There were several models of body armour in
the Red Army, called SN-38, SN-39, SN-40, SN-40A, and SN-42. The number denotes
the design year. All were combat tested, but only the SN-42 ("Stalynoi
Nagrudnik" is Russian for "steel bib") was put in production.
(The native Cyrillic abbreviation for the vest was СН, the Cyrillic letters Es
and En.)
It consisted of two pressed steel plates
that protected the front torso and groin. The plates were 2 mm (.08") and
weighed 3.5 kg (7.7 lbs). This armour was supplied to SHISBr (assault
engineers) and Tankodesantniki (infantry that rode on tanks) of some tank
brigades.
Real combat experience showed that the
MP-40 9 mm bullet failed to penetrate at around 100-125 m (100-130 yards). It
was very useful in dense, intense urban battles (Stalingrad) where the Germans
used the MP-40 predominantly, but, because of its weight, was not practical for
soldiers charging across an open field.
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