Denel NTW-20 | |
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Type | Anti-materiel rifle |
Place of origin | South Africa |
Service history | |
In service | 1998-present |
Production history | |
Designer | Tony Neophytou |
Designed | 1995 |
Manufacturer | Denel Land Systems |
Variants | NTW 20, NTW 14.5, NTW 20×110mm |
Specifications | |
Weight | 31 kg (NTW 20), 34 kg (NTW 14.5) |
Length | 1,795 mm (NTW 20), 2,015 mm (NTW 14.5) |
Barrel length | 1,000 mm (NTW 20), 1,220 mm (NTW 14.5) |
Crew | Two; rifle breaks down into two parts for transport and fits into two backpacks weighing 15kg each, one containing the weapon receiver section, while the other contains the barrel and ammunition |
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Cartridge |
20×82mm (NTW 20) 20×110mm Hispano (NTW 20×110mm) 14.5×114mm (NTW 14.5) |
Action | Bolt action, recoiling barrel |
Muzzle velocity | 720 m/s (20×82mm) 820 m/s (20×110mm) 1,000 m/s (14.5×114mm) |
Effective firing range | 1,500m (20×82mm) 1,800m (20×110mm) 2,300m (14.5×114mm) |
Feed system | 3-round detachable box magazine (20×82mm and 14.5×114mm) Single shot (20×110mm) |
Sights | 8 × 56 Lynx Telescopic sight |
The NTW-20 is a South African anti-materiel rifle or large-calibre sniper rifle, developed by Denel Mechem in the 1990s. It is intended for deployment against targets including parked aircraft, telecommunication masts, power lines, missile sites, radar installations, refineries, satellite dishes, gun emplacements, bunkers and personnel, using a range of specialized projectiles. As with other weapons of this type, it can also be used for counter sniping and ordnance disposal (shooting explosive ordnance from a safe distance).
The weapon was designed by Tony Neophytou (co-designer of the Neostead combat shotgun). Development of the system began in August 1995 under the "Aerotek" name and a working prototype was ready for testing four and a half months later. This rapid progress was made possible by Neophytou's expertise in the field of recoil reduction systems, having worked on helicopter turrets in the past. In order to further reduce the amount of research and development, the project recycled the barrel, bolt and barrel extension of the existing Vektor GA1 automatic cannon. It was put into production by Denel Land Systems in two versions; 20 x 110 and 20 x 82. The latter model is also available in 14.5 x 114 and conversion between the calibres can be done in the field by swapping the barrel and bolt assembly. The significantly larger 20 x 110 model cannot be converted to another calibre. The rifle was accepted into service with the South African National Defence Force in 1998.
The NTW 20/14.5 is one of the few firearms in existence that allow the changing of the caliber without completely disassembling and reworking the weapon. Switching between the two calibers of the NTW (20×82mm and 14.5×114mm) requires changing the bolt, barrel, sighting gear and magazine. (A third variant, the NTW 20×110mm has been developed, but is not designed for barrel caliber switching.) Caliber switching the NTW 20/14.5 can be accomplished in the field without specialized tools. The magazine protrudes from the left side of the receiver. The NTW can be disassembled and packed into two backpacks for carriage. A muzzle brake is fitted on the end of the barrel which absorbs an estimated 50%-60% of recoil. This is further supplemented by a buffered slide in the receiver.