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Russia’s 6.02×41mm: The Armor-Piercing AK Round

Russia just threw down the gauntlet. Their new 6.02×41mm prototype isn’t just another intermediate cartridge; it’s Moscow’s not-so-subtle way of telling NATO, “Your body armor won’t save you.”

From the “Poison Bullet” to Today

In the 1980s, the Soviet Union adopted the 5.45×39mm round for its AK-74 rifles. It earned the infamous nickname “poison bullet” thanks to its tumbling projectile that carved out horrific wound channels. Mujahideen fighters hit by the round often had to endure days without treatment, leading to infection, gangrene, and a reputation for grotesque battlefield injuries.

Soldier of Fortune’s own Galen Geer even smuggled 5.45 ammo out of Afghanistan to show the world what the Soviets were using. At 2,950 fps with a 52-grain bullet, the 5.45×39 gave Soviet troops a lighter, flatter-shooting round than 7.62×39, allowing them to carry more ammo and hit effectively out to 500 meters.

Body Armor Changed the Game

Fast-forward to 2023, and NATO’s improved body armor has made older intermediate calibers far less effective. That’s where the 6.02×41mm comes in. Filed under Russian patent RU 2809501 C1 by Tula Cartridge Works with input from Kalashnikov Concern, this new round is designed with one goal: defeat Level IV body armor.

Specs That Mean Business

  • Projectile: 7.5-gram (≈116-grain) tungsten-carbide core
  • Muzzle Velocity: 800 m/s (≈2,625 fps)
  • Muzzle Energy: ≈2,000 joules (≈1,475 ft-lbs)
  • Effective Range: 800 meters against armored targets

For comparison, that’s significantly more energy than 5.45×39 (≈1,300 J) and even more than 5.56 NATO (≈1,700 J). The 6.02 is designed to remain supersonic and hard-hitting well beyond 500 meters, effectively doubling the range of legacy 5.45 rounds.

Unlike the tumbling 5.45 or the velocity-dependent fragmentation of 5.56, this cartridge is all about deep, straight-line penetration and hydrostatic shock, making it a nightmare for surgeons and anyone hiding behind armor.

The East–West Arms Race Heats Up

The U.S. military’s Next Generation Squad Weapon (NGSW) program is taking a similar approach with the 6.8×51mm SIG Fury, now chambered in the XM5 rifle and XM250 LMG. That round pushes 135- to 140-grain bullets at nearly 3,000 fps, delivering 2,700 ft-lbs of energy, but at the cost of heavier ammo and more recoil.

The Russian 6.02×41mm, by contrast, strikes a middle ground: it’s lighter, easier to control in full-auto, and keeps AK-platform rifles relevant on a modern battlefield where plates are the norm.

Why It Matters

Whether or not the 6.02×41 ever goes into mass production, its very existence signals where the global small-arms race is headed: more energy, more penetration, and a focus on defeating armor at distance.

The days of 5.45 and 5.56 ruling the battlefield uncontested are numbered. The future of infantry combat may very well be chambered in 6mm.

Our Take

If you’re looking for proof that the near-peer fight is driving small arms development, this is it. Russia is clearly acknowledging that NATO’s proliferation of Level IV plates and hard armor inserts has fundamentally changed the game.

The 6.02×41mm isn’t just about better terminal ballistics; it’s about regaining overmatch. This round enables Russian infantry to engage targets at ranges of 700–800 meters and still penetrate the armor most Western soldiers wear. That has major implications for U.S. and allied troops if a future conflict breaks out in Europe or Asia.

In many ways, this mirrors America’s move to the 6.8×51mm SIG Fury under NGSW. Both sides are seeking a solution to the same problem: how to keep the rifleman relevant in an era where body armor can withstand 5.56 or 5.45mm rounds at a distance.

The message here is clear: the next big war won’t be fought with legacy 5.56 rifles. It’s going to be fought with hotter, harder-hitting cartridges, and the side that fields them first, at scale, will have a serious advantage.

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