As most of the western nations have reduced their inventories to a few or mostly one type of main battle tank model in their active inventories, the myriad of tank platforms and distinct versions employed by the Russian armed forces may feel overwhelming. Here is a quick guide to identifying Russian MBTs. When you come across an image (or the actual thing), follow the steps to identify it properly.
Family of the tank
Russian Armed Forces currently operates, or at least storage, the following tank platforms/families:
-
T-55
(<2000 in storage)
-
T-62
(2000 in storage)
-
T-64
(2000 in storage)
-
T-72
(2000 active duty, 8000 in storage)
-
T-80
(2000 active duty, 5000 in storage)
-
T-90
(350 active duty, 600 in storage)
-
T-14
(20 in field testing)
So how can you identify what type of a tank are you looking at?
There are
two features that can be used to distinguishing the tank families: The roadwheel placement and the exhaust ports. The older and smaller T-55 and T-62 have five roadwheels in
their suspensions, the later models have six roadwheels.
The T-55 and the T-62 can be identified from the spacing of the roadwheels. The T-62 has the gaps
between roadwheels increasing towards the rear, but on the T-55 the front
roadwheel is separated from the rest.
The T-55 and T-62 can also be identified from the smoke evacuators in their
main gun barrels. T-55 has the bulging part at the muzzle of the 100mm barrel,
while T-62 has a similar component at the middle of its 115mm barrel.
The more
modern T-72 and T-90 have the same suspension layout with six large evenly
spaced roadwheels and they can easily be identified from the T-80 models as
they have six smaller wheels grouped in pairs and the T-64 has completely
different suspension layout with very small roadwheels. T-80 and T-64 are easily separated from each other by the fact that T-80 has a searchlight on the right side of the barrel, while the similar light is mounted to the left side on T-64 variants.
The other way of identifying the tank platforms are the engine exhaust ports. These can
also be used to separate T-72 and T-90 from each other. The T-64 and T-80
series tanks have a horizontally opposed diesel engine and a gas turbine engine respectively, both with large exhaust ports at the rear of
the tank. The other platforms have diesel engines with exhaust ports on the right
side of the tank.
T-72 and T-90
The active
duty T-72 and T-90 variants all have ERA armor with several of them sharing the
same layouts, identifying the apart can seem a bit daunting. But there are some
details that make the task easier.
T-90
differs from all mass produced T-72 variants in two distinct ways. It has the Shtora-1
anti-missile system. Shtora-1 has two easily identifiable emitters mounted on
both sides of the barrel, in Russian service this feature is only found on the
T-90A and T-80UK. The other feature are the exhaust ports. T-72s have a long
and low exhaust port, while the T-90 one is distinctly boxy, T-72BA may also feature the boxy exhaust port, but it can be easily identified as shown below.
Out of the two
dozen T-72 variants developed, the Russian Armed Forces presently use the T-72B,
T-72AV, T-72B obr 1989, T-72B1, T-72B3 and the T-72B3 obr 2016. These tanks can
be easily separated into two groups. The T-72B, T-72AV and T-72B1 all use the older
Kontakt-1 ERA bricks that are not integrated into the tank like the never
Kontakt-5 (or externally almost
identical Relikt) ERA found on the other models.
In order to
separate the most modern and lethal T-72B3 from the other two Kontakt-5 equipped
tanks you must look at details on the turret. The T-72B3 has a symmetrical ERA
layout and no searchlight on the right side of the main gun barrel. There is
also one more ERA brick on the right side of the T-72B3 than there are on
T-72BA and T-72B obr 1989. The T-72B3 also has the Sosna-U optical sight on top
of its turret, that is conciderably higher than the 1K13-49 sight found on the
T-72BA and T-72 obr 1989.
The T-72B3 and
T-72B3 obr 2016 are mostly similar, but the T-72B3 obr 2016 has extended ERA
coverage at the skirts and cage type slat armor protecting the rear of the vehicle.
There is
also a variant of the T-72B3 without the ERA slabs on the skirts and a variant of
the T-72B3 obr 2016 with a bag mounted ERA/Applique armor on the skirts.
The T-72BA
and T-72 obr 1989 are even more alike, but they have one easily identifiable
difference. The newer, or at least more recently modernized T-72BA features a
more advanced fire control system that has a meteorological sensor mast at the
back of the turret.
The T-72AV
has a more V-shaped ERA array on the turret than the T-72B1 and T-72B with ERA
that have the same armor layout. The T-72B1 uses the same older optics than the
T-72AV. The T-72B on the other hand has the more modern 1K13-49 sight that can
be identified from frontal pictures. Russia has manufactured a T-72B1 variant with the Sosna-U sight, but at the moment it has been only delivered to Laos and Nicaragua, it is not in Russian use.
T-62
There are two T-62 variants that have seen the light of day in the past few years, while there may be other models hidden in the endless storage dumps in Siberia. The active reserve variants are the T-62M and T-62 MV.
T-62M has one spaced applique armor panel on the both cheeks of the turret. T-62MV has Kontakt-1 ERA bricks covering the turret and hull. It' also possible that a T-62MVs have their ERA bricks removed during storage, but they still retain hedgehog like spikes for their mounting.
T-55M has one spaced applique armor panel on the both cheeks of the turret. T-55MV has Kontakt-1 ERA bricks covering the turret and hull. There are more modernized T-55 variants with different main guns and even Kontakt-5 ERA, but these are not in Russian service in meaningful numbers.
Not that the T-55M designation is also used on various export variants and upgrades by other operators, for example the Finnish T-55Ms are very different from the Russian ones.
As a rule
of thumb: “First roadwheels, then exhausts, after that ERA layout, then lights
and masts”
Best image source for Russian military vehicles on the internet: