T-34 variants

Main article: T-34
T-34 variants

T-34 family portrait, 1941
(BT-8, A-20, T-34 Models 1940 and 1941)
Type Medium tank
Place of origin Soviet Union
Service history
In service 1940– 1970s (USSR)
Production history
Produced 1940–1956 (USSR)
Number built about 84,070

The T-34 medium tank is one of the most-produced and longest-lived tanks of all time.

Identification of T-34 variants can be complicated. Turret castings, superficial details, and equipment differed between factories; new features were added in the middle of production runs, or retrofitted to older tanks; damaged tanks were rebuilt, sometimes with the addition of newer-model equipment and even new turrets.[1] Some tanks had appliqué armor made of scrap steel of varying thickness welded onto the hull and turret; these tanks are called s ekranami ("with screens"), although this was never an official designation for any T-34 variant.

T-34 model 1941 s ekranami, manufactured at STZ, with appliqué armour welded to the hull.

Model naming

Since the break-up of the Soviet Union, newly declassified sources have demonstrated that all T-34s with the original turret and F-34 gun (conventionally known as Models 1941 and 1942) were officially called "Model 1941", and hexagonal-turret T-34 (Model 1943) was officially called "Model 1942".

German intelligence in World War II referred to the two main production models as T-34/76 and T-34/85, with minor models receiving letter designations such as T-34/76A—this nomenclature has been widely used in the west, especially in popular literature.

Since at least the 1980s, many academic sources (notably AFV expert Steven Zaloga) have used Soviet-style nomenclature: T-34 and T-34-85, with minor models distinguished by year: T-34 Model 1940. (This page has adopted that convention.)

Because many different factories manufactured T-34s, with components built by subcontractors, the listing below merely gives a broad overview and does not capture every possible variant. Also, not every factory implemented all model changes at the same time. For example, factory No. 112 continued building narrow-turret 76 mm armed models long after all other plants had switched to hexagonal-turreted tanks.

List of models and variants

The original T-34 Model 1940 can be recognized by the low-slung barrel of the L-11 gun, below a bulge in the mantlet housing its recoil mechanism. This particular vehicle is a pre-production A-34 prototype, recognizable by the small driver's hatch and single-piece front hull.

Soviet Union

Tanks

The model 1942 had an all-new hexagonal turret with bulbous trunnion housing.
A commander's cupola was added during the model 1942 production run to improve all-round vision. This variant was known as T-34 Model 1943.
T-34-85 with D5T gun, manufactured at Factory 112.
The T-34-85 had a larger three-man turret, with a long 85 mm gun.

Tank destroyers

Self-propelled howitzers

Support vehicles

SPK-5 crane tank in Batey ha-Osef Museum, Tel Aviv, Israel, 2005

Bulgaria

Fixed fortifications

Cuba

Self-propelled howitzers

T-34-85CZ.

Czechoslovakia

Tanks

Support vehicles

Egypt

Ex-Egyptian T-100 tank destroyer next to an Ex-Egyptian Soviet-made IS-3 heavy tank in Yad la-Shiryon Museum, Israel, 2005

Tank destroyers

Self-propelled howitzers

Hungary

Firefighting vehicles

Nazi Germany

FlakPanzer T-34(r)

Self-propelled anti-aircraft guns

People's Republic of China

Type 58

Tanks

Self-propelled anti-aircraft guns

Poland

Tanks

T-34-85M2.

Support vehicles

WPT-34

Syria

Tanks

Self-propelled howitzers

Ex-Syrian T-34/122 SPH in Batey ha-Osef Museum, Tel Aviv, Israel, 2005

Former Yugoslavia

Tanks

Yugoslav Teski Tank Vozilo A on display at the military museum in the Kalemegdan fortress in Belgrade

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to T-34.

Notes

  1. Zaloga, Steven J. and James Grandsen. T-34 In Action. Carrollton, Texas: Squadron/Signal Publications, 1983. ISBN 0-89747-112-1
  2. "The Russian Battlefield"
  3. Don Busack Consulting. "T-34/122 (Egyptian) Walk Around Page 1". Primeportal.net. Retrieved 2013-09-03.
  4. "Neue Seite 2". Lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de. Retrieved 2013-09-03.
  5. "Panzerkampfwagen T-34(r) Soviet T-34 in German Service".
  6. "NVA Armour"
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