Milkor 37/38mm and 40mm Stopper

The Milkor 37/38mm Less Lethal “Stopper” Single-shot was designed and distributed in 1981 by Milkor (Pty) Ltd as a less-lethal anti-riot weapon along with the Milkor 40mm Single shot Grenade Launcher which was designed as a reduced-cost grenade launcher for the SWAPOL Forces. In 2008, Milkor (Pty) Ltd released a new design designated the Milkor 37/38mm or 40mm Stopper Convertible, which is a single shot break-open weapon designed to utilize a variety of 37/38mm or 40mm Less Lethal rounds. As with the original Milkor MGL, the Stopper was originally marketed for Milkor by Armscor (South Africa).

Milkor 37/38mm and 40mm Stopper
TypeGrenade launcher
Place of originSouth Africa
Service history
In service1981–present [1]
Used bySouth African Police Service
Production history
DesignerAndries Piek
Designed1981
ManufacturerMilkor (Pty) Ltd [2]
Four views of the 1981 37/38mm Milkor Stopper

Design

The Milkor Stopper is a riot gun used for riot control, designed to fire a 37/38mm or 40mm cartridge, which can be a 9mm Buckshot, Rubber ball buckshot, teargas canister, rubber shot cartridge or explosive. The weapon is simple to operate and all metal surfaces are treated with a coating for corrosion protection, plus long-life dry film lubrication. It fires one shot before reloading. It is a conventional single shot, break-open weapon (opening at the breech like an ordinary shotguns (not pump-action)) with a floating firing pin mechanism that ensures safety when accidentally dropped. As a security or assault weapon, it can be fired from the shoulder or like a pistol by hand. The components of the weapon are interchangeable (client dependent), providing a range of applications from Less Lethal 37/38mm to a 40mm Lethal weapon.

Variants

  • (1981) The Milkor 37/38mm Less Lethal “Stopper” Single-shot
  • (1981) The Milkor 40mm Single Shot Grenade Launcher
  • (2008) The 37/38mm or 40mm Stopper Convertible

See also

Reference list

  1. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-02-19. Retrieved 2013-09-16.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. http://www.worldsecurity-index.com/details.php?id=5040


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