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Wheels & Tracks Gallery: Soviet Union
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T-26B-1 light tank was based on the Vickers 6-ton Model B. |
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T-26B-1(V) commanders tank with frame antenna followed by an OT-130 flame-throwing version of the T-26. |
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T-26B-2(V) (commander’s version) light tank. |
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T-26B. |
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T-26Bs, September 1941. |
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OT-130 flamethrowing tank. These vehicles were in service from 1939 to 1941. |
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OT-130 flamethrowing tank, second version. |
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Comparison of the flame guns of the two OT-130 models. |
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Three T-26C light tanks knocked out and abandoned during the early days of Operation Barbarossa. |
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T-26C light tank knocked out in a sunflower field in Russia during the early days of Operation Barbarossa. |
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T-26 Model 1939 light tank being examined by British officers during the British/Russian invasion of Iran. |
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T-26B-2 light tank reworked to T-26S standard. |
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T-26S light tank. This was the considerably redesigned final production version of the T-26. |
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T-26S, knocked out, burning, as a German horse-drawn artillery unit moves past. |
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T-26S knocked out, its turret blown completely off. |
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OT-133 flamethrowing tank based on the T-26S, was in service between 1939 and 1942. |
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T-28 medium tank, saw service until 1941. |
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T-28 medium tank prototype. |
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T-28B medium tank was the original T-26A with a turret basket, visors for the driver and a longer and more powerful L/26 76.2mm gun. |
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T-28. |
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T-28. |
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T-28(V) (commander’s version) medium tank with radio and frame antenna around the turret. |
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T-28 medium tanks, 1941. |
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German soldiers examine a knocked out T-28(V) commander’s tank. |
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T-28 medium tanks on parade. |
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T-28 medium tank. |
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Experimental T-29-5 medium tank was an attempt to combine the Christie suspension with the T-28 chassis. |
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Experimental T-29 medium tank prototype was a further refinement of the Christie idea with the ability to run at the same speed on wheels or tracks. |
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T-30 light amphibious tank. Did not enter production. |
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A-20 medium tank prototype was developed from the BT-1S as an alternative to the T-111 and lead to the development of the A-30. |
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T-32 medium tank based on experience with the A-20 and A-30 models. |
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T-33 prototype light amphibious tank developed into the T-37 light amphibious tank. |
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T-33 second prototype. |
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T-34, original version with 76mm gun. |
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T-34/76A medium tank with welded turret and L/30 76.2mm gun. Production design based on the T-32 prototype with pilot models produced in 1940 and full production beginning in June 1940. |
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T-34/76A with cast turret and L/30 76.2mm gun. |
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T-34/76. |
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T-34 during a night attack. |
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A line of T-34s almost ready to leave the factory. |
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T-34/76D medium tank with new hexagonal turret and wide mantlet for gun. |
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T-34s group for an attack. |
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Capture of a T-34 and its crew. |
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T-34/76E medium tank with added cupola and all-welded construction and cooling improvements. |
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German troops view the smoldering remains of a destroyed T-34. |
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T-34/76F medium tank with cast turret and mechanical improvements. Production was terminated after 100 vehicles in favor of the T-34/85. |
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T-34/76F with commander’s cupola. |
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T-34/76F with mine rollers. |
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T-34/85 medium tank with a new enlarged turret with 85mm gun which entered service in 1944. |
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T-34/85 tanks in the East Prussian town of Heiligenbeil in January 1945. Note the extra track used to improve protection on the relatively thin hull plating. |
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T-34/85-II medium tank which entered service in 1947. When this vehicle entered service the earlier T-34/85 medium tanks became known as T-34/85-I. |
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T-34/76B ATO-41 flamethrowing tank with armored fuel tank on hull rear and flame projector in place of the hull machine gun. Only limited production. |
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Close-up of the flame gun on the T-34/76D ATO-42 (OT-34) flamethrowing tank was a 1944 development of the ATO-41 with fuel tank capacity doubled and carried inside the tank. |
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T-34 on the Pacific coast, August 1945. |
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T-34/85 medium tank with mine rollers. |
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T-34 medium tank. Note cut-away hull and turret. |
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T-34/85 medium tank. |
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T-34/76 medium tank. |
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German troops examine a knocked out T-34/76B medium tank. |
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T-34/76E medium tank turret blown off a knocked out tank. |
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T-34/76 medium tanks. |
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Knocked out T-34/76F medium tank being recovered by German troops. |
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This T-34 tank was purchased with savings of the Shirmanov family, the mother, Maria, sitting next to her son Andrei, with his crew. |
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T-34/85 medium tank, passing German prisoners, winter 1945. |
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T-34 medium tanks. |
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T-34 medium tanks, Ukrainian Front, 1944. |
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T-34 medium tank, 1943. |
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T-34/85 medium tank, 1943. |
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A Soviet Army official accepts delivery of newly completed T-34 tanks from factory workers. |
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T-34 medium tanks lined up for inspection. |
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T-34 tanks with supporting infantry, August 1942. |
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German soldiers examine a Russian T-34 medium tank apparently used as a static pillbox. |
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T-34, Berlin, April 1945. |
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T-34/76F medium tanks on a production line in a factory in the Urals, 1943. |
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T-34 medium tank performs reconnaissance on the snowbound Russian front. |
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American Dodge WC-51 truck in Soviet service with T-34s. |
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T-34 tank crews taking the oath prior to an engagement. |
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Infantry attacking under cover of T-34 medium tanks. |
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After forcing the Dniester, Soviet T-34/85 tanks with mounted infantry fight their way forward. Operation Bagration, Odessa, 1944. |
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Another view of the same unit of T-34s, seconds later, after the infantry has dismounted. |
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Factory workers in a Urals plant assembling T-34 medium tanks for front line defense. |
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Red Army men of a T-34 medium tank detachment taking German soldiers prisoner. |
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A German mortar squad in a bomb crater near a destroyed T-34 medium tank. |
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Red Army men advancing toward the enemy under cover of a T-34 medium tank. |
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A tank-borne detachment starts out on a fighting operation on T-34 medium and KV heavy tanks. |
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Camouflaged infantry are carried behind a T-34 and BT-7 medium tank to advance lines. |
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A tank-borne detachment mounting T-34 medium tanks in preparation for an attack. |
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T-34 medium tank and camouflaged troops fighting for a village converted by the Germans into a center of resistance. |
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T-34 medium tank camouflaged with hay and snow. |
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A duel between a Russian T-34 medium tank (foreground) and a German tank. |
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At a signal of alarm crews return to their T-34 medium tank. |
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A tank-borne infantry detachment boarding T-34 medium tanks for an operation. |
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Camouflaged T-34 medium tanks headed to the front. |
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The first Russian tanks, T-34s, enter Berlin, 1945. |
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T-34/76E medium tanks, west of Kiev, winter 1943. |
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A Soviet T-34 moves past an abandoned German 3.7cm anti-tank gun. |
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KV-8 heavy tank. |
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Captured JS-2 heavy tank. |
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SU-152 self-propelled gun. |
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T-35 heavy tank. |
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KV-1. |
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KV-2. |
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KV-2. |
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KV-2. |
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T-34/85. |
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T-34. |
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T-34/85. |
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The production of T-34 tanks. In the foreground is a 76.2-mm gun F-34 model 1940. |
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Anti-tank dog with T-34. |
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KV-1. |
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Winter-hardened Red ski troopers and tankmen counterattacked while the Germans were holed up in “hedgehog” positions. |
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Knocked out near a burning German supply truck are a BT-7 tank and T-34 tank. |
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T-34/76 cutaway. |
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Soviet officers salute American troops during a review, post-war. |
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Soviet-manned American M4 Medium Tank followed by a T-34 during a review, post-war. |
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An American officer with two Soviet officers during a review, post-war. American troops and M5 light tank in the background. |
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Knocked out T-34s. |
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Japanese soldiers with captured Soviet flamethrower tank KHT-26. |
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Soviet tanks advancing at Khalkhin Gol. |
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T-46 light tank was an intended replacement for the T-26 series in which the Christie suspension of the BT series was combined with the T-26 hull. Only a few were built. |
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T-50 light tank intended as a replacement for the T-26, but the complicated design forced production to end after only 65 were built and it saw limited service. |
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T-60 light tank intended as a replacement for all earlier light tank models. |
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Women electricians checking the wiring of a Soviet T-60 light tank before it leaves the plant. |
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T-60A light tank was an improved production model of the T-60. Production began in early 1942. |
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T-70 light tank was produced to overcome the limitations in firepower and armor in the T-60. Production ended in 1944 after 8,226 were built. |
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A late T-70A, up-armored from 60mm to 70mm maximum thickness. Note the squared-off, as opposed to rounded turret rear. |
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T-70A light tank had thicker turret armor and squared off turret rear with reinforced corners. |
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T-80 light tank was an uparmored T-70 with new turret. Few were built as their role was taken over by Lend-Lease American half-tracks when the Soviets discontinued the use of light tanks in 1944. |
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T-111 (T-46-5) medium tank prototype utilizing the Christie suspension with small road wheels. |
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Guderian's panzers race toward Moscow. Russian tanks are not capable of stopping them. Knocked out near a burning German supply truck are a Soviet BT-7 tank and T-34 tank. |
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T-34. |
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T-26 light tanks. |
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T-34 medium tank. |
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T-34 knocked out and burned. The rubber on the roadwheels has been burned off. |
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German soldiers examine a T-34 that was run on top of a Soviet artillery position. |
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Knocked out T-34 that ran over a Soviet 45mm anti-tank gun. |
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Knocked out and burning T-34. |
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T-34s with mounted infantry on the attack. |
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Soviet Vickers E Type A in 1932. |
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Two T-34s and a Churchill (right rear) of the 5th Guards Armored Army knocked out at Prochorovka, 12 July 1943. |
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Soviet trials of the Vickers E Type A, January 1931. |
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T-44 with 122mm main gun alongside a captured German PzKpfw V “Panther” for comparison. |
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BT-7A artillery support tank was a self-propelled gun variant, armed with a 76.2mm howitzer. |
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BT-7 tanks on parade. |
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T-28 medium tanks in production. |
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T–28 tanks, with horseshoe radio antennas. |
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T-34/85 armed with 85mm gun. |
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A tank-borne infantry detachment rolls into battle on T-34 medium tanks. |
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T-34 destroyed at Kursk. |
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T-50 light infantry tank. |
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The people of Belgrade greet the arrival of a T-34 as Soviet forces enter the city. |
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T-34 crosses a road behind a burning German Tiger I. |
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T-26 light tanks. |
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Soviet automatic riflemen going into battle against the Germans, a British Matilda infantry tank in the background. |
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SU-76. The SU-76 (Samokhodnaya Ustanovka 76) was a Soviet self-propelled gun used during World War II. |
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Red Army infantry supported by open-topped armored SU-76 tank destroyers (on T-70 chassis) in East Prussia in April 1945. |
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SU-100. |
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SU-76M in Bovington Tank Museum, Dorset. |
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SU-76M Self-propelled gun in Nizhny Novgorod, Russia. |
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SU-85. |
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SU-85 in Bucharest. |
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SU-85. |
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SU-85, knocked out, Eastern front. Note German MP40 carried by Soviet soldier at right. |
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SU-85 assault guns enter Berlin, 1945. |
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A SU-76l self-propelled gun based on the PzKpfw III chassis utilizing captured vehicles. |
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ZIS-30 (SU-57) self-propelled gun based on the STZ-3 tractor which was an improvised SU used mainly in the Moscow area, 1941. |
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SU-5-1 self-propelled gun of the Triplex Program armed with a 76.2mm Model 02/30 gun. |
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SU-7 self-propelled gun with 203mm gun/howitzer. |
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SU-14-Br2 self-propelled gun with 152mm Model 1935 gun which saw limited service in the opening months of World War II. |
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SU-100 Y “Igrek” self-propelled gun based on the T-100 tank series which saw very limited service in the early months of World War II. |
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ISU-122 (D-25-T) self-propelled gun showing the later ball socket gun mounting. |
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T-37 light amphibious tanks. |
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T-37 light amphibious tank. |
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T-37 light amphibious tank, on display near the Museum of the Great Patriotic War in Kiev, Ukraine. |
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T-38 light amphibious tank, left, with a T-37 light amphibious tank. |
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T-38 light amphibious tank was in service until 1942. |
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T-38M-2 light amphibious tank with uprated engine and detail changes. |
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T-38M light amphibious tank armed with a 20mm gun. |
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T-40A light amphibious tank. |
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T-40 light amphibious tanks, September 1941. |
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T-40S light tank was an improved version of the T-40 but was not amphibious. Production began in 1942. |
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The driver of a T-40 light amphibious tank. In 1941 Soviet tanks were weak, but Russia sacrificed enough of the strong men inside them to finally stop the German advance. |
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Winter-hardened Red ski troopers and tankmen in T-40s counterattacked while the Germans were holed up in “hedgehog” positions. |
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T-41 light amphibious tank prototype. Did not enter production. |
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The T-40 amphibious scout tank was an amphibious light tank used by the Soviet Union during World War II. |
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T-40 amphibious scout tank. |
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Russian soldiers in snow camouflage move off from a column of T-40 light tanks. |
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A German grenadier dug in in front of a Soviet Komsomolets artillery tractor. |
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Soviet motorized column, including artillery tractors. |
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Germans use a captured Soviet tractor to pull a wheeled trailer along one of the better Russian roads during the early stages of Barbarossa. |
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Studebaker US6. |
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Soviet motorized sled captured and in use by a Luftwaffe unit. |
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Katyushas in action. |
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Katyushas in firing position. |
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M-8 rocket launcher on Lend-Lease 6x4 Studebaker 2.5-ton truck. |
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M-8 82mm rocket launcher mounted on a ZIS-6 2.5-ton truck. |
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132mm rockets on an M-13 launcher. |
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M-13 rocket launcher on a ZIS-6 2.5-ton truck. |
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M-13 rocket launcher on a T-60 light tank chassis. |
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BM-13 Katyusha. Russian soldiers loading rockets on the truck’s rails, 1945. |
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Katyusha M-13, Manchuria, 1945. |
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M-13 rocket launcher on a STZ-5 artillery tractor. |
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M-31 rocket launcher. |
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Loading M-13 rocket launchers. |
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Katyusha rocket launcher mounted on tractor, captured by German forces in Russia, 1943. |
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M-31 310mm rocket launcher mounted on a GAZ-AA truck. |
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Soviet armored train car under construction. |
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BA-10 armored cars converted for traveling on railroad tracks alongside an armored train. |
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Soviet armored troops manned the converted tank turrets on armored trains. |
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Soviet armored train with a variety of cannons, guns and machine guns. |
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German soldiers pose alongside a derailed Soviet armored train. |
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Wrecked Soviet T-34 tank in Stalingrad, Russia, 8 October 1942. |
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A T-34 destroyed at the Battle of Prokhorovka, 1943. |
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Soviet KV-85G prototype. It was just a KV-1S with an 85mm gun jammed in the turret. It was rejected for having insufficient internal turret space. |
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Soviet T-100 tank. It was a similar design to the SMK, but nevertheless, its construction was different. Both were considered too bulky and unreliable to warrant production. |
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KV-2 heavy tank. |
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A KV-2 with a 107 mm gun. The KV-2 was similar to some superheavy tank projects the gun was intended for use with. |
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KV-2. |
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KV-2. |
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KV-2. |
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Destroyed KV-2. |
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KV-2. |
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KV-2. |
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Soviet artillery tractor with ammunition trailer and anti-tank gun. |
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Universal Carrier in Soviet service. |
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Universal Carrier in Soviet service slung underneath a plane. |
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Soviet M4 medium tank in Romania. |
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M3 light tank in Soviet service. |
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M4 medium tank of the 1st Guards Mechanized Corps in Vienna. |
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Men of the 1st Guards Mechanized Corps gets off its tank a1-01 and take Maria Theresia Platz, Vienna. |
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M4A2 (76mm) in Berlin. |
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Captured German Panther tanks in Soviet service. |
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British Matilda IIs in Soviet service. |
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T-34 tanks under fire with supporting infantry. |
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Captured German Panzer IV in Soviet service. |
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Abandoned KV-1 with main gun barrel destroyed by crew to prevent its use by German forces. |
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Soviet soldiers aim their Thompson submachine guns and M2 Browning machine guns at the skies from their M3 light tanks. |
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Trucks move supplies across frozen Lake Ladoga during the siege of Leningrad. |
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Destroyed Russian tank with crew caught trying to escape. Notice penetrating hits on hull and turret. |
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M4A2 (76) medium tanks of 1st Battalion, 46th Guards Tank Brigade, 9th Guards Mechanised Corps, in Vienna. Note the StuG in the background. |
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Soviet infantry hitching a ride on a M4 medium tank. |
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Knocked out KV-1. |
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A Soviet KV-1 rammed a German 88mm gun. |
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Aftermath of battle between German and Soviet tanks, in defense of the city of Pskov, in the region of Solovyi-Lopatino, July 7, 1941. |
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German soldiers are on a T-34-76, abandoned in Lvov, in 1940. |
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German soldiers inspect a dug-in T-34. |
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German soldiers inspect abandoned T-34s. |
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KV-1S hull with the 203mm gun – S-51. |
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M4 medium tank converted by the Soviets into a prime mover. |
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