MT-55

MT-55A armoured bridgelayer

BLG-60 at the Bundeswehrmuseum Dresden
Type Armoured vehicle-launched bridge
Place of origin  Soviet Union
Specifications
Weight 36.0 tonnes
Length 9,880 mm (with span)
Width 3,300 mm (with span)
Height 3,350 mm (with span)
Crew 2 (commander, driver)

Engine V-55 12-cyl. 38.88 liter water-cooled diesel
580 hp (430 kW)
Power/weight 14 hp/tonne
Suspension Torsion bar
Operational
range
580 km (On roads)
Speed 50 km/h

The MT-55A (Slovak: Mostní tank) is an armoured vehicle-launched bridge (AVLB) tank, manufactured by ZTS Martin in Slovakia. The AVLB is based on a T-55A medium tank chassis, with the turret detached and replaced by a special bridge launching equipment.[1]

The MT-55A was produced for the armies of the Warsaw Pact (including the Soviet Army), as well as for export clients.

Design and development

The MT-55A was designed and produced by ZTS Martin from 1962 (the former Czechoslovakia was one of the countries that build the T-54/55 series under licence). The development phase ended in 1967 after which 5 pre-series vehicles were built. Series production started in 1969.[2]

The transformed T-55A chassis differs only by the arrangement of the compartments in the hull. The bridge tank is proposed for an easy and swift crossing of antitank barriers (trenches) and other obstacles with the purpose of facilitating the passage of mechanised and tank units.[1]

The bridge initiating equipment is controlled by a system of hydraulic cylinders; the allocation of hydraulic oil can be controlled both manually by mechanical levers and automatically. The pressure of the liquid is provided by high-pressure piston pumps motorized by the tank engine. All mechanisms of the MT-55A used for laying and recovering of the bridge can be controlled by the crew from the inside of the tank, with hatch covers closed.[1][3]

To begin the launching process, the vehicle stops short of the gap; then, the bridge swings ahead and down while its two sections open like scissors.[1] The MT-55A span is 18 meters long and can hold up loads up to 50 tons. Later the MT-55A was modified with gap measuring mechanism and infrared equipment for bridge laying at darkness.

Of the MT-55A, a total of 1,762 were produced between 1969 and 1983, including 183 export versions MT-55KS (from 1971) and 301 hulls for East Germany's BLG-60 programme.

Variants

Operators

MT-55KS bridgelayer in Yad La-Shiryon Museum, Israel.


See also

References

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to MT-55 bridgelayer.