cased ammunition. Pribor refers to the plastic part as the “plastic master device.” A more accurate translation of this would be a driving band.

Driving bands are generally used on bullets larger than 12.7mm (.50 caliber) to engage the rifling and “drive” the spin of the bullet. Most ammunition still uses driving bands made of softer metals like copper or lead. But the new Russian ammunition has a plastic driving band.

Is this new? Hardly.

The United States moved to plastic driving bands in the 1970s following the adoption of the massive GAU-8 cannon on the A-10 tankbuster plane. The gun’s rate of fire was so high that traditional driving bands would have caused the gun to undergo unacceptably rapid barrel wear. As a result, the 30x173mm projectile used in the gun was adapted to use plastic driving bands.

A lot of other NATO designs would move to plastic driving bands. Fabrique Nationale’s failed 15mm heavy machine gun used plastic driving bands on its bullets.

So why is Russia making a big deal of these new driving bands?

Russian ammunition has traditionally used copper-lead bands. Pribor’s announcement cites the same benefits of plastic driving bands that the United States already got when they switched over: increased barrel life and better barrel performance during rapid fire.

However, unlike American guns, Russian cannons are notorious for low barrel life. Russian websites cite the barrel life of the ubiquitous GSh-30-1 cannon at 2,000 rounds. Comparatively, the similar 20mm M39 aircraft cannon had a barrel life of 10,000 rounds in testing. If the use of plastic driving bands really doubles the barrel life, it would significantly improve maintenance scheduling on their aircraft cannons.

Russian vehicle autocannons can also reach far higher rates of fire than their NATO counterparts. Most modern NATO combat vehicles use some variant on the Bushmaster autocannon, which has a rate of fire that is generally less than 300 rounds per minute.

 

Comparatively, most Russian vehicles utilize the 2A42 autocannon can reach up to 800 rounds per minute in the anti-aircraft mode, resulting in very high barrel wear. The addition of plastic driving bands would allow these vehicles to use the “high” rate of fire setting without worrying as much about burning the barrel out.

The same round is used in the Tunguska and Pantsirs’ 2A38 autocannon, which also features a very high rate of fire. The barrel life of the 2A38 with standard ammunition is only 8000 rounds, the equivalent of four standard ammunition loads. Doubling the barrel life here would also be a big deal when it comes to logistics.

While the use of plastic driving bands may be old hat to NATO militaries, it’s easy to see why the Russian military is getting excited over them.

Charlie Gao studied political and computer science at Grinnell College and is a frequent commentator on defense and national-security issues. (This first appeared last year.)

Image: Reuters.