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    T-27

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    T-27

    T-27 on display in Kiev, Ukraine
    Type Tankette
    Place of origin  Soviet Union
    Service history
    In service 1931–41
    Used by Soviet Union
    Wars World War II
    Production history
    Designer Carden-Loyd, N. Kozyrev, Factory No. 37, Moscow
    Manufacturer Bolshevik Factory, GAZ
    Produced 1931–33
    Number built 2,540
    Variants T-27A
    Specifications (T-27A[1])
    Weight 2.7 tonnes
    Length 2.60 m
    Width 1.83 m
    Height 1.44 m
    Crew 2

    Armour 6–10 mm
    Primary
    armament
    7.62mm DT machine gun (2,520 rds.)
    Engine GAZ-AA
    40 hp (30 kW)
    Power/weight 15 hp/tonne
    Suspension bogie
    Fuel capacity 46 l
    Operational
    range
    120 km
    Speed 42 km/h

    The T-27 was a tankette developed in the 1930s by the Soviet Union. It was based on the design of the Carden Loyd tankette, bought under license from the United Kingdom in 1930.

    Contents

    [edit] Design

    The Soviets were not fully satisfied with the Carden Loyd design and made a number of changes before putting it into mass production under the designation of T-27. Compared with the British original, the hull was larger, the running gear was improved and the weapon mount was modified to take a Soviet-built 7.62 mm DT machine gun. A number of other changes were made by Chief Engineer N. Kozyrev and Lead Engineer K. Sirken to improve the tankette's ability to cope with the Russian climate and terrain. It lacked any communication devices, as communication between vehicles was intended to be expedited through the use of signal flags.

    [edit] Service

    The tankette was accepted into service on February 13, 1931. It was manufactured in two factories simultaneously, the Bolshevik factory in Leningrad and what would later become the GAZ factory in Nizhni Novgorod.

    The principal use of the T-27 during its service life was as a reconnaissance vehicle. Initially, 65 tankette battalions were formed by the Red Army, with each having about 50 tankettes. This figure was later reduced to 23 per battalion. The tankette was also intended to be air-mobile. In 1935, the Soviets experimented with transporting T-27s by air, by suspending them under the fuselages of Tupolev TB-3 bombers.

    The T-27 saw active service in the Soviet republics of Central Asia during the 1930s, where the tankettes were used in campaigns against rebellious native peoples. However, they fairly quickly became obsolete due to the introduction of more advanced tanks. The Red Army found them reliable and simple to operate, but the T-27 coped poorly with swampy and snowy terrain due to the narrowness of its tracks. It was also difficult to find crews, as the tankettes were so small that it was difficult to find crews of sufficiently diminutive stature. By the end of the 1930s the T-27 was relegated primarily to training use, with some being used as tractors to tow field guns.

    [edit] Variants

    Some experiments were also made to equip T-27s with more advanced weapons, such as flamethrowers and recoilless guns, but these did not prove successful. A few T-27s were pressurised and provided with special equipment to enable them to cross rivers underwater. It was also the first Soviet tracked vehicle transported by plane (a single tankette could be mounted below the fuselage of the TB-3 bomber).[2]

    [edit] Production

    2,157 T-27s remained in service by January 1941 and some took part in the initial stages of the Great Patriotic War (World War II) later that year. The last recorded combat use of the T-27 was in the Battle of Moscow in December 1941.

    [edit] Notes

    1. ^ Zaloga 1983, p 123.
    2. ^ (Polish) Janusz Magnuski; Maksym Kołomijec (1994). Czerwony blitzkrieg (Red Blitzkrieg). Warsaw: Pelta. p. 14. ISBN 83-85314-03-2. 

    [edit] References

    • Zaloga, Steven J.; James Grandsen (1984). Soviet Tanks and Combat Vehicles of World War Two. London: Arms and Armour Press. ISBN 0-85368-606-8. 

    [edit] External links

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