So that explanation contradicts @Fluke McHappenstance 's that its the shaped charge.
Even your explanation doesn’t seem to line up. The munition for an RPG-7 used against a vehicle (not troops) is usually a PG-7.
Drone operators usually don’t have the long stick portion out the back using to mount it in an RPG-7, so its just the shaped charge, and the rocket propellant . The propellant exhaust comes out those 4 small V shaped fin outlets. Your explanation is suggesting that, on impact, the shaped charge also ignites the (at that point) unused propellant, and that the aerodynamically unstable propellant portion of the munition flies backward in a perfectly straight line level to the ground exhausting thrusting gas out of 4 V nozzles without affecting its flight path?
I’ll be the first one that says he’s not an expert, but that seems suspect.
So that explanation contradicts @Fluke McHappenstance 's that its the shaped charge.
Even your explanation doesn’t seem to line up. The munition for an RPG-7 used against a vehicle (not troops) is usually a PG-7.
Drone operators usually don’t have the long stick portion out the back using to mount it in an RPG-7, so its just the shaped charge, and the rocket propellant . The propellant exhaust comes out those 4 small V shaped fin outlets. Your explanation is suggesting that, on impact, the shaped charge also ignites the (at that point) unused propellant, and that the aerodynamically unstable propellant portion of the munition flies backward in a perfectly straight line level to the ground exhausting thrusting gas out of 4 V nozzles without affecting its flight path?
I’ll be the first one that says he’s not an expert, but that seems suspect.