T-54/55 | |
---|---|
Type |
|
Place of origin | Soviet Union |
Service history | |
In service | 1948–present |
Used by | See Operators |
Wars | See Service History |
Production history | |
Designer | |
Designed | 1945–1958 |
Manufacturer | |
Unit cost | US$200,000 (export price to Egypt, 1956–1972)[1] |
Produced |
|
No. built | 96,500–100,000+ est., including:
|
Variants | See Operators and variants section below |
Specifications (T-55) | |
Mass | 36 metric tons (35.4 long tons; 39.7 short tons) |
Length | 9.00 m (29 ft 6 in) with gun forward |
Width | 3.37 m (11 ft 1 in) |
Height | 2.40 m (7 ft 10 in) |
Crew | 4 |
Armour |
|
Main armament | D-10T 100 mm rifled gun (43 rounds) |
Secondary armament | 7.62 mm SGMT coaxial machine gun, (12.7 mm DShK heavy machine gun) |
Engine | Model V-55(V-54) V-12 water-cooled. 38.88-litre diesel 500 horsepower (373 kW) up to 800 horsepower (600 kW) (late versions) |
Power/weight | 14.6 horsepower per metric ton (10.9 kW/t) |
Transmission | Mechanical (synchromesh), 5 forward, 1 reverse gears |
Suspension | Torsion bar |
Ground clearance | 0.425 m (16.7 in) |
Fuel capacity | 580 L internal, 320 L external (less on early T54), 400 L jettisonable rear drums |
Operational range | 325 kilometres (202 mi), 610 kilometres (380 mi) with extra tanks (on unpaved roads) |
Maximum speed | 51 kilometres per hour (32 mph) |
The T-54 and T-55 tanks are a series of Soviet medium tanks[3] introduced in the years following the Second World War. The first T-54 prototype was completed at Nizhny Tagil by the end of 1945.[4] From the late 1950s, the T-54 eventually became the main tank for armoured units of the Soviet Army, armies of the Warsaw Pact countries, and many others. T-54s and T-55s have been involved in many of the world's armed conflicts since their introduction in the second half of the 20th century.
The T-54/55 series is the most-produced tank in history. Estimated production numbers for the series range from 96,500 to 100,000. They were replaced by the T-62, T-64, T-72, T-80 and T-90 tanks in the Soviet and Russian armies, but remain in use by up to 50 other armies worldwide, some having received sophisticated retrofitting. The Chinese version of the T-54A is the Type 59.
During the Cold War, Soviet tanks never directly faced their NATO adversaries in European combat. However, the T-54/55's first appearance in the West around the period of the 1950s (then the beginning of the Cold War) spurred the United Kingdom to develop a new tank gun, the Royal Ordnance L7, and the United States to create the M60 tank.[5]
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
The T-54/T-55 series is the hands down, all time most popular tank in history.