T-10

T-10 Heavy Tank

LandSovjet-Unie
RoleZware tank
In gebruik1953–1996
GebouwdOnbewust

De T-10 (ook bekend als Object 730 of, IS-8) was een Sovjet zware tank van de Koude Oorlog, de laatste ontwikkeling van de IS-tankserie. Tijdens de ontwikkeling heette het IS-8 en IS-9. Het werd in 1952 in productie genomen als de IS-10 (Iosif Stalin, Russische vorm van Jozef Stalin), maar vanwege het politieke klimaat in de nasleep van Stalins dood in 1953 werd het omgedoopt tot T-10.

Bron: T-10 op Wikipedia

T-10 Heavy Tank
FotograafOnbewust
LokalisatieOnbewust
Foto 's141
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T-10m rondlopen
FotograafTimur
Foto 's53
Т-10М Walk Around
FotograafOnbewust
Lokalisatie
Foto 's18

Zie ook:

Tweede Wereldoorlog: de definitieve visuele geschiedenis van Blitzkrieg tot de atoombom (DK Definitive Visual Histories) - Amazon Kaart voor kaart van de Tweede Wereldoorlog (DK History Map by Map) - Amazon

Т-10М Walk Around
FotograafVladimir Yakubov
LokalisatieOnbewust
Foto 's141
Wacht, zoeken T-10 Heavy Tank foto's voor u ...

Role and History

The T-10 (originally designated the IS-8 and briefly the IS-9) was the final heavy tank in the line of Soviet IS (“Iosif Stalin”) tanks. It entered service in 1953 and was later renamed T-10 after Stalin’s death in the de-Stalinization period.

It was designed as a heavy breakthrough tank intended to punch through enemy defensive lines, operating in specialized heavy tank regiments. Although superseded by the development of the Main Battle Tank (MBT) concept (like the T-62 and T-64) in the 1960s, the T-10 series remained in Soviet service for decades, only being officially withdrawn from Russian reserves in 1997.

Key Design Features

The T-10 inherited several core design elements from its IS-series predecessors but featured notable improvements in size, armor, and power:

  • Hull Shape: It retained the distinctive steeply sloped “pike nose” frontal armor configuration from the IS-3, which provided excellent ballistic protection against contemporary anti-tank weapons.
  • Suspension and Mobility: The hull was lengthened, resulting in a seventh pair of road wheels (unlike the six on the IS-3), which improved weight distribution. It used a torsion-bar suspension.
  • Powerplant: It was powered by a supercharged V12 diesel engine (initially 700 hp, later 750 hp in the T-10M), giving it a combat weight of around 50 tonnes and a maximum road speed of 42–50 km/h.
  • Bemanning: The tank was operated by a crew of four (Commander, Gunner, Loader, Driver).

Armament and Variants

The T-10’s formidable firepower came from its large-caliber main gun, a hallmark of Soviet heavy tank design.

Variant Main Gun Key Fire Control / Armament Feature
T-10 (Original) 122 mm D-25TA rifled gun Equipped with an electromechanical loading rammer.
T-10A 122 mm D-25TS gun Added a vertical-plane stabilizer (“Uragan”).
T-10M (Final) Longer 122 mm M-62-T2S gun Two-plane stabilization, 14.5 mm KPVT heavy machine guns (replacing 12.7 mm DShK), and infrared night vision.

A persistent limitation of the 122 mm main gun was its use of separate loading ammunition (shell and charge), which restricted the rate of fire to around 2–4 rounds per minute, a common trade-off for such massive firepower.

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