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SU-T-26 (SU-26, later SU-76P) — Self-propelled gun of an open-top design armed with a 37 mm gun or a 76.2mm regimental gun mod. 1927. The Factory of Hoisting-and-Conveying Machinery named after S.M. Kirov (in Leningrad ) built 14 vehicles in 1941: probably 2 with a 37 mm gun and 12 with a 76 mm gun.
T-26 model 1931 with gun plus machine gun armament: [49] [50] twin-turreted version with a 37 mm gun in the right turret (some modern sources mention this tank as T-26 model 1932). There were two models of 37 mm guns in the USSR suitable for mounting in light tanks at that time—the Hotchkiss gun (or its Soviet improved variant PS-1), and the ...
The T-26 formed the backbone of the Red Army's armoured forces during the first months of the German invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941. On 1 June, the Red Army had 10,268 T-26 tanks of all models, including armoured combat vehicles based on the T-26 chassis. The T-26 made up 39.5 percent of the tank strength, by number.
SU-14, a prototype heavy self-propelled gun built on a T-35 chassis. SU-18, a self-propelled gun based on the T-18 tank. SU-26, a self-propelled gun of an open-top design over a T-26 light tank chassis. SU-57, the Soviet designation for lend-leased T48 Gun Motor Carriages. SU-76, a self-propelled gun used during and after World War II based to ...
SU-5-3: Self-propelled gun Soviet Union: It was on the T-26 chassis. Equipped with the 152mm mortar M1931. SU-14: Self-propelled gun prototype Soviet Union: One was built as a prototype. The main armament was the 152 mm gun (U-30 or BR-2). SU-100Y: Self-propelled gun prototype Soviet Union: One prototype was made, based on the SU-100 tank and ...
The also unrelated SU-76P (1941) was based on the T-26 chassis. It was built in Leningrad during the Siege of Leningrad and involved removing the turret from the T-26 and mounting a 76 mm regimental gun M1927 on the engine deck. This was created due to the lack of high-explosive 45 mm ammunition inside Leningrad due to the siege, so some T-26 ...
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The gun was developed in 1927 by the design bureau of Orudiyno-Arsenalny Trest (OAT) and entered production in 1928. A total of 18,116 pieces were built. On June 22, 1941, the Red Army had 4,708 of these guns. In 1943 the gun was replaced in production by the 76 mm regimental gun M1943, but remained in