…today we have a chance to take a look at one of the Soviet experimental sniper rifles/DMRs chambered in the 6x49mm caliber. The rifle is called TKB-0145S (ТКБ-0145С)…
The 6x49mm was a high-pressure cartridge launching 6mm projectiles at a high muzzle velocity of 1,150 m/s which is about 3,770 fps… With such a high muzzle velocity, it was an extremely flat shooting cartridge. The bullet drop was minimal resulting in a long point blank range and the projectiles were also less affected by the wind…
As you can see in the images, TKB-0145S is not only a bullpup rifle but also has a possibility to fold in half resulting in a folded length of 32.8″ (834mm) at a barrel length of 28.3″ (720mm). The hinge point of the rifle is located in front of the rear sight base. There is a spring-loaded latch on the barrel which catches the lug located on the rear on the receiver thus retaining the rifle on its folded position. Folding of the rifle does not require removal of the scope and the magazine. This feature decreases the time required to prepare the rifle for firing.
The TKB-0145S rifle is gas operated with a rather interesting gas system. There is no gas port drilled into the barrel. The gasses are vented into the system after they have left the muzzle. This is somewhat similar to the Bang system in terms of the general principle. This design solution was used to eliminate any possible effects of the gas system onto the bullet’s flight…
https://www.thefirearmblog.com/blog/2018/07/09/soviet-experimental-6mm-sniper-rifle-tkb-0145s/
That is a truly wonky rifle. I am curious what the intended practical use of having it fold on top of being a bullpup was, it wasn’t short enough to conceal, and without folding it seems suitable for mechanized use.
The gas system seems kind of overkill for something that would be in a kind of designated rifle role.
The cartridge sort of makes sense as trying to replace the antiquated rimmed 54r round, but only if you managed to convince the Soviets to also replace the PKM, which seems far fetched.
Overall seems too innovative for its own good.
In the article they mentioned it was meant to be able to be used by para troopers and fit in armored vehicles. Along with plans of replacing their MGs to match the new ammo.
I don’t have a solid date on this but it seems the English language sources suggest shortly before the collapse of the USSR and then it wasn’t looked at again.
The cartridge reminds me of the new 6.8x51 or .277 Fury in concept.
I completely understand that both folding and bullpupping are meant for airborne/mechanized, it just seems like one or the other is sufficient. Putting both into one gun seems overkill.
The cartridge does seem mechanically better than 54r, and in that sweet spot size that modern rounds seem to trend towards. I was speaking more logistically that it’s an uphill fight to adopt it for just a DMR. The other new rounds usually get (or try to get) adopted for multiple guns.
There’s a “You see Ivan” meme in here somewhere but it’s beyond me at the moment.
Great post!
In Soviet Russia gun shoots you
Amazing engineering! That muzzle velocity is crazy! It’s literally a war crime to use but Russia wouldn’t care. Real winter soldier stuff
Wait what’s the war crime? High velocity?
Nah for some reason I was thinking this was 50cal. Only 7.62.