List of USSR Tanks

  • T-27

  • T-26

  • BT-2

  • T-37A

    Influenced by the British Carden-Loyd tankettes, the T-37A was a Soviet design with amphibious qualities.
  • T-28

  • BT-5

  • T-41

    Soviet industry produced twelve developmental examples of the two-man T-41 tracked vehicle to experiment with a light tank offering amphibious qualities.
  • T-29

  • BT-7

  • T-35

    Impressive when it debuted in 1935, the T-35 suffered from its immense size and mechanical issues by 1939.
  • T-46

    Cost was, once again, a factor in the Soviet Army passing on the newer, all-modern T-46 Light Tank during the pre-World War 2 period.
  • T-38

    Despite it being outclassed on the battlefields of World War 2, the T-38 Amphibious Light Tank series served up until 1943.
  • T-25 (STZ-25)

  • BT-SV

  • T-100 (Project)

  • KV-1

  • A-20

  • SMK

  • T-34

  • KV-2

  • NI tank

  • ZiS-30

    The ZiS-30 tank destroyer was a stop-fap design for the Red Army beginning in 1941.
  • T-70

    The T-70 was an up-gunned and improved form of the preceding T-60, seeing production reach over 8,200 units by the end of World War 2.
  • T-60

    The T-60 light tank design was an easy-to-produce measure for the Red Army after it had suffered heavy losses at the hands of the German Army.
  • T-50

    Fewer than 100 T-50 Battle Tanks were completed during the early stages of World War 2, it was given up in favor of the classic T-34 series.
  • T-40

    Losses of T-40 Amphibious Light Tanks were high during the initial German invasion of the Soviet Union during Operation Barbarossa.
  • T-34M (A-43)

    The T-34M was an early-war attempt by Soviet engineers to shore up the limitations of the classic T-34 Medium Tank, the German invasion derailed all hope for it.
  • KV-8

  • KV-9

  • AN-40 (glider tank)

  • KV-13

  • T-34/85

  • SU-152

  • SU-85

  • IS-2

  • IS-1

  • T-80 Object 080

    The T-80 Light Tank was an attempt by Soviet engineers to improve upon the lacking qualities of the earlier T-70.
  • T-43

    Intended as a successor to the famous T-34 and KV-1 tanks, the T-43 was being developed with medium tank mobility and heavy tank armor protection.
  • KV-85

  • SU-100

  • T-44

    The T-44 appeared during World War 2 as a successor to the classic Soviet T-34, though it arrived too late to see combat service and never lived up to expectations.
  • T-34/100

  • IS-3