FAB-250 vs Mk 82
| Introduced by the Soviet Union in 1946, the FAB-250 is a 250-kilogram general-purpose aerial bomb, distinguished by its thick-walled steel casing designed to produce fragmentation upon detonation. | |
| Origin | π·πΊ Russia |
| Category | Unguided Bomb |
| Type | General Purpose Air-dropped Bomb |
| Manufacturer | Russian State Industry |
| Service year | 1962 |
| Number produced | -- units |
| Estimated unit price | NA |
| The Mk 82 is a US-developed, 500-lb general-purpose bomb introduced in 1954, primarily used for conventional bombing, and identifiable by its streamlined shape. | |
| Origin | πΊπΈ United States |
| Category | Unguided Bomb |
| Type | General-purpose bomb |
| Manufacturer | -- |
| Service year | 1954 |
| Number produced | -- units |
| Estimated unit price | NA |
| Weight | 250 kg β |
| Warhead | 99.0 kg β |
| Length | 1.20 m β |
| Diameter | 285 mm β |
| Guidance | Unguided |
| Warhead type | High-explosive |
| Weight | 230 kg β |
| Warhead | 87.0 kg β |
| Length | 2.21 m β |
| Diameter | 273 mm β |
| Guidance | Unguided |
| Warhead type | Thermobaric |
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