T-34 variants

T-34 variants

T-34 family portrait, 1941
(BT-8, A-20, T-34 Models 1940 and 1941)
Type Medium tank
Place of origin  Soviet Union
Service history
In service 1940–96
Production history
Produced 1940–56
Number built about 84,070

The T-34 medium tank is one of the most-produced and longest-lived tanks of all time.

Identification of T-34 variants can be complicated. Turret castings, superficial details, and equipment differed between factories. New features were added in the middle of production runs or retrofitted to older tanks. Damaged tanks were rebuilt, sometimes with the addition of newer-model equipment and even new turrets. Some tanks had appliqué armor made of scrap steel of varying thickness welded on to the hull and turret; these tanks are called s ekranami ("with screens"), although this was never an official designation for any T-34 variant.

Contents

Model naming

German intelligence in World War II referred to the two main production models as T-34/76 and T-34/85, with minor models receiving letter designations such as T-34/76A—this nomenclature has been widely used in the west, especially in popular literature. Since at least the 1980s, many academic sources (notably AFV expert Steven Zaloga) have used Soviet-style nomenclature: T-34 and T-34-85, with minor models distinguished by year: T-34 Model 1940. (This page has adopted that convention.)

Since the break-up of the Soviet Union, newly declassified sources have demonstrated that all T-34s with the original turret and F-34 gun (conventionally known as Models 1941 and 1942) were officially called "Model 1941", and hexagonal-turret T-34 (Model 1943) was officially called "Model 1942".

Because many different factories manufactured T-34s, with components built by subcontractors, the listing below merely gives a broad overview and does not capture every possible variant. Also, not every factory implemented all model changes at the same time. For example, factory No. 112 continued building narrow-turret 76 mm armed models long after all other plants had switched to hexagonal-turreted tanks.

List of models and variants

Former Soviet Union

Tanks

[1]

Tank destroyers

Self-propelled howitzers

Support vehicles

Bulgaria

Fixed fortifications

Cuba

Self-propelled howitzers

Czechoslovakia

Tanks

Support vehicles

Egypt

Tank destroyers

Self-propelled howitzers

Hungary

Firefighting vehicles

Nazi Germany

Self-propelled anti-aircraft guns

People's Republic of China

Tanks

Self-propelled anti-aircraft guns

Poland

Tanks

Support vehicles

Syria

Tanks

Self-propelled howitzers

Former Yugoslavia

Tanks

Notes

See also