Stridsvagn m/42

Stridsvagn m/42

Stridsvagn m/42 (1943)
Type Medium Tank
Place of origin Sweden
Service history
Used by Sweden
Production history
Designer AB Landsverk
Manufacturer AB Landsverk, Volvo
Produced April 1943–January 1945
No. built 282
Variants Strv m/42 TM (1943–44)[1]
Strv m/42 TH (1944)[1]
Strv m/42 EH (1944–45)[1]
Strv m/42 TV (1948)[1]
Ikv 73 (1957–60)[1]
Strv 74 (1957–60)[1]
Specifications (Strv m/42)
Weight 22.5 t (24.8 short tons; 22.1 long tons)[2]
Length TH: 6.215 m (20 ft 4.7 in)[1]
EH: 6.22 m (20 ft 5 in)[1]
Width 2.34 m (7 ft 8 in)[1]
Height 2.585 m (8 ft 5.8 in)[1]
Crew 4[1][2]

Armor 9–55 mm (0.35–2.17 in)[1]
Main
armament
75 mm m/41 gun L/34[1]
Secondary
armament
4 x 8 mm m/39 machine guns [1]
Engine TM, TH & TV: 2 x Scania-Vabis 603/1[1]
EH: 1 x Volvo A8B[1]
TM, TH & TV: 325 hp[1]
EH: 380 hp[1]
Power/weight TM & TH: 14,5 hp/ton
EH: 16,9 hp/ton
Transmission TM: ZF 6-speed electromagnetic[1]
TH: 2x Atlas-Diesel DF-1,0
Atlas-Diesel TER-1/1,81[1]
EH: Atlas-Diesel DF-1,15 S
Atlas-Diesel TER-1/1,67[1]
TV: Landsverk S-8082 +
Volvo VL 420[1]
Suspension Torsion-bar suspension
Speed 42 km/h (26 mph)[1][2]

Stridsvagn m/42 (Strv m/42) was Swedish medium tank in service in the World War II period. Known by its manufacturer AB Landsverk as Lago II-III-IV, it fielded a 75 mm L/34 gun, the first of its size in a Swedish tank. It entered service with the Swedish army in November 1941. Modern in design it was also well protected and mobile. A total of 282 were produced.

As a neutral nation in World War II Sweden did not engage in combat; thus its tanks have no battlefield record.

Design history

The Strv m/42 had its origins on modifications in the Lago (the manufacturer designation) a 16 tons light tank armed with a 57 mm cannon and three machine guns produced for the Hungarian Army in late 1930s by the AB Landsverk, itself a development of the Stridsvagn L-60 light tank also made by the AB Landsverk. The Swedish Army specified for a bigger and better tank than the Lago resulting in the Strv m/42 (later known as Strv m/42 TM), a 22-ton tank armed with a 75mm L/34 gun, suited against armored and soft vehicles, it had similar performance as the German 7.5 cm StuK 37 L/24 gun. The gearbox of the m/42 TM wasn't working well and these tanks were built either as m/42 TH, or they got a new mechanical gearbox and became known m/42 TV.

Production history

In November 1941 100 Strv m/42s were ordered. All the vehicles had an electromagnetic gearbox. (Strv m/42 TM, the T meaning two engines and the M meaning electromagnetic gearbox). In January 1942 another 60 Strv m/42s were ordered. This batch were built under license by Volvo, the first 55 vehicles were fitted with twin Scania-Vabis 603 engines and the remaining five were equipped with a new engine, the Volvo A 8B. All the vehicles had the first batch electromagnetic gearbox replaced by a new hydraulic gearbox, with all these modifications, the single-engine vehicles were now designated as Strv m/42 EH, (the E meaning one engine and the H meaning hydraulic gearbox), the dual-engines tanks but with the new transmission were designated as Strv m/42 TH. In June 1942 another 80 were ordered from Landsverk, they were 70 m/42 TH and 10 m/42 EH.

Between April 1943 to January 1945, 282 Strv m/42s were delivered, of which 180 tanks were made in Landsverk, 102 at Volvo. Most of the vehicles, 225 pieces, were fitted with Scania engines. The other 57 tanks got Volvo engines.[2] All of the 225 Strv m/42 TH and m/42 TV produced (all strv m/42 with twin Scania-Vabis 603 engines), were rebuilt between 1957 and 1960 to Stridsvagn 74 tank and the EH vehicles (strv m/42 with single Volvo engine A 8B engines) to Infanterikanonvagn 73 infantry support vehicles. The turrets were reused as static gun pillboxes, along the major coastlines, but mostly defending harbours and more seldom airfields.[2]

Variants

Strv m/42 was originally ordered in four versions in three configurations:[2]

Service

The Strv m/42 was issued to the following armored regiments:[2]

The Strv m/42s were employed in the heavy tank companies of the armored brigades. They were phased out of active service in the 1950s and replaced by the Stridsvagn 81.

Stridsvagn m/42 in perfect condition
Stridsvagn m/42 at the Swedish Tank Museum Arsenalen

See also

Tanks of comparable role, performance and era

Notes

References

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