The grenade replaced the RG-14/30, which was a World War I vintage design with an improved arming system. The RGD-33 is composed of four separate pieces: a cylindrical head containing of TNT filling, a fragmentation sleeve that was only used when thrown under the protection of a trench or cover, the throwing handle which contains the igniter, and the fuse. The grenade was distributed to troops in both assembled and disassambled (head separated from the handle) forms; riflemen carried the assembled grenades and fuses separately in a grenade pouch. Each fuse was wrapped separately in paper or cloth and stored in special pockets of the pouch. Before use the fuse is inserted into the grenade head. Described by Rottman as "the most complex grenade to operate," the RGD-33 was too complicated to handle, specially in the hands of poorly educated peasant conscripts under the stress of combat situations. Before arming, a safety switch on the outer handle must be released by flipping it to the left unlocking the inner and outer handles; the inner handle remains fixed and the outer handle rotates. The operator then grasps the warhead with their offhand and grips the handle with their throwing hand. The handle is then pulled back, rotated clockwise to the right and pushed in; a red dot will appear in the window to indicate it was now cocked. The safety is now moved to the right to cover the red dot in the cutout, making it safe. The cover on the top of the grenade head was opened, the fuse inserted and the cover closed; it is disarmed by pushing the catch open, causing the fuze to pop out and be retrieved. The operator arms the fuze by flipping the switch to the left, exposing the red dot. The operator then throws the grenade. The forward momentum activated the igniter mechanism in the handle, beginning the 3.2−3.8 seconds delay. According to
Soviet Army manuals, the RDG-33 had a throwing range of approximately . While such a complex procedure prevented enemy soldiers unfamiliar with the unusual arming mechanism from immediately making use of captured grenades, its complexity combined with the cost and production time resulted in the RDG-33 falling out of use in the early stages of the Great Patriotic War, though it remained in use with the Naval Infantry. The RGD-33 featured a separate metal fragmentation sleeve pre-notched in a diamond pattern, it was firmly held in place with a latch engaging the pin on the grenade body. Upon the grenade's detonation, the sleeve would spread fragments up to a radius of . Without the fragmentation sleeve, the grenade had an effective lethal radius of , making it suitable for offensive operations. When the sleeve was attached for defensive operations, the grenade had an effective lethal radius of .
Vietnamese copies During the
First Indochina War, the
North Vietnamese used crude copies of the RGD-33; these copies had a metal safety cap on the bottom of the handle. Before use, the cap was unscrewed revealing a ceramic bead tied to a pull cord. Once it was pulled, the cord activated a friction time fuse. These grenades produced little fragmentation upon detonation, making them well suited for close-up assaults. == History ==