20 mm caliber
The 20 mm caliber is a common firearm bore diameter, typically used to distinguish smaller-caliber weapons, commonly called "guns", from larger-caliber "cannons" (e.g. machine gun vs. autocannon). All 20 mm cartridges have an outside projectile (bullet) diameter and barrel bore diameter of 0.787 inches (20.0 mm). These projectiles are typically 75 to 127 mm (3–5 in) long, cartridge cases are typically 75 to 152 mm (3–6 in) long, and most are shells, with an explosive payload and detonating fuze.
Weapons using this caliber range from anti-materiel rifles and anti-tank rifles to aircraft autocannons and anti-aircraft guns.
Usage
    
Twenty-millimeter-caliber weapons are generally not used to target individual soldiers, but against targets such as vehicles, buildings, or aircraft.
Types of ammunition
    
- High explosive (HE)
- High explosive incendiary (HEI)
- Armour-piercing (AP)
- Semi-armor-piercing high explosive incendiary (SAPHEI)
- Armor-piercing discarding sabot (APDS)
- High-explosive fragmentary tracer (HEF-t)
- Penetrator with enhanced lateral effect (PELE)
- Target practice - inert projectile (i.e., PGU-27A/B).[1] Used for training. (TP)
- Target practice tracer - inert projectile with tracer material in base for visual trajectory tracking (i.e., PGU-30A/B). (TP-T)
20 mm weapons
    
Each weapon is listed with its cartridge type appended.
Current weapons
    
| Weapon | Country of origin | Cartridge | Notes | 
|---|---|---|---|
| Neopup PAW-20 |  South Africa | 20×42mm | |
| Denel NTW-20 |  South Africa | 20×82 mm Mauser | |
| Denel Vektor GA-1 |  South Africa | ||
| Vidhwansak |  India | ||
| Anzio 20 mm rifle |  United States | 20×102 mm | |
| M61 Vulcan |  United States | ||
| M197 electric cannon |  United States | ||
| M39 cannon |  United States | ||
| GIAT M621 |  France | ||
| ZVI PL-20 Plamen |  Czech Republic | ||
| Metallic RT-20 |  Croatia | 20×110 mm Hispano | |
| Yugoimport-SDPR M71/08 |  Serbia | Single barrel development of Zastava M55 | |
| Oerlikon KAA/KAB |  Switzerland | 20×128 mm | Formerly known as Oerlikon 204GK/5TG | 
| Meroka CIWS |  Spain | ||
| Oerlikon KAD |  Switzerland | 20×139 mm | Formerly known as Hispano-Suiza HS.820 | 
| GIAT M693/20 mm modèle F2 |  France | ||
| Rheinmetall Rh 202 |  Germany | ||
| Denel Land Systems GI-2 |  South Africa | 
Historical weapons
    
Cartridge type indicates the diameter of projectile and the length of the cartridge that holds it; for example 20×102 mm is a 20 mm projectile in a 102 mm long case. Only rarely do two designers use the same case length, so this designation is usually definitive. Some cartridge types have additional letters or information about them listed.
See also
    
    
References
    
- PGU-27A/B TP/ PGU-28A/B SAPHEI / PGU-30A/B TP-T
- Williams, Anthony G (January 4, 2021). "Ammunition Data Tables - 20 mm Calibre Cartridges". Military Guns & Ammunition. Solo Publications. Archived from the original on March 30, 2022. Retrieved April 17, 2022.
External links
    
- FAS: 20 mm Cannon Ammunition
- ATK produced 20, 25 & 30 mm caliber ammunition
- Rapid Fire: 20 mm Cartridge Data Table
- Rapid Fire: 20 mm Antitank Rifle Cartridges image
- Rapid Fire: 20 mm Autocannon Cartridges WWII image 1
- Rapid Fire: 20 mm Autocannon Cartridges WWII image 2
- Rapid Fire: 20 mm Autocannon Cartridges Post-WWII image

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