Hi everyone,
Does anyone have pictures or knows websites where I can find something about the soviet T-34T.
I know there are pictures off one vehicle on dishmodels.ru, but that is a post war vehicle and I am looking for a WW2 era vehicle.
To be honest, I don't even know if the soviets did build specialized ARV equipment during the war.
If they did, did they look like the post war T-34T's or not.
Please help me out here.
Frank.
Hosted by Jacques Duquette
T-34T anyone ?
postbusf
Noord-Brabant, Netherlands
Joined: November 15, 2007
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Joined: November 15, 2007
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Posted: Saturday, January 23, 2010 - 02:36 AM UTC
Frenchy
Rhone, France
Joined: December 02, 2002
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Posted: Saturday, January 23, 2010 - 03:20 AM UTC
Here are some WW2 (I think...) T-34 ARVs. To me they look quite similar to the T-34T on Dishmodels website...
A few other T-34 ARV variants can be found here : http://henk.fox3000.com/t34-2.htm
HTH
Frenchy
A few other T-34 ARV variants can be found here : http://henk.fox3000.com/t34-2.htm
HTH
Frenchy
goldnova72
Alberta, Canada
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Posted: Saturday, January 23, 2010 - 03:57 AM UTC
I " think " the one with the roof and hatches is a post war build . Most photos I've seen of WW2 vehicles are open topped with canvas cover .( Picture of post war Vt34 in Photos under USSR.) Let's hope Scott or Mark can give us a better idea if these things got rebuilt with roof and hatches during the war . If so its a easy kitbash. Jim
( more photos would be nice too....pls )
Thanks Frenchy .. missed the link......
( more photos would be nice too....pls )
Thanks Frenchy .. missed the link......
Lector
Joined: April 17, 2009
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Posted: Saturday, January 23, 2010 - 08:55 AM UTC
Quoted Text
... most photos I've seen of WW2 vehicles are open topped with canvas cover .( Picture of post war Vt34 in Photos under USSR.) Let's hope Scott or Mark can give us a better idea if these things got rebuilt with roof and hatches during the war . If so its a easy kitbash. Jim
( more photos would be nice too....pls )
Thanks Frenchy .. missed the link......
Yes, I think this config was the most common in the batlefield: just removing the turret and covering the hole with a simple canvas.
It´s a pity I´m not currently writing with my PC (its hard drive is kaputt... but I have a safety copy of the contents that were in it), because in mine I had a link to a webpage where several photos of diferent 1:76 models of the T-34´s ARV family could be seen very clearly.
Currently I´m "deciding" how to build my 1:35 SU-122 (obsolete Tamiya´s original model, of course, but with added modelkasten, eureka cables, new fuel tanks, photoetch, etc.), I´m on the way, and the probabilities are 80% it will be a SU-122 ARV : to make it it is only necessary to remove the gun and then to cover the hole with a piece of evergreen plastic sheet. Very very simple.
dsfraser
Alberta, Canada
Joined: October 01, 2007
KitMaker: 172 posts
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Posted: Monday, January 25, 2010 - 01:06 AM UTC
The T-34T you describe is an entirely postwar contraption. A few tanks may have been modified in the field as recovery vehicles, but there was no formal conversion program until after the war. At that time, many thousands of old T-34s remained in the tank park, and many of these (especially 76 mm tanks) were converted to special purpose vehicles. The turret and roof were removed and replaced by a plate roof with cupola, as in your photos, and these were used for driver training, as tractors, and as platforms for cranes and other special equipment. Many of these are still around, used in a wide variety of industries.
SUs did not get the same treatment. By the end of the war the SU-122 and SU-85 were few in number, and the SU-100 was still considered a potent weapon. The SU-100 was phased out much earlier, but the T-34-85 was still in active Red Army service in the Trans-Baikal and Far East regions until the mid-1970s, and with local militia units until the mid-1990s.
Outside of the USSR, there is no telling what was done with a T-34 (or SU). Certainly the DDR made their own conversions to ARVs, as did the Poles and Czechs, and there are photos of Hungarian SUs used as tractors. I'm sure that's just the tip of the iceberg. The T-34 was so widely exported, it's impossible to know what was done on it and with it.
Here's a photo of a German ARV:
And here's another photo of a Soviet conversion, in Egypt.
There are other photos on the web.
Cheers
Scott Fraser
SUs did not get the same treatment. By the end of the war the SU-122 and SU-85 were few in number, and the SU-100 was still considered a potent weapon. The SU-100 was phased out much earlier, but the T-34-85 was still in active Red Army service in the Trans-Baikal and Far East regions until the mid-1970s, and with local militia units until the mid-1990s.
Outside of the USSR, there is no telling what was done with a T-34 (or SU). Certainly the DDR made their own conversions to ARVs, as did the Poles and Czechs, and there are photos of Hungarian SUs used as tractors. I'm sure that's just the tip of the iceberg. The T-34 was so widely exported, it's impossible to know what was done on it and with it.
Here's a photo of a German ARV:
And here's another photo of a Soviet conversion, in Egypt.
There are other photos on the web.
Cheers
Scott Fraser