Land Weapons

Medium Tank (1934)

Kirovskiy Zavod

T-28

T-28 (Maavoimat)
T-28B

The T-28 was the main medium tank serving in the Red Army during the 1930s and remained in production until shortly before the USSR's entry into World War II. Inspired by the British A6 and designed as a breakthrough tank, the T-28 was extremely well armed for its time thanks to a 76.2-mm KT-28 gun that was far more powerful than any other fitted on a medium tank in the 1930s. Armor protection was also a priority and to this end it featured a maximum of 80mm in its later variants. Like the T-35 heavy tank which it strongly resembled, the T-28 was a multi-turreted design, which aside from the main gun also had two movable machine guns. This required two extra crewmen (for a total of six) and proved to not be particularly effective. All units were also equipped with a two-way radio in the form of a frame aerial around the top of the main turret. Another visual characteristic were the prominent mud chutes that doubled as side skirts for the multi-wheel suspension. The T-28 first saw combat against the Japanese in 1939 and later, in the 1939-40 Winter War against Finland. During this conflict, they became renowned for their performance during the breakthrough of the Mannerheim Line in 1940. By the time of the German invasion in 1941 it remained in widespread service with the Red Army and was in action during the first few months of the conflict before being gradually replaced by its successor, the T-34.

Development of the T-28 began in 1932 and it was originally fitted with a 45-mm Model 27/32 gun before being replaced by the short-barreled 76.2-mm that became standard. The T-28A was the first improved variant which featured a modified suspension with 12 bogie rollers with four return rollers and thicker frontal armor. This was followed by the T-28B with a ball-mounted machine gun in the rear and a longer caliber L-10 (L26) gun. Attempts to improve protection during the war against Finland resulted in the T-28C with frontal armor increasing from 50mm to 80mm and thicker armor on the sides and rear as well. This version was used in the 1940 breakthroughs. The last dozen units produced used the same conical turret as late T-35s. The chassis of the T-28 was also adapted for numerous uses including various experimental variants along with the IT-28 bridelayer and a mine-clearing tank.

Preceded by:

None

Succeeded by:

T-34 (1940)

Datafile

DesignT-28AT-28C
TypeMedium TankMedium Tank
Year19341938
Crew66
Dimensions
Length (w/Gun)7.44 m7.44 m
Width2.810 m2.810 m
Height2.820 m2.820 m
Ground Clearance0 m0 m
Track0 m0 m
Track on Ground0 m0 m
Weight
Combat28,500 kg32,000 kg
Ground Pressure0.72 kg/cm²0 kg/cm²
SuspensionCoil springsCoil springs
Performance
Speed (Off-Road)37 km/h (20 km/h)23 km/h
Range (Off-Road)220 km (160 km)190 km (120 km)
AmphibiousNoNo
Fording0.80 m0.80 m
Vertical Obstacle1 m1 m
Trench2.90 m2.90 m
Gradient93.3%93.9%
Powerplant
Engine1 x 500-hp
M-17L
1 x 500-hp
M-17L
FuelGasolineGasoline
Power/Weight17.54 hp/t15.63 hp/t
Armament
Main1 x 76.2-mm L/16
KT-28

Howitzer
↑ 40° / ↓ -10° / ↔ 360°
1 x 76.2-mm L/30.5
L-11

Rifled Gun
↑ 40° / ↓ -10° / ↔ 360°
SecondaryCoaxial:
1 x 7.62-mm
DT
mgturret:
2 x 7.62-mm
DT
rear:
1 x 7.62-mm
DT
Coaxial:
1 x 7.62-mm
DT
mgturret:
2 x 7.62-mm
DT
rear:
1 x 7.62-mm
DT
Ammo7.62-mm: 7,938
7.62-mm: 7,938
Armor
TypeSteelSteel
Thickness10 - 30 mm15 - 80 mm
Max Effective23 - 33 mm RHAe80 - 88 mm RHAe
Hull Upper Front30 mm / 25°80 mm / 25°
Hull Lower Front30 mm / 25°80 mm / 25°
Hull Upper Sides20 mm / 10°40 mm / 10°
Hull Lower Sides20 mm40 mm
Hull Lower Rear20 mm40 mm
Hull Top15 mm / 15°23 mm / 15°
Hull Bottom15 mm / 10°23 mm / 10°
Turret Mantlet20 mm80 mm
Turret Front20 mm40 mm
Turret Sides23 mm40 mm
Turret Rear23 mm40 mm
Turret Top10 mm15 mm
Production
Builtn/an/a
Total503

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