I'm not able to answer that. It seems to be a training device just for loading and firing, not for hitting, as the rocket motor is missing.An this is why I wondered if this is worth the effort.
The tubular part of the blue plasticmoulding, which appears to be an inert 1-piece moulding, is where the rocket-motor-tube normally is situated with the exhaust nozzles canted slightly out-and backwards. This appears as a ring, just below the head, on the tubular plastic moulding. The propellant around the tail-boom section burns instantly, shooting out the rocket with its warhead, the rocket motor ignites only after a safe distance from the launcher, so as not to burn the shooter with its hot exhaust gases and flame. In the above picture, the blue rocketmotor section appears to be inert and the whole blue plastic section reusable.What is missing? To me it looks like any other PG variant with a life rocket engine.
That's just my interpretation of the foto. I have never seen a thing like that and I don't think that they will sell a lots of those items. But, "financial" overkill you find everywhere in the world. When you see the prices that are paid for extremely simple items, just because they are for military use, you will be flabbergasted. But that's the way things are.Ah, now I know what you mean - the image is too crappy to see all details. So the will just replace the expelling charges and the whole device will fall down a few meters in front of the launcher then. Thank you for this thought!
Means no target practice use and just a "getting used to the firing operation".
Would that here not be a training overkill for such very basic mililtaries like Pakistan? (and I do not remember anything similar from more sophisticated militaries)
I knew such similar systems for Russian/Soviet MANPADS where such systems make sense actually.