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Kliment Voroshilov tank

The Kliment Voroshilov (KV) tanks are a series of Soviet heavy tanks named after the Soviet defence commissar and politician Kliment Voroshilov who operated with the Red Army during World War II. The KV tanks were known for their heavy armour protection during the early stages of the war, especially during the first year of the German invasion of the Soviet Union. In certain situations, even a single KV-1 or KV-2 supported by infantry could halt German formations. The German Wehrmacht at that time rarely deployed its tanks against KVs, as their own armament was too poor to deal with the "Russischer Koloss" – "Russian Colossus".[7]

KV-1
KV-1 on display in Kirovsk
TypeHeavy tank
Place of originSoviet Union
Service history
In service1939–1945
Used byPoland, Soviet Union
WarsWinter War, World War II
Production history
DesignerZhozef Kotin, TsKB-2
Designed1938–1939
ManufacturerKirov Factory, ChTZ
Produced1939–1943
No. built5,219[1]
VariantsKV-2, KV-8 flamethrower, KV-1S, KV-85, KV-122
Specifications (KV-1 Model 1941)
Mass45 t (44 long tons; 50 short tons)
Length6.75 m (22 ft 2 in)
Width3.32 m (10 ft 11 in)
Height2.71 m (8 ft 11 in)
Crew5

Armour
  • Maximum (front): 90 mm (3.5 in)
  • Side: 75 mm (3.0 in)
  • Rear: 70 mm (2.8 in)
Main
armament
76.2 mm M1941 ZiS-5 gun
Secondary
armament
3 or 4 × DT machine guns
EngineModel V-2 V12 diesel engine
600 hp (450 kW)
Power/weight13 hp/tonne
SuspensionTorsion bar
Operational
range
Road:
250 km (160 mi)
Cross-country:
150 km (93 mi)[2]
Maximum speed 35 km/h (22 mph)
KV-2
KV-2 in Central Armed Forces Museum with KV-1 in background
TypeHeavy tank/assault gun
Place of originSoviet Union
Service history
In service1940–1945
Used bySoviet Union
WarsWorld War II
Production history
DesignerZh. Kotin, TsKB-2
Designed1938–1939
ManufacturerKirov Factory, ChTZ
No. built210
Specifications
Mass52 t (51 long tons; 57 short tons)
Length6.67 m (21 ft 11 in)[3]
Width3.35 m (11 ft 0 in)[3]
Height3.25 m (10 ft 8 in)[3]
Crew6

Armour60–110 mm (2.4–4.3 in)
Main
armament
152 mm M-10T howitzer (20 rounds)
Secondary
armament
2 × DT machine guns (2,079 rounds)
EngineModel V2-K-12 cylinder diesel
550 hp (410 kW)
Operational
range
Road:
225 km (140 mi)
Cross-country:
150 km (93 mi)[4]
Maximum speed 28 km/h (17 mph)
KV-85
KV-85
TypeHeavy tank
Place of originSoviet Union
Service history
Used bySoviet Union
WarsWorld War II
Production history
Produced1943
No. built148[5]
Specifications
Mass46 t (45 long tons; 51 short tons)
Length8.49 m (27 ft 10 in)
Width3.25 m (10 ft 8 in)
Height2.87 m (9 ft 5 in)
Crew4

Armour30–110 mm (1.2–4.3 in)
Main
armament
85 mm D-5T tank gun
Secondary
armament
3 × 7.62 mm DT machine guns
EngineMikulin Model V-2 V12 diesel
600 hp (450 kW)
Power/weight11.8 hp/tonne
SuspensionTorsion bar
Operational
range
Road:
250 km (160 mi)
Cross-country:
180 km (110 mi)[6]
Maximum speed 40 km/h (25 mph)

The KV tanks were practically immune to the 3.7 cm KwK 36 and howitzer-like, short-barreled 7.5 cm KwK 37 guns mounted, respectively, on the early Panzer III and Panzer IV tanks fielded by the invading German forces. Until the Germans developed more effective guns, the KV-1 was invulnerable to almost any German weapon except the 8.8 cm Flak gun.[8]

Prior to the start of Operation Barbarossa in June 1941, about 500 of the over 22,000 tanks then in Soviet service were of the KV-1 type. As the war progressed, it became evident that there was little sense in producing the expensive KV tanks, as the T-34 medium tank performed better (or at least equally well) in all practical respects. In fact the only advantage the KV had over the T-34/76 was its larger and roomier three-man turret.[9] Later in the war, the KV series became a base for the development of the IS (Iosif Stalin) series of tanks and self-propelled guns.

Development history Edit

 
KV-1 with KV-1S turret in the Great Patriotic War Museum, Moscow.

After disappointing results with the multi-turreted T-35 heavy tank, Soviet tank designers started drawing up replacements. The T-35 conformed to the 1920s notion of a "breakthrough tank" with very heavy firepower though its armour protection was lacking and it suffered from poor mobility. The Spanish Civil War demonstrated the need for much heavier armour on tanks,[citation needed] and was the main influence on Soviet tank design just prior to World War II.

Several competing designs were offered, and even more were drawn up prior to reaching prototype stage. All had heavy armour, torsion-bar suspension, wide tracks, and were of welded and cast construction. One of the main competing designs was the SMK, which in its final form had two turrets, mounting one 76.2 mm and one 45 mm weapon. The designers of the SMK independently drew up a single-turreted variant and this received approval at the highest level. Two of these, named after the People's Commissar for Defence, were ordered alongside a single SMK. The smaller hull and single turret enabled the designer to install heavy frontal and turret armour while keeping the weight within manageable limits.

The KV was ordered right off the drawing board.[10] When the Soviets entered the Winter War, the SMK, KV and a third design, the T-100, were sent to be tested in combat conditions. The KV outperformed the SMK and T-100 designs. The KV's heavy armour proved highly resistant to Finnish anti-tank weapons, making it more difficult to stop. In 1939, the production of 50 KVs was ordered. During the war, the Soviets found it difficult to deal with the concrete bunkers used by the Finns and a request was made for a tank with a large howitzer. One of the rush projects to meet the request was to put the howitzer in a new turret on one of the KV tanks.[11] Initially known as 'Malen'kaya Bashenka' (little turret kv) and 'Bol'shaya Bashnya',(big turret kv) the 76-mm-armed tank was redesignated as the KV-1 Heavy Tank and the 152 mm howitzer one as KV-2 Heavy Artillery Tank.

KV tanks first faced the Germans in the Battle of Raseiniai, just after the start of Operation Barbarossa. On 23 June, over 200 German tanks advancing through Lithuania encountered Soviet armor, including KV-1 and KV-2 tanks. While their frontal armor was sufficient to deflect anti-tank fire, German troops were able to outflank them and destroy them with explosive charges or lure them to within point-blank range of direct-fire artillery. Of the more than 200 Soviet tanks lost at Raseiniai, 29 were KVs.[10]

The KV's strengths included armor that was impenetrable by any tank-mounted weapon then in service[12] except at point-blank range, that it had good firepower, and that it had good flotation on soft ground. It also had serious flaws: it was difficult to steer; the transmission (which was a twenty-year-old Holt Caterpillar design)[13] "was the main stumbling block of the KV-1, and there was some truth to rumors of Soviet drivers having to shift gears with a hand sledge";[13] and the ergonomics were poor, with limited visibility.[14] Furthermore, at 45 tons, it was simply too heavy. This severely impacted the maneuverability, not so much in terms of maximum speed, as through inability to cross many bridges medium tanks could cross.[15] The KV outweighed most other tanks of the era, being about twice as heavy as the heaviest German tank at that time (before the Tiger). As appliqué armour and other improvements were added without increasing engine power, later models were less capable of keeping up to speed with medium tanks and had more trouble with difficult terrain. In addition, its firepower was no better than that of the T-34.[13] It took field reports from senior commanders "and certified heroes", who could be honest without risk of punishment, to reveal "what a dog the KV-1 really was".[13]

Further development Edit

By 1942, when the Germans were fielding large numbers of long-barreled 5 cm Pak 38 and 7.5 cm Pak 40 anti-tank guns, the KV's armour was no longer impenetrable, requiring the installation of additional appliqué armour. The KV-1's side (favorable approach: 30° at 300–500 m distance), top, and turret armor could also be penetrated by the high-velocity Mk 101 30 mm cannon carried by German ground attack aircraft, such as the Henschel Hs 129.[16] The KV-1's 76.2 mm gun also came in for criticism. While adequate against all German tanks, it was the same gun as carried by smaller, faster, and cheaper T-34 medium tanks. In 1943, it was determined that this gun could not easily penetrate the frontal armour of the new Tiger, the first German heavy tank, one of which was captured near Leningrad.[17] The KV-1 was also much more difficult to manufacture and thus more expensive than the T-34, its advantages no longer outweighed its drawbacks.

 
KV-1 produced in 1942, displayed in the Finnish Tank Museum in Parola

Because of its initial superior performance, the KV-1 was chosen as one of the few tanks to continue being built following the Soviet reorganization of tank production. Due to the new standardization, it shared a similar engine and gun as the T-34 (the KV used a 600 hp V-2K modification of the T-34's V-2 diesel engine, and had a ZiS-5 main gun while the T-34 had a similar F-34 main gun), was built in large quantities and received frequent upgrades.[citation needed] When production shifted to the "Tankograd" complex in the Ural Mountains, the KV-2 was dropped. While impressive on paper, it had been designed as a slow-moving bunker-buster. It was less useful in the highly mobile, fluid warfare that developed in World War II. The turret was so heavy it was difficult to traverse on uneven terrain. Finally, it was expensive to produce. Only about 210 KV-2s were made, all in 1940–1941, making it one of the rarest Soviet tanks. The KV-1 continued to get more armor to compensate for the increasing effectiveness of German weapons. This culminated in the KV-1 model 1942 (German designation KV-1C), which had very heavy armor but lacked a corresponding improvement to the engine. Tankers complained that, although they were well-protected, their mobility was poor and they had no firepower advantage over the T-34 medium tank.[citation needed]

KV-1S Edit

In response to criticisms, the lighter KV-1S was developed, with thinner armor and a smaller, lower turret in order to reclaim some speed. The KV-1S had a commander's cupola with all-around vision blocks. It also had a sophisticated planetary transmission that significantly increased the reliability, and allowed use of more efficient regenerative geared steering, unlike the solely clutch and brake steering systems used by the Panzer III, IV and T-34 and previous KV tanks. Its reduced weight allowed it to achieve a top speed of 43.3 km/h. Over 1,300 were built before production ended in August 1943.[18] Although the KV-1S was, according to some, the best of the KV tanks, overcoming its predecessors' problems (at a cost of losing the heavy armor that made the earlier tanks so valuable, making it more of a slow medium tank than a heavy tank), more modern tanks were already in sight.[19] Up-arming the regular turret of the KV-1S with an 85 mm S-31 resulted in the KV-1S-85. This was rejected as it came with the unacceptable loss of a dedicated commander, reducing the turret crew to two (unlike the 3-man turret fitted to the T-34/85).[20] However, the thinning-out of the armor called into question why the tank was being produced at all, when the T-34 could seemingly do everything the KV could do and much more cheaply. The Soviet heavy tank program was close to cancellation in mid-1943.

The appearance of the German Panther tank in the summer of 1943 convinced the Red Army to make a serious upgrade of its tank force for the first time since 1941. Soviet tanks needed bigger guns to take on the growing numbers of Panthers and the few Tigers.

KV-85 Edit

A stopgap upgrade to the KV series was the short-lived KV-85 or Objekt 239. This was a KV-1S with the new turret from the Object 237 (IS-85) still in development, mounting the same 85 mm D-5T gun as the SU-85 and early versions of the T-34-85 (not yet in production at the time). The 85 mm proved capable of penetrating the Tiger I from 1000 m and the demand for it slowed production of the KV-85 tremendously, only 148 were built between August and October 1943.[21] Soviet industry was therefore able to produce a heavy tank as well armed as the Tiger I before the end of 1943. Although the KV-85 was an excellent opponent to the Tigers and Panthers, it was a stopgap and thus was built in small numbers.[18] The complete Object 237 was accepted into service as the IS-85 and was produced in the autumn and winter of 1943-44; they were sent to the front as of October 1943 and production of the IS-85/IS-1 was stopped by the spring of 1944 once the IS-122/IS-2 entered full-scale production.

Successor Edit

A new heavy tank design entered production late in 1943 based on the work done on the KV-13. Because Voroshilov had fallen out of political favour, the new heavy tank series was named the Iosif Stalin tank, after the Soviet leader Stalin. The KV-13 program's IS-85 prototype was accepted for production as the IS-1 (or IS-85, Object 237) heavy tank. After testing with both the 100 mm D-10 and 122 mm guns, the D-25T 122 mm gun was selected as the main armament of the new tank, primarily because of its ready availability and the effect of its large high-explosive shell when attacking German fortifications. The 122 mm D-25T used a separate shell and powder charge, resulting in a lower rate of fire and reduced ammunition capacity. While the 122 mm armour-piercing shell had a lower muzzle velocity than similar late German 7.5 cm and 8.8 cm guns, proving-ground tests established that the 122 mm could penetrate the frontal armour of the German Panther tank at 2500 metres[22] and the HE shell would easily blow off the drive sprocket and tread of the heaviest German tank or self-propelled gun. The IS-122 replaced the IS-85, and began mass production as the IS-2. The 85 mm gun saw service in the lighter SU-85 and T-34-85.

Models Edit

The Soviets did not recognize different production models of KV-1 during the war; designations like model 1939 (M1939, Russian: Obr. 1939) were introduced later in military publications. These designations, however, are not strict and describe leading changes, while other changes might be adapted earlier or later in specific production batches. Designations like KV-1A were applied by the Germans during the war.[citation needed] All tanks in the series were heavily based on the KV-1.

 
KV-1 model 1939
 
A KV-1B at the Bovington Tank Museum
  • KV-0 - Prototype tank for KV-1. It was armed with 2 guns, 76mm and 45mm gun.
  • KV-1
    • Model 1939 – First production models, these tanks were prone to frequent breakdowns, but were highly resistant to anti-tank weapons during the Winter War. Armed with the 76 mm L-11 tank gun, recognizable due to a recuperator above a barrel. Most tanks were lacking the hull machine gun, earlier ones also had cast turret (different from one used on 1941/42 models). 141 were built.
    • Model 1940 (German designation: KW-1A) – Used the F-32 [ru] 76 mm gun and a new mantlet. The main production model by the time of the German invasion.
    • Model 1940 s ekranami ("with shields") or KW-1E – with additional bolted-on appliqué armour and F-32 gun.
    • Model 1941 (German designation: KW-1B) – Up-armoured with 25–35 mm (0.98–1.38 in) added to the turret, hull front and sides. Later tanks had cast turrets. This tank was armed with the longer-barreled ZiS-5 tank gun.
    • Model 1942 (German designation: KW-1C) – Fully cast turret with thicker armour, again up-armoured, using an improved engine and the 76 mm ZiS-5 tank gun.
    • KV-1S – A variant with higher speed, but thinner armour. A new, smaller, cast turret and redesigned rear hull with a new planetary transmission. 1370 built.
 
The KV-2 heavy artillery tank's 152 mm howitzer was housed in an enormous turret. This prototype differs from the production version in several ways. It was called the Dreadnought by its crews.[23]
 
Comparison of selected KV tank chassis variants.
  • KV-2 (204) – A heavy assault tank with the M-10 152 mm howitzer, the KV-2 was produced at the same time as the KV-1. Due to the size of its heavy turret and gun, the KV-2 was slower and had a much higher profile than the KV-1. Those captured and used by the German Army were known as (Sturm)Panzerkampfwagen KW-II 754(r).[24] Few were produced due to its combat ineffectiveness, mainly the decreased speed due to the weight of the new gun and turret. Due to an increase in turret weight from the expanded dimensions and a heavier gun, the turret traverse mechanism could work only on level ground.
    • KV-2 (ZiS-6) - In March 1941 a single ZiS-6 [ru] was placed into a KV-2 turret for testing. It passed testing by June 1941, after which it was sent to the Artillery Scientific Test Range at Leningrad. While further fate of the vehicle is unknown, it was possibly used (and destroyed) in combat while defending Leningrad.
 
T-150-KV
  • Т-150 (Object 150) - One of a pair of designs requested 17 June 1940. Armour specified at 90 mm, which caused weight to reach 50 tons, so the 600 hp V-2K was replaced with the 700 hp V-5 engine. In addition to the improved armour, the turret had a cupola but otherwise followed the design of the KV-1. One prototype was constructed in 1941 and was destroyed defending Leningrad. On 15 March 1941 the design was approved for production as the KV-3.[25][26]
  • T-220 (Object 220) (also called KV-220) - One of a pair of designs requested 17 June 1940. Longer chassis with 7 rollers per side. Armour specified at 100 mm. Prototype trialed with V-2PUN and V-2SN engines. but suffered engine and suspension problems. New diamond-shaped turret fitted with 85 mm F-30 cannon, but development changed to fitting 107mm F-39 instead. One prototype was constructed in 1941, but did not enter serial production. The prototype later had its turret replaced by standard KV-1 turret and redesignated as KV-220-2, it was destroyed in its first battle with 124th Tank Division. Original turret was mounted as static pillbox, its further fate is unknown.[25][26]

  • KV-3 (Objects 150, 220, 221, 222, and 223) - Designation initially approved 15 March 1941 for production version of Object 150 tank design. Further developments were made on the basis of the Object 220, in the form of the Object 221 (with an 85 mm gun), Object 222 (with the F-32 76.2 mm gun) and Object 223 (built to develop a new conical turret to house the 107 mm gun, now specified to be the ZiS-6 cannon). Series production was intended to start in late 1941, but the German invasion of the USSR halted these plans and the only prototype hull was destroyed. The design was accepted for service May 1941 and was to have entered production at the Kirovsky Plant in August 1941, but the German invasion forced this to be abandoned.[25][26]
  • KV-4 (Object 224) - A project for a super-heavy tank. About 20 different designs were proposed, but it was cancelled due to the outbreak of the war. Different versions would have been between roughly 85 and 110 tonnes, with armour thickness ranging from 120 to 190 mm. Armament consisted of the 107 mm ZiS-6 cannon. Different variants had various auxiliary weapons: 45 mm, 76 mm cannons, machine guns, and flamethrowers in addition to the main gun.[27]
  • KV-5 (Object 225) - A cancelled project for a super-heavy tank. Armament was to be a 107 mm ZiS-6 gun in a large turret and a machine gun in a small secondary turret. Weight was projected as about 100 tons, and the tank was to have 150–180 mm of armour. Project development began in June 1941, however was cancelled due to the Siege of Leningrad, in which all developmental operations at the Kirov Plant were halted. The project fell out of favour from the more advanced heavy tank designs, and no prototype was built.[27]
  • KV-6 This vehicle was a flamethrower variant. At least four were used in the battle of Leningrad.[citation needed] It is not to be confused with the fictional KV-VI super heavy tank, built by modeler Brian Fowler in 1995.
  • KV-7 (Object 227) (also called U-13). - Experimental self-propelled gun with 100 mm of frontal armour, armed with 3 cannons: two 45 mm model 1932/34 and one 76 mm F-34. 200 rounds of ammunition was carried for the 45 mm guns and 93 rounds for the 76 mm gun. One unit was produced and tested in 1941.
  • KV-7-2 (improved variant) (also called U-14) had two 76 mm F-34 cannons, and 85 mm of frontal armour. Vehicles were not taken in service primarily because they could not fight tanks (the KV-7s had only 15 degree gun traverse to each side) and could not combat concrete bunkers due to the small caliber of the guns. After the failure of the KV-7 it was decided to put one 152 mm gun in the casemate instead of three smaller guns; this led to the development of the SU-152.
 
U-18
  • U-18 - Experimental self-propelled gun. KV-7 armed with 152 mm ML-20 gun-howitzer. Vehicle was projected in 1941. Wooden mockup was constructed. Project was cancelled, but this vehicle was a first step towards SU-152 design.
  • S-51 (also called U-19) - Experimental self-propelled gun projected by the Grabin Artillery Projects Central Department armed with the 203 mm howitzer M1931 (B-4) in a KV-1S hull. The vehicle was to have 75 mm of frontal armour, 60 mm on the side, and the roof was to be 30 mm (the roof would have been removable to facilitate loading). It was projected to weigh 66 tons, one prototype passed by the testing grounds in the spring of 1944 but was not very successful and cancelled within a year.
  • SU-152 - See SU-152. Heavy assault gun based on the KV-1S chassis using 152 mm ML-20 gun-howitzer.
  • ZiK-20 - The ZiK-20 was very similar to the U-19 (S-51), but had 105 mm of frontal armour, 75 mm of side armour, and was to mount a ML-20 gun. By the time its wooden mockup was made the KV-1 was phased out of production. However, just before the project was cancelled a blueprint was drawn up to equip the ZiK-20 with a 152 mm gun M1935 (Br-2), and to offset the weight the frontal armour was to be reduced to 75 mm (or 60 mm on the KV-1S chassis).
  • SU-203 - SU-152 equipped with 203 mm M-4 mortar. Never built.
  • KV-8 (102) – A KV-1 fitted with the ATO-41 flamethrower in the turret,[28] beside a machine gun.[citation needed] In order to accommodate the new weapon, the 76.2 mm gun was replaced with a smaller 45 mm gun M1932, though it was disguised to look like the standard 76 mm (the cannon was placed inside a 76 mm tube).[citation needed]
    • KV-8S (35) – The same as KV-8, but based on KV-1S. Equipped with ATO-42 flamethrower (improved version of ATO-41).[28] The smaller turret of the KV-1S caused space limitations, so 25 of the KV-8S had the original KV-8 turret mated to the KV-1S hull, while the remaining 10 had a KV-1S turret with ATO-42 flamethrower but lacked the coaxial machine gun.[citation needed]
    • KV-8M - Upgraded version of KV-8S. Equipped with two flamethrowers. Two prototypes were constructed.[citation needed]
  • KV-9 (Object 229) - A KV-1 with short 122 mm U-11 howitzer. One prototype was constructed and proved in 1941.
  • KV-10 (Object 230) - Also known as KV-1K. A KV-1 with 4 rocket launchers on the sides of its hull. Each launcher contained two 132 mm M-13 rockets. Early variant of KV-1K had two launchers on the back of the hull, each contained 6 rockets. One prototype was constructed and tested in 1942. Not taken into service.
  • KV-11 (Object 231) - KV-1 armed with 85 mm F-30 cannon. Projected in 1942. Not built.
 
КV-12
  • KV-12 (Object 232) - Experimental chemical tank. Was equipped with 4 external toxin tanks on rear of chassis. Tanks surrounded with 30 mm armour. Not taken into service.
  • KV-13/IS Model 1 (Object 233) - Prototype of a medium tank. Designation for an advanced redesign of the KV series, which resulted in the production of the IS series.
    • IS Model 2 - A KV-13, with turret and armament of a KV-9. One prototype was constructed and proved in 1943. Tank had lost competition to IS-1 and was not taken into service.
  • KV-14 (Object 236) – Prototype designation for a 152 mm self-propelled gun, accepted for service as the SU-152.
  • KV-85 (Object 239) – A KV-1S with the 85 mm D-5T cannon in a new turret, with the ball mounted hull machine gun repositioned to the right of driver (now fixed mount) and the hole welded shut; 148 of these tanks were produced in the second half of 1943 until the spring of 1944 as a stopgap until the IS tank series entered production.[29]
    • KV-85G - KV-1S with 85 mm S-31 cannon. Turret and mantlet remained from conventional KV-1S. This variant was a competitor of the KV-85 during proving. It lost the competition and was not taken into service.
    • KV-122 - A KV-1S with short 122 mm S-41 howitzer. One prototype was made in 1943. Not taken into service.[30]
    • KV-100 - A KV-85 with the 100 mm S-34 cannon. One prototype was made in 1944. Not taken into service.
    • KV-122 - A KV-85 with the 122 mm D-25T cannon. One prototype was made in 1944. Not taken into service.
    • KV-152 - Proposal to fit a 152 mm gun into the turret of a KV-85. Nothing became of the project.

KV and other heavy Soviet tanks compared Edit

Soviet heavy tanks of World War II[31]
T-35 KV-1
M1940
KV-1
M1941
KV-1
M1942
KV-1S
M1942
KV-85
M1943
IS-2
M1945
IS-3[32]
M1945
Crew 11 5 5 5 5 4 4 4
Weight (tonnes) 45 43 45 47 42.5 46 46 46.5
Gun 76.2 mm
M. 27/32
76.2 mm
F-32 (L/31.5)
76.2 mm
ZiS-5 (L/42.5)
76.2 mm
ZiS-5
76.2 mm
ZiS-5
85 mm
D-5T
122 mm
D-25T
122 mm
D-25T
Ammunition 100 111 111 114 114 70 28 28
Secondary armament 45 mm tank gun (20-K)
5×7.62 mm
2× 7.62 mm DT machine gun 4×DT 4×DT 4×DT 3×DT 3×DT, 1 x 12.7mmDShK 2×DT, DShK
Engine 500 hp
M-17M gasoline
600 hp
V-2K diesel
600 hp
V-2
600 hp
V-2
600 hp
V-2
600 hp
V-2
600 hp
V-2
600 hp
V-2-IS
Fuel (litres) 910 600 600 600 975 975 820 520 + 270
Road speed (km/h) 30 35 35 28 45 40 37 37
Road range (km) 150 250 250 250 380 340 240 150 (225)
Cross-country range (km) 70 150 150 150 240 220 180 120 (175)
Armour (mm) 11–30 25–75 30–90 20–130 30–82 30–160 30–160 20–220

Combat history Edit

June 1941 Battle of Raseiniai Edit

 
A KV-1 on fire, knocked out near Voronezh in 1942.

A KV-1 or KV-2 tank (accounts vary) advanced far behind the German lines after attacking a column of German trucks. The tank stopped on a road across soft ground and was engaged by four 50 mm anti-tank guns of the anti-tank battalion of the 6th Panzer Division. The tank was hit many times but returned fire, disabling all four guns. A heavy 8.8 cm gun of the German division's anti-aircraft battalion was moved about 730 m (800 yd) behind the tank but was knocked out by the tank gunner before it could score a hit. During the night, German combat engineers attempted to destroy the tank with satchel charges and failed, despite possibly damaging the tracks. Early on the morning of 25 June, German tanks fired on the KV from the woodland while an 88 mm targeted the tank from its rear. Of several shots fired, only two penetrated the tank. German infantry then advanced, with the KV opening machine-gun fire against them.[33] The tank's resistance was finally ended by grenades thrown into the tank's hatches. According to some accounts, the crew was buried by the German soldiers with full military honours; in other accounts, the crew escaped during the night.[33]

General Erhard Raus was commander of the Kampfgruppe of the 6th Panzer Division, the unit delayed by the lone vehicle.[f] He described it as a KV-1, which was damaged by several 8.8 cm anti-tank gun shots fired from behind the vehicle while it was distracted by Panzer 35(t) tanks from Panzer Battalion 65, and the KV-1 crew were killed by members of a pioneer unit who pushed grenades through two holes made by the gun while the turret began moving again, the other five or six shots having not fully penetrated. Apparently, the KV-1 crew had remarkably only been stunned by the shots which had entered the turret. Afterwards, they were buried nearby with military honours by the German unit.[34][a]

Krasnogvardeysk Edit

On August 14, 1941, the vanguard of the German 8th Panzer Division approached Krasnogvardeysk (Gatchina) near Leningrad (St Petersburg), and the only Soviet force available at the time to attempt to stop the German advance consisted of five well-hidden KV-1 tanks, dug in within a grove at the edge of a swamp. KV-1 tank no. 864 was commanded by the leader of this small force, Lieutenant Zinoviy Kolobanov.

German forces attacked Krasnogvardeysk from three directions. Near Noviy Uchkhoz settlement the geography favoured the Soviet defenders as the only road in the region passed the swamp, and the defenders commanded this choke point from their hidden position. Lieutenant Kolobanov had carefully studied the situation and readied his detachment the day before. Each KV-1 tank carried twice the normal amount of ammunition, two-thirds being armour-piercing rounds. Kolobanov ordered his other commanders to hold their fire and await orders. He did not want to reveal the total force, so only one exposed tank at a time would engage the enemy.

On August 14, the German 8th Panzer Division's vanguard ventured directly into the well-prepared Soviet ambush, with Kolobanov's tank knocking out the lead German tank with its first shot. The Germans falsely assumed that their lead tank had hit an anti-tank mine, and failed to realize that they had been ambushed. The German column stopped, giving Kolobanov the opportunity to destroy the second tank. Only then did the Germans realize they were under attack, but they failed to find the source of the shots. While the German tanks were firing blindly, Kolobanov knocked out the trailing German tank, thus boxing in the entire column.

Although the Germans correctly guessed the direction of fire, they could only spot Lieutenant Kolobanov's tank, and now attempted to engage an unseen enemy. German tanks moving off the road bogged down in the surrounding soft ground, becoming easy targets. 22 German tanks and 2 towed artillery pieces fell victim to Kolobanov's No. 864 before it ran out of ammunition. Kolobanov ordered in another KV-1, and 21 more German tanks were destroyed before the half-hour battle ended. A total of 43 German tanks were destroyed by just five Soviet KV-1s (two more remained in reserve).

After the battle, the crew of No. 864 counted a total of 135 hits on their tank, none of which had penetrated the KV-1's armour. Lieutenant Kolobanov was awarded the Order of Lenin, while his Gunner Usov was awarded the Order of the Red Banner. Later, former Captain Zinoviy Kolobanov was again decorated by Soviet authorities, despite having been convicted and downgraded after the Winter War for "fraternizing with the enemy." Lieutenant Kolobanov served in the post-war Soviet occupation zone in East Germany, where he was convicted again and transferred to the reserves when a subordinate escaped to the British occupation zone.

The battle for Krasnogvardeysk was covered up by Soviet propaganda. A monument dedicated to this battle was installed in the village of Noviy Uchkhoz in 1980, at the place where Kolobanov's KV-1 was dug in, due solely to the demands of the villagers. It was impossible to find a KV-1 tank, so an IS-2 heavy tank was installed there instead.[36]

The Soviet victory was the result of a well-planned ambush in advantageous ground and of technical superiority. Most of the German tanks in this battle were Panzer IIs, armed with 20 mm guns, and a few Panzer IIIs armed with 37 mm KwK 36 L/46.5 guns. The German tank guns had neither the range nor the power of the 76 mm main gun of a KV-1, and the narrower track width of the German tanks caused them to become trapped in the swampy ground.

Other users Edit

When German forces used captured KV-1s, they were renamed as "Panzerkampfwagen KV-IA 753(r)"[37]

The Finnish forces had two KV-1s, nicknamed Klimi, a Model 1940 and Model 1941, both of which received minor upgrades in their service, and both of which survived the war.[citation needed]

Romanian forces captured one KV-1 as of 1 November 1942 and one more in March 1944.[38]

Production Edit

Production numbers[39]
Year KV-1 KV-2 KV-1S KV-8/8S KV-85 SU-152
1940 139 110
1941 1,252 100
1942 1,802 626 127
1943 459 10 148 670
Total 3,193 210 1,085 137 148 670

See also Edit

Tanks of comparable role, performance and era Edit

References Edit

Footnotes Edit

  1. ^ In 1965, the remains of the crew were exhumed and reburied at the military cemetery in Raseiniai. According to research by Russian military historian Maxim Kolomiets, the tank may have been from the 3rd Company of the 1st Battalion, 4th Tank Regiment, part of the 2nd Tank Division. It is impossible to clarify the crew's names because the documents were buried in the woods north of Raseiniai during the retreat.[35]

Citations Edit

  1. ^ Zaloga; including variants and prototypes
  2. ^ Soviet Tanks and Combat Vehicles of World War Two (Steven J. Zaloga, James Grandsen) page 119.
  3. ^ a b c Fleischer, Wolfgang, Russian Tanks and Armoured Vehicles 1917-1945, p. 150
  4. ^ Soviet Tanks and Combat Vehicles of World War Two (Steven J. Zaloga, James Grandsen) page 176.
  5. ^ "KV-85 total production". Tank Encyclopedia.
  6. ^ Soviet Tanks and Combat Vehicles of World War Two (Steven J. Zaloga, James Grandsen) page 176.
  7. ^ Vollert (2005), p. 59.
  8. ^ Glantz, David M. (1995). When Titans Clash: How the Red Army Stopped Hitler. University Press of Kansas. p. 36. ISBN 9780700608997.
  9. ^ Ogorkiewicz, Richard (2015). Tanks: 100 years of evolution. Osprey. p. 94.
  10. ^ a b The KV-1 Tank Blundered Its Way Into History - Warisboring.com, 17 October 2016
  11. ^ Zaloga p. 7
  12. ^ Russel H. S. Stolfi (1991). Hitler's panzers east: World War II reinterpreted. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 158. ISBN 9780806125817.
  13. ^ a b c d Sewell, Stephen, CW2 (rtd) (11 November 2015), "Why Three Tanks?", Armor, no. July–August 1998, p. 24 – via tankandafvnews.com{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  14. ^ Zaloga (1995). KV-1 & 2: Heavy Tanks 1939–1945. Bloomsbury USA. p. 9. ISBN 9781855324961.
  15. ^ Steven J. Zaloga; Peter Sarson (January 1994). IS-2 Heavy Tank 1944–73. Bloomsbury USA. p. 3. ISBN 9781855323964.
  16. ^ Pegg, Martin (1997). Hs 129 Panzerjager!. Classic Publications. ISBN 0952686716.
  17. ^ Pyatakhin, Dmitry. . Achtung Panzer. Archived from the original on 20 December 2010. Retrieved 3 January 2011.
  18. ^ a b Vollert (2005), p. 33.
  19. ^ Vollert (2005), p. 34.
  20. ^ Vollert (2005), p. 40.
  21. ^ Stokes, p. 33
  22. ^ Tolochkov; Volosatov (September 12, 1944). . The Russian Battlefield. Archived from the original on 29 October 2014. Retrieved 27 October 2014.
  23. ^ Zaloga & Gransden, 1984, pp.118–19
  24. ^ Vollert, Jochen (2013). Panzerkampfwagen T 34-747 (r) : the Soviet T-34 Tank as Beutepanzer und Panzerattrappe in German Wehrmacht Service 1941-45. Erlangen: Tankograd Publishing. ISBN 978-3-936519-36-5. OCLC 867146299.
  25. ^ a b c Potapov, Valeri. . The Russian Battlefield. Archived from the original on 24 February 2019. Retrieved 25 October 2014.
  26. ^ a b c Zaloga & Kinnear, 1995, p13
  27. ^ a b Zaloga (2013), p. 16.
  28. ^ a b Bishop 2002, p. 270.
  29. ^ Boldyrev, Eugeni. . english.battlefield.ru. Archived from the original on 31 March 2015. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
  30. ^ Солянкин А.Г., Павлов М.В., Павлов И.В., Желтов И.Т. Отечественные бронированные машины. ХХ век. Том 2. 1941–1945 (Domestic Armoured Vehicles. XXth Century. Volume 2. 1941–1945). Moscow, 2005. P. 238
  31. ^ Zaloga & Grandsen (1984) pp. 119, 176
  32. ^ IS-3 Model 1945 2014-08-11 at the Wayback Machine onwar.com
  33. ^ a b Buttar 2013, p. 85.
  34. ^ Raus 2003, pp. 32–33.
  35. ^ Dobrovolsky, Alexander (29 April 2015). "Один день из жизни "Климента Ворошилова"" [A Day in the Life of a Kliment Voroshilov]. Moskovsky Komsomolets (in Russian). Retrieved 11 October 2016.
  36. ^ Герой, не ставший героем (in Russian)
  37. ^ Regenberg, Werner (1990). Captured Tanks Under the German Flag: Russian Battle Tanks. United States: Schiffer Publishing. p. 45. ISBN 0887402011.
  38. ^ Mark Axworthy, Cornel I. Scafeș, Cristian Crăciunoiu, Third Axis, Fourth Ally: Romanian Armed Forces in the European War, 1941-1945, pp. 220 and 221
  39. ^ Stokes, pp. 30–33

Bibliography Edit

  • Buttar, Prit (2013). Between Giants: The Battle for the Baltics in World War II. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 9781472802873.
  • Raus, Erhard (2003). Panzer Operations: The Eastern Front Memoir of General Raus, 1941-1945. Translated by Newton, Steven H. Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0-306-81247-7.
  • Stokes, Neil (2010). KV Technical History & Variants. Canada: Air Connection Hobby. ISBN 978-0-9781091-2-7.
  • Vollert, Jochen (2005). Tankograd Militar Fahrzeug - Special No. 2003 Soviet Special - KV-1 Soviet Heavy Tanks of WWII - Late Variants. Tankograd Publishing.
  • Zaloga, Steven J.; Grandsen, James (1981). Soviet Heavy Tanks. Vanguard 24. London: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 0-85045-422-0.
  • Zaloga, Steven J.; Grandsen, James (1984). Soviet Tanks and Combat Vehicles of World War Two. London: Arms and Armour Press. ISBN 0-85368-606-8.
  • Zaloga, Steven J; Kinnear, Jim (1995), KV-1 & 2 Heavy Tanks 1939–1945, New Vanguard 17, illustrated by Peter Sarson, Oxford: Osprey Publishing, ISBN 1-85532-496-2
  • Bishop, Chris (2002). The Encyclopedia of Weapons of World War II. Sterling Publishing Company, Inc. ISBN 978-1-58663-762-0.

External links Edit

  • OnWar specifications: , , , , ,
  • Walkaround KV-85 from Avtovo, Saint-Petersburg (Russia)
  • KV tanks, KV tanks in museum and monuments
  • KV-2 "test drive" (video)

kliment, voroshilov, tank, redirect, here, tombs, kliment, voroshilov, tanks, series, soviet, heavy, tanks, named, after, soviet, defence, commissar, politician, kliment, voroshilov, operated, with, army, during, world, tanks, were, known, their, heavy, armour. KV 2 and KV 5 redirect here For the tombs see KV2 and KV5 The Kliment Voroshilov KV tanks are a series of Soviet heavy tanks named after the Soviet defence commissar and politician Kliment Voroshilov who operated with the Red Army during World War II The KV tanks were known for their heavy armour protection during the early stages of the war especially during the first year of the German invasion of the Soviet Union In certain situations even a single KV 1 or KV 2 supported by infantry could halt German formations The German Wehrmacht at that time rarely deployed its tanks against KVs as their own armament was too poor to deal with the Russischer Koloss Russian Colossus 7 KV 1KV 1 on display in KirovskTypeHeavy tankPlace of originSoviet UnionService historyIn service1939 1945Used byPoland Soviet UnionWarsWinter War World War IIProduction historyDesignerZhozef Kotin TsKB 2Designed1938 1939ManufacturerKirov Factory ChTZProduced1939 1943No built5 219 1 VariantsKV 2 KV 8 flamethrower KV 1S KV 85 KV 122Specifications KV 1 Model 1941 Mass45 t 44 long tons 50 short tons Length6 75 m 22 ft 2 in Width3 32 m 10 ft 11 in Height2 71 m 8 ft 11 in Crew5ArmourMaximum front 90 mm 3 5 in Side 75 mm 3 0 in Rear 70 mm 2 8 in Mainarmament76 2 mm M1941 ZiS 5 gunSecondaryarmament3 or 4 DT machine gunsEngineModel V 2 V12 diesel engine600 hp 450 kW Power weight13 hp tonneSuspensionTorsion barOperationalrangeRoad 250 km 160 mi Cross country 150 km 93 mi 2 Maximum speed35 km h 22 mph KV 2KV 2 in Central Armed Forces Museum with KV 1 in backgroundTypeHeavy tank assault gunPlace of originSoviet UnionService historyIn service1940 1945Used bySoviet UnionWarsWorld War IIProduction historyDesignerZh Kotin TsKB 2Designed1938 1939ManufacturerKirov Factory ChTZNo built210SpecificationsMass52 t 51 long tons 57 short tons Length6 67 m 21 ft 11 in 3 Width3 35 m 11 ft 0 in 3 Height3 25 m 10 ft 8 in 3 Crew6Armour60 110 mm 2 4 4 3 in Mainarmament152 mm M 10T howitzer 20 rounds Secondaryarmament2 DT machine guns 2 079 rounds EngineModel V2 K 12 cylinder diesel550 hp 410 kW OperationalrangeRoad 225 km 140 mi Cross country 150 km 93 mi 4 Maximum speed28 km h 17 mph KV 85KV 85TypeHeavy tankPlace of originSoviet UnionService historyUsed bySoviet UnionWarsWorld War IIProduction historyProduced1943No built148 5 SpecificationsMass46 t 45 long tons 51 short tons Length8 49 m 27 ft 10 in Width3 25 m 10 ft 8 in Height2 87 m 9 ft 5 in Crew4Armour30 110 mm 1 2 4 3 in Mainarmament85 mm D 5T tank gunSecondaryarmament3 7 62 mm DT machine gunsEngineMikulin Model V 2 V12 diesel600 hp 450 kW Power weight11 8 hp tonneSuspensionTorsion barOperationalrangeRoad 250 km 160 mi Cross country 180 km 110 mi 6 Maximum speed40 km h 25 mph The KV tanks were practically immune to the 3 7 cm KwK 36 and howitzer like short barreled 7 5 cm KwK 37 guns mounted respectively on the early Panzer III and Panzer IV tanks fielded by the invading German forces Until the Germans developed more effective guns the KV 1 was invulnerable to almost any German weapon except the 8 8 cm Flak gun 8 Prior to the start of Operation Barbarossa in June 1941 about 500 of the over 22 000 tanks then in Soviet service were of the KV 1 type As the war progressed it became evident that there was little sense in producing the expensive KV tanks as the T 34 medium tank performed better or at least equally well in all practical respects In fact the only advantage the KV had over the T 34 76 was its larger and roomier three man turret 9 Later in the war the KV series became a base for the development of the IS Iosif Stalin series of tanks and self propelled guns Contents 1 Development history 1 1 Further development 1 2 KV 1S 1 3 KV 85 1 4 Successor 1 5 Models 1 6 KV and other heavy Soviet tanks compared 2 Combat history 2 1 June 1941 Battle of Raseiniai 2 2 Krasnogvardeysk 2 3 Other users 3 Production 4 See also 4 1 Tanks of comparable role performance and era 5 References 5 1 Footnotes 5 2 Citations 5 3 Bibliography 6 External linksDevelopment history Edit nbsp KV 1 with KV 1S turret in the Great Patriotic War Museum Moscow After disappointing results with the multi turreted T 35 heavy tank Soviet tank designers started drawing up replacements The T 35 conformed to the 1920s notion of a breakthrough tank with very heavy firepower though its armour protection was lacking and it suffered from poor mobility The Spanish Civil War demonstrated the need for much heavier armour on tanks citation needed and was the main influence on Soviet tank design just prior to World War II Several competing designs were offered and even more were drawn up prior to reaching prototype stage All had heavy armour torsion bar suspension wide tracks and were of welded and cast construction One of the main competing designs was the SMK which in its final form had two turrets mounting one 76 2 mm and one 45 mm weapon The designers of the SMK independently drew up a single turreted variant and this received approval at the highest level Two of these named after the People s Commissar for Defence were ordered alongside a single SMK The smaller hull and single turret enabled the designer to install heavy frontal and turret armour while keeping the weight within manageable limits The KV was ordered right off the drawing board 10 When the Soviets entered the Winter War the SMK KV and a third design the T 100 were sent to be tested in combat conditions The KV outperformed the SMK and T 100 designs The KV s heavy armour proved highly resistant to Finnish anti tank weapons making it more difficult to stop In 1939 the production of 50 KVs was ordered During the war the Soviets found it difficult to deal with the concrete bunkers used by the Finns and a request was made for a tank with a large howitzer One of the rush projects to meet the request was to put the howitzer in a new turret on one of the KV tanks 11 Initially known as Malen kaya Bashenka little turret kv and Bol shaya Bashnya big turret kv the 76 mm armed tank was redesignated as the KV 1 Heavy Tank and the 152 mm howitzer one as KV 2 Heavy Artillery Tank KV tanks first faced the Germans in the Battle of Raseiniai just after the start of Operation Barbarossa On 23 June over 200 German tanks advancing through Lithuania encountered Soviet armor including KV 1 and KV 2 tanks While their frontal armor was sufficient to deflect anti tank fire German troops were able to outflank them and destroy them with explosive charges or lure them to within point blank range of direct fire artillery Of the more than 200 Soviet tanks lost at Raseiniai 29 were KVs 10 The KV s strengths included armor that was impenetrable by any tank mounted weapon then in service 12 except at point blank range that it had good firepower and that it had good flotation on soft ground It also had serious flaws it was difficult to steer the transmission which was a twenty year old Holt Caterpillar design 13 was the main stumbling block of the KV 1 and there was some truth to rumors of Soviet drivers having to shift gears with a hand sledge 13 and the ergonomics were poor with limited visibility 14 Furthermore at 45 tons it was simply too heavy This severely impacted the maneuverability not so much in terms of maximum speed as through inability to cross many bridges medium tanks could cross 15 The KV outweighed most other tanks of the era being about twice as heavy as the heaviest German tank at that time before the Tiger As applique armour and other improvements were added without increasing engine power later models were less capable of keeping up to speed with medium tanks and had more trouble with difficult terrain In addition its firepower was no better than that of the T 34 13 It took field reports from senior commanders and certified heroes who could be honest without risk of punishment to reveal what a dog the KV 1 really was 13 Further development Edit By 1942 when the Germans were fielding large numbers of long barreled 5 cm Pak 38 and 7 5 cm Pak 40 anti tank guns the KV s armour was no longer impenetrable requiring the installation of additional applique armour The KV 1 s side favorable approach 30 at 300 500 m distance top and turret armor could also be penetrated by the high velocity Mk 101 30 mm cannon carried by German ground attack aircraft such as the Henschel Hs 129 16 The KV 1 s 76 2 mm gun also came in for criticism While adequate against all German tanks it was the same gun as carried by smaller faster and cheaper T 34 medium tanks In 1943 it was determined that this gun could not easily penetrate the frontal armour of the new Tiger the first German heavy tank one of which was captured near Leningrad 17 The KV 1 was also much more difficult to manufacture and thus more expensive than the T 34 its advantages no longer outweighed its drawbacks nbsp KV 1 produced in 1942 displayed in the Finnish Tank Museum in ParolaBecause of its initial superior performance the KV 1 was chosen as one of the few tanks to continue being built following the Soviet reorganization of tank production Due to the new standardization it shared a similar engine and gun as the T 34 the KV used a 600 hp V 2K modification of the T 34 s V 2 diesel engine and had a ZiS 5 main gun while the T 34 had a similar F 34 main gun was built in large quantities and received frequent upgrades citation needed When production shifted to the Tankograd complex in the Ural Mountains the KV 2 was dropped While impressive on paper it had been designed as a slow moving bunker buster It was less useful in the highly mobile fluid warfare that developed in World War II The turret was so heavy it was difficult to traverse on uneven terrain Finally it was expensive to produce Only about 210 KV 2s were made all in 1940 1941 making it one of the rarest Soviet tanks The KV 1 continued to get more armor to compensate for the increasing effectiveness of German weapons This culminated in the KV 1 model 1942 German designation KV 1C which had very heavy armor but lacked a corresponding improvement to the engine Tankers complained that although they were well protected their mobility was poor and they had no firepower advantage over the T 34 medium tank citation needed KV 1S Edit In response to criticisms the lighter KV 1S was developed with thinner armor and a smaller lower turret in order to reclaim some speed The KV 1S had a commander s cupola with all around vision blocks It also had a sophisticated planetary transmission that significantly increased the reliability and allowed use of more efficient regenerative geared steering unlike the solely clutch and brake steering systems used by the Panzer III IV and T 34 and previous KV tanks Its reduced weight allowed it to achieve a top speed of 43 3 km h Over 1 300 were built before production ended in August 1943 18 Although the KV 1S was according to some the best of the KV tanks overcoming its predecessors problems at a cost of losing the heavy armor that made the earlier tanks so valuable making it more of a slow medium tank than a heavy tank more modern tanks were already in sight 19 Up arming the regular turret of the KV 1S with an 85 mm S 31 resulted in the KV 1S 85 This was rejected as it came with the unacceptable loss of a dedicated commander reducing the turret crew to two unlike the 3 man turret fitted to the T 34 85 20 However the thinning out of the armor called into question why the tank was being produced at all when the T 34 could seemingly do everything the KV could do and much more cheaply The Soviet heavy tank program was close to cancellation in mid 1943 The appearance of the German Panther tank in the summer of 1943 convinced the Red Army to make a serious upgrade of its tank force for the first time since 1941 Soviet tanks needed bigger guns to take on the growing numbers of Panthers and the few Tigers KV 85 Edit A stopgap upgrade to the KV series was the short lived KV 85 or Objekt 239 This was a KV 1S with the new turret from the Object 237 IS 85 still in development mounting the same 85 mm D 5T gun as the SU 85 and early versions of the T 34 85 not yet in production at the time The 85 mm proved capable of penetrating the Tiger I from 1000 m and the demand for it slowed production of the KV 85 tremendously only 148 were built between August and October 1943 21 Soviet industry was therefore able to produce a heavy tank as well armed as the Tiger I before the end of 1943 Although the KV 85 was an excellent opponent to the Tigers and Panthers it was a stopgap and thus was built in small numbers 18 The complete Object 237 was accepted into service as the IS 85 and was produced in the autumn and winter of 1943 44 they were sent to the front as of October 1943 and production of the IS 85 IS 1 was stopped by the spring of 1944 once the IS 122 IS 2 entered full scale production Successor Edit A new heavy tank design entered production late in 1943 based on the work done on the KV 13 Because Voroshilov had fallen out of political favour the new heavy tank series was named the Iosif Stalin tank after the Soviet leader Stalin The KV 13 program s IS 85 prototype was accepted for production as the IS 1 or IS 85 Object 237 heavy tank After testing with both the 100 mm D 10 and 122 mm guns the D 25T 122 mm gun was selected as the main armament of the new tank primarily because of its ready availability and the effect of its large high explosive shell when attacking German fortifications The 122 mm D 25T used a separate shell and powder charge resulting in a lower rate of fire and reduced ammunition capacity While the 122 mm armour piercing shell had a lower muzzle velocity than similar late German 7 5 cm and 8 8 cm guns proving ground tests established that the 122 mm could penetrate the frontal armour of the German Panther tank at 2500 metres 22 and the HE shell would easily blow off the drive sprocket and tread of the heaviest German tank or self propelled gun The IS 122 replaced the IS 85 and began mass production as the IS 2 The 85 mm gun saw service in the lighter SU 85 and T 34 85 Models Edit The Soviets did not recognize different production models of KV 1 during the war designations like model 1939 M1939 Russian Obr 1939 were introduced later in military publications These designations however are not strict and describe leading changes while other changes might be adapted earlier or later in specific production batches Designations like KV 1A were applied by the Germans during the war citation needed All tanks in the series were heavily based on the KV 1 nbsp KV 1 model 1939 nbsp A KV 1B at the Bovington Tank MuseumKV 0 Prototype tank for KV 1 It was armed with 2 guns 76mm and 45mm gun KV 1 Model 1939 First production models these tanks were prone to frequent breakdowns but were highly resistant to anti tank weapons during the Winter War Armed with the 76 mm L 11 tank gun recognizable due to a recuperator above a barrel Most tanks were lacking the hull machine gun earlier ones also had cast turret different from one used on 1941 42 models 141 were built Model 1940 German designation KW 1A Used the F 32 ru 76 mm gun and a new mantlet The main production model by the time of the German invasion Model 1940 s ekranami with shields or KW 1E with additional bolted on applique armour and F 32 gun Model 1941 German designation KW 1B Up armoured with 25 35 mm 0 98 1 38 in added to the turret hull front and sides Later tanks had cast turrets This tank was armed with the longer barreled ZiS 5 tank gun Model 1942 German designation KW 1C Fully cast turret with thicker armour again up armoured using an improved engine and the 76 mm ZiS 5 tank gun KV 1S A variant with higher speed but thinner armour A new smaller cast turret and redesigned rear hull with a new planetary transmission 1370 built nbsp The KV 2 heavy artillery tank s 152 mm howitzer was housed in an enormous turret This prototype differs from the production version in several ways It was called the Dreadnought by its crews 23 nbsp Comparison of selected KV tank chassis variants KV 2 204 A heavy assault tank with the M 10 152 mm howitzer the KV 2 was produced at the same time as the KV 1 Due to the size of its heavy turret and gun the KV 2 was slower and had a much higher profile than the KV 1 Those captured and used by the German Army were known as Sturm Panzerkampfwagen KW II 754 r 24 Few were produced due to its combat ineffectiveness mainly the decreased speed due to the weight of the new gun and turret Due to an increase in turret weight from the expanded dimensions and a heavier gun the turret traverse mechanism could work only on level ground KV 2 ZiS 6 In March 1941 a single ZiS 6 ru was placed into a KV 2 turret for testing It passed testing by June 1941 after which it was sent to the Artillery Scientific Test Range at Leningrad While further fate of the vehicle is unknown it was possibly used and destroyed in combat while defending Leningrad nbsp T 150 KVT 150 Object 150 One of a pair of designs requested 17 June 1940 Armour specified at 90 mm which caused weight to reach 50 tons so the 600 hp V 2K was replaced with the 700 hp V 5 engine In addition to the improved armour the turret had a cupola but otherwise followed the design of the KV 1 One prototype was constructed in 1941 and was destroyed defending Leningrad On 15 March 1941 the design was approved for production as the KV 3 25 26 T 220 Object 220 also called KV 220 One of a pair of designs requested 17 June 1940 Longer chassis with 7 rollers per side Armour specified at 100 mm Prototype trialed with V 2PUN and V 2SN engines but suffered engine and suspension problems New diamond shaped turret fitted with 85 mm F 30 cannon but development changed to fitting 107mm F 39 instead One prototype was constructed in 1941 but did not enter serial production The prototype later had its turret replaced by standard KV 1 turret and redesignated as KV 220 2 it was destroyed in its first battle with 124th Tank Division Original turret was mounted as static pillbox its further fate is unknown 25 26 KV 3 Objects 150 220 221 222 and 223 Designation initially approved 15 March 1941 for production version of Object 150 tank design Further developments were made on the basis of the Object 220 in the form of the Object 221 with an 85 mm gun Object 222 with the F 32 76 2 mm gun and Object 223 built to develop a new conical turret to house the 107 mm gun now specified to be the ZiS 6 cannon Series production was intended to start in late 1941 but the German invasion of the USSR halted these plans and the only prototype hull was destroyed The design was accepted for service May 1941 and was to have entered production at the Kirovsky Plant in August 1941 but the German invasion forced this to be abandoned 25 26 KV 4 Object 224 A project for a super heavy tank About 20 different designs were proposed but it was cancelled due to the outbreak of the war Different versions would have been between roughly 85 and 110 tonnes with armour thickness ranging from 120 to 190 mm Armament consisted of the 107 mm ZiS 6 cannon Different variants had various auxiliary weapons 45 mm 76 mm cannons machine guns and flamethrowers in addition to the main gun 27 KV 5 Object 225 A cancelled project for a super heavy tank Armament was to be a 107 mm ZiS 6 gun in a large turret and a machine gun in a small secondary turret Weight was projected as about 100 tons and the tank was to have 150 180 mm of armour Project development began in June 1941 however was cancelled due to the Siege of Leningrad in which all developmental operations at the Kirov Plant were halted The project fell out of favour from the more advanced heavy tank designs and no prototype was built 27 KV 6 This vehicle was a flamethrower variant At least four were used in the battle of Leningrad citation needed It is not to be confused with the fictional KV VI super heavy tank built by modeler Brian Fowler in 1995 KV 7 Object 227 also called U 13 Experimental self propelled gun with 100 mm of frontal armour armed with 3 cannons two 45 mm model 1932 34 and one 76 mm F 34 200 rounds of ammunition was carried for the 45 mm guns and 93 rounds for the 76 mm gun One unit was produced and tested in 1941 KV 7 2 improved variant also called U 14 had two 76 mm F 34 cannons and 85 mm of frontal armour Vehicles were not taken in service primarily because they could not fight tanks the KV 7s had only 15 degree gun traverse to each side and could not combat concrete bunkers due to the small caliber of the guns After the failure of the KV 7 it was decided to put one 152 mm gun in the casemate instead of three smaller guns this led to the development of the SU 152 nbsp U 18U 18 Experimental self propelled gun KV 7 armed with 152 mm ML 20 gun howitzer Vehicle was projected in 1941 Wooden mockup was constructed Project was cancelled but this vehicle was a first step towards SU 152 design S 51 also called U 19 Experimental self propelled gun projected by the Grabin Artillery Projects Central Department armed with the 203 mm howitzer M1931 B 4 in a KV 1S hull The vehicle was to have 75 mm of frontal armour 60 mm on the side and the roof was to be 30 mm the roof would have been removable to facilitate loading It was projected to weigh 66 tons one prototype passed by the testing grounds in the spring of 1944 but was not very successful and cancelled within a year SU 152 See SU 152 Heavy assault gun based on the KV 1S chassis using 152 mm ML 20 gun howitzer ZiK 20 The ZiK 20 was very similar to the U 19 S 51 but had 105 mm of frontal armour 75 mm of side armour and was to mount a ML 20 gun By the time its wooden mockup was made the KV 1 was phased out of production However just before the project was cancelled a blueprint was drawn up to equip the ZiK 20 with a 152 mm gun M1935 Br 2 and to offset the weight the frontal armour was to be reduced to 75 mm or 60 mm on the KV 1S chassis SU 203 SU 152 equipped with 203 mm M 4 mortar Never built KV 8 102 A KV 1 fitted with the ATO 41 flamethrower in the turret 28 beside a machine gun citation needed In order to accommodate the new weapon the 76 2 mm gun was replaced with a smaller 45 mm gun M1932 though it was disguised to look like the standard 76 mm the cannon was placed inside a 76 mm tube citation needed KV 8S 35 The same as KV 8 but based on KV 1S Equipped with ATO 42 flamethrower improved version of ATO 41 28 The smaller turret of the KV 1S caused space limitations so 25 of the KV 8S had the original KV 8 turret mated to the KV 1S hull while the remaining 10 had a KV 1S turret with ATO 42 flamethrower but lacked the coaxial machine gun citation needed KV 8M Upgraded version of KV 8S Equipped with two flamethrowers Two prototypes were constructed citation needed KV 9 Object 229 A KV 1 with short 122 mm U 11 howitzer One prototype was constructed and proved in 1941 KV 10 Object 230 Also known as KV 1K A KV 1 with 4 rocket launchers on the sides of its hull Each launcher contained two 132 mm M 13 rockets Early variant of KV 1K had two launchers on the back of the hull each contained 6 rockets One prototype was constructed and tested in 1942 Not taken into service KV 11 Object 231 KV 1 armed with 85 mm F 30 cannon Projected in 1942 Not built nbsp KV 12KV 12 Object 232 Experimental chemical tank Was equipped with 4 external toxin tanks on rear of chassis Tanks surrounded with 30 mm armour Not taken into service KV 13 IS Model 1 Object 233 Prototype of a medium tank Designation for an advanced redesign of the KV series which resulted in the production of the IS series IS Model 2 A KV 13 with turret and armament of a KV 9 One prototype was constructed and proved in 1943 Tank had lost competition to IS 1 and was not taken into service KV 14 Object 236 Prototype designation for a 152 mm self propelled gun accepted for service as the SU 152 KV 85 Object 239 A KV 1S with the 85 mm D 5T cannon in a new turret with the ball mounted hull machine gun repositioned to the right of driver now fixed mount and the hole welded shut 148 of these tanks were produced in the second half of 1943 until the spring of 1944 as a stopgap until the IS tank series entered production 29 KV 85G KV 1S with 85 mm S 31 cannon Turret and mantlet remained from conventional KV 1S This variant was a competitor of the KV 85 during proving It lost the competition and was not taken into service KV 122 A KV 1S with short 122 mm S 41 howitzer One prototype was made in 1943 Not taken into service 30 KV 100 A KV 85 with the 100 mm S 34 cannon One prototype was made in 1944 Not taken into service KV 122 A KV 85 with the 122 mm D 25T cannon One prototype was made in 1944 Not taken into service KV 152 Proposal to fit a 152 mm gun into the turret of a KV 85 Nothing became of the project KV and other heavy Soviet tanks compared Edit Soviet heavy tanks of World War II 31 T 35 KV 1 M1940 KV 1 M1941 KV 1 M1942 KV 1S M1942 KV 85 M1943 IS 2 M1945 IS 3 32 M1945Crew 11 5 5 5 5 4 4 4Weight tonnes 45 43 45 47 42 5 46 46 46 5Gun 76 2 mm M 27 32 76 2 mm F 32 L 31 5 76 2 mm ZiS 5 L 42 5 76 2 mm ZiS 5 76 2 mm ZiS 5 85 mm D 5T 122 mm D 25T 122 mm D 25TAmmunition 100 111 111 114 114 70 28 28Secondary armament 2 45 mm tank gun 20 K 5 7 62 mm 2 7 62 mm DT machine gun 4 DT 4 DT 4 DT 3 DT 3 DT 1 x 12 7mmDShK 2 DT DShKEngine 500 hp M 17M gasoline 600 hp V 2K diesel 600 hp V 2 600 hp V 2 600 hp V 2 600 hp V 2 600 hp V 2 600 hp V 2 ISFuel litres 910 600 600 600 975 975 820 520 270Road speed km h 30 35 35 28 45 40 37 37Road range km 150 250 250 250 380 340 240 150 225 Cross country range km 70 150 150 150 240 220 180 120 175 Armour mm 11 30 25 75 30 90 20 130 30 82 30 160 30 160 20 220Combat history EditJune 1941 Battle of Raseiniai Edit See also Battle of Raseiniai nbsp A KV 1 on fire knocked out near Voronezh in 1942 A KV 1 or KV 2 tank accounts vary advanced far behind the German lines after attacking a column of German trucks The tank stopped on a road across soft ground and was engaged by four 50 mm anti tank guns of the anti tank battalion of the 6th Panzer Division The tank was hit many times but returned fire disabling all four guns A heavy 8 8 cm gun of the German division s anti aircraft battalion was moved about 730 m 800 yd behind the tank but was knocked out by the tank gunner before it could score a hit During the night German combat engineers attempted to destroy the tank with satchel charges and failed despite possibly damaging the tracks Early on the morning of 25 June German tanks fired on the KV from the woodland while an 88 mm targeted the tank from its rear Of several shots fired only two penetrated the tank German infantry then advanced with the KV opening machine gun fire against them 33 The tank s resistance was finally ended by grenades thrown into the tank s hatches According to some accounts the crew was buried by the German soldiers with full military honours in other accounts the crew escaped during the night 33 General Erhard Raus was commander of the Kampfgruppe of the 6th Panzer Division the unit delayed by the lone vehicle f He described it as a KV 1 which was damaged by several 8 8 cm anti tank gun shots fired from behind the vehicle while it was distracted by Panzer 35 t tanks from Panzer Battalion 65 and the KV 1 crew were killed by members of a pioneer unit who pushed grenades through two holes made by the gun while the turret began moving again the other five or six shots having not fully penetrated Apparently the KV 1 crew had remarkably only been stunned by the shots which had entered the turret Afterwards they were buried nearby with military honours by the German unit 34 a Krasnogvardeysk Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Kliment Voroshilov tank news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message On August 14 1941 the vanguard of the German 8th Panzer Division approached Krasnogvardeysk Gatchina near Leningrad St Petersburg and the only Soviet force available at the time to attempt to stop the German advance consisted of five well hidden KV 1 tanks dug in within a grove at the edge of a swamp KV 1 tank no 864 was commanded by the leader of this small force Lieutenant Zinoviy Kolobanov German forces attacked Krasnogvardeysk from three directions Near Noviy Uchkhoz settlement the geography favoured the Soviet defenders as the only road in the region passed the swamp and the defenders commanded this choke point from their hidden position Lieutenant Kolobanov had carefully studied the situation and readied his detachment the day before Each KV 1 tank carried twice the normal amount of ammunition two thirds being armour piercing rounds Kolobanov ordered his other commanders to hold their fire and await orders He did not want to reveal the total force so only one exposed tank at a time would engage the enemy On August 14 the German 8th Panzer Division s vanguard ventured directly into the well prepared Soviet ambush with Kolobanov s tank knocking out the lead German tank with its first shot The Germans falsely assumed that their lead tank had hit an anti tank mine and failed to realize that they had been ambushed The German column stopped giving Kolobanov the opportunity to destroy the second tank Only then did the Germans realize they were under attack but they failed to find the source of the shots While the German tanks were firing blindly Kolobanov knocked out the trailing German tank thus boxing in the entire column Although the Germans correctly guessed the direction of fire they could only spot Lieutenant Kolobanov s tank and now attempted to engage an unseen enemy German tanks moving off the road bogged down in the surrounding soft ground becoming easy targets 22 German tanks and 2 towed artillery pieces fell victim to Kolobanov s No 864 before it ran out of ammunition Kolobanov ordered in another KV 1 and 21 more German tanks were destroyed before the half hour battle ended A total of 43 German tanks were destroyed by just five Soviet KV 1s two more remained in reserve After the battle the crew of No 864 counted a total of 135 hits on their tank none of which had penetrated the KV 1 s armour Lieutenant Kolobanov was awarded the Order of Lenin while his Gunner Usov was awarded the Order of the Red Banner Later former Captain Zinoviy Kolobanov was again decorated by Soviet authorities despite having been convicted and downgraded after the Winter War for fraternizing with the enemy Lieutenant Kolobanov served in the post war Soviet occupation zone in East Germany where he was convicted again and transferred to the reserves when a subordinate escaped to the British occupation zone The battle for Krasnogvardeysk was covered up by Soviet propaganda A monument dedicated to this battle was installed in the village of Noviy Uchkhoz in 1980 at the place where Kolobanov s KV 1 was dug in due solely to the demands of the villagers It was impossible to find a KV 1 tank so an IS 2 heavy tank was installed there instead 36 The Soviet victory was the result of a well planned ambush in advantageous ground and of technical superiority Most of the German tanks in this battle were Panzer IIs armed with 20 mm guns and a few Panzer IIIs armed with 37 mm KwK 36 L 46 5 guns The German tank guns had neither the range nor the power of the 76 mm main gun of a KV 1 and the narrower track width of the German tanks caused them to become trapped in the swampy ground Other users Edit When German forces used captured KV 1s they were renamed as Panzerkampfwagen KV IA 753 r 37 The Finnish forces had two KV 1s nicknamed Klimi a Model 1940 and Model 1941 both of which received minor upgrades in their service and both of which survived the war citation needed Romanian forces captured one KV 1 as of 1 November 1942 and one more in March 1944 38 Production EditProduction numbers 39 Year KV 1 KV 2 KV 1S KV 8 8S KV 85 SU 1521940 139 1101941 1 252 1001942 1 802 626 1271943 459 10 148 670Total 3 193 210 1 085 137 148 670See also EditIS tank family March of the Soviet Tankmen Comparison of early World War II tanksTanks of comparable role performance and era Edit German Tiger I United States Heavy Tank M6 British Matilda IIReferences EditFootnotes Edit In 1965 the remains of the crew were exhumed and reburied at the military cemetery in Raseiniai According to research by Russian military historian Maxim Kolomiets the tank may have been from the 3rd Company of the 1st Battalion 4th Tank Regiment part of the 2nd Tank Division It is impossible to clarify the crew s names because the documents were buried in the woods north of Raseiniai during the retreat 35 Citations Edit Zaloga including variants and prototypes Soviet Tanks and Combat Vehicles of World War Two Steven J Zaloga James Grandsen page 119 a b c Fleischer Wolfgang Russian Tanks and Armoured Vehicles 1917 1945 p 150 Soviet Tanks and Combat Vehicles of World War Two Steven J Zaloga James Grandsen page 176 KV 85 total production Tank Encyclopedia Soviet Tanks and Combat Vehicles of World War Two Steven J Zaloga James Grandsen page 176 Vollert 2005 p 59 Glantz David M 1995 When Titans Clash How the Red Army Stopped Hitler University Press of Kansas p 36 ISBN 9780700608997 Ogorkiewicz Richard 2015 Tanks 100 years of evolution Osprey p 94 a b The KV 1 Tank Blundered Its Way Into History Warisboring com 17 October 2016 Zaloga p 7 Russel H S Stolfi 1991 Hitler s panzers east World War II reinterpreted University of Oklahoma Press p 158 ISBN 9780806125817 a b c d Sewell Stephen CW2 rtd 11 November 2015 Why Three Tanks Armor no July August 1998 p 24 via tankandafvnews com a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Zaloga 1995 KV 1 amp 2 Heavy Tanks 1939 1945 Bloomsbury USA p 9 ISBN 9781855324961 Steven J Zaloga Peter Sarson January 1994 IS 2 Heavy Tank 1944 73 Bloomsbury USA p 3 ISBN 9781855323964 Pegg Martin 1997 Hs 129 Panzerjager Classic Publications ISBN 0952686716 Pyatakhin Dmitry The New Generation of Soviet Armor vs Tigers Achtung Panzer Archived from the original on 20 December 2010 Retrieved 3 January 2011 a b Vollert 2005 p 33 Vollert 2005 p 34 Vollert 2005 p 40 Stokes p 33 Tolochkov Volosatov September 12 1944 Report on the Results of Testing of the 100 mm and the 122 mm Tank Guns at the Kubinka Proving Grounds The Russian Battlefield Archived from the original on 29 October 2014 Retrieved 27 October 2014 Zaloga amp Gransden 1984 pp 118 19 Vollert Jochen 2013 Panzerkampfwagen T 34 747 r the Soviet T 34 Tank as Beutepanzer und Panzerattrappe in German Wehrmacht Service 1941 45 Erlangen Tankograd Publishing ISBN 978 3 936519 36 5 OCLC 867146299 a b c Potapov Valeri KV 3 KV 4 KV 5 KV 7 KV 9 KV 220 The Russian Battlefield Archived from the original on 24 February 2019 Retrieved 25 October 2014 a b c Zaloga amp Kinnear 1995 p13 a b Zaloga 2013 p 16 a b Bishop 2002 p 270 Boldyrev Eugeni KV 85 Heavy Tank english battlefield ru Archived from the original on 31 March 2015 Retrieved 20 October 2014 Solyankin A G Pavlov M V Pavlov I V Zheltov I T Otechestvennye bronirovannye mashiny HH vek Tom 2 1941 1945 Domestic Armoured Vehicles XXth Century Volume 2 1941 1945 Moscow 2005 P 238 Zaloga amp Grandsen 1984 pp 119 176 IS 3 Model 1945 Archived 2014 08 11 at the Wayback Machine onwar com a b Buttar 2013 p 85 Raus 2003 pp 32 33 Dobrovolsky Alexander 29 April 2015 Odin den iz zhizni Klimenta Voroshilova A Day in the Life of a Kliment Voroshilov Moskovsky Komsomolets in Russian Retrieved 11 October 2016 Geroj ne stavshij geroem in Russian Regenberg Werner 1990 Captured Tanks Under the German Flag Russian Battle Tanks United States Schiffer Publishing p 45 ISBN 0887402011 Mark Axworthy Cornel I Scafeș Cristian Crăciunoiu Third Axis Fourth Ally Romanian Armed Forces in the European War 1941 1945 pp 220 and 221 Stokes pp 30 33 Bibliography Edit Buttar Prit 2013 Between Giants The Battle for the Baltics in World War II Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 9781472802873 Raus Erhard 2003 Panzer Operations The Eastern Front Memoir of General Raus 1941 1945 Translated by Newton Steven H Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 81247 7 Stokes Neil 2010 KV Technical History amp Variants Canada Air Connection Hobby ISBN 978 0 9781091 2 7 Vollert Jochen 2005 Tankograd Militar Fahrzeug Special No 2003 Soviet Special KV 1 Soviet Heavy Tanks of WWII Late Variants Tankograd Publishing Zaloga Steven J Grandsen James 1981 Soviet Heavy Tanks Vanguard 24 London Osprey Publishing ISBN 0 85045 422 0 Zaloga Steven J Grandsen James 1984 Soviet Tanks and Combat Vehicles of World War Two London Arms and Armour Press ISBN 0 85368 606 8 Zaloga Steven J Kinnear Jim 1995 KV 1 amp 2 Heavy Tanks 1939 1945 New Vanguard 17 illustrated by Peter Sarson Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 1 85532 496 2 Bishop Chris 2002 The Encyclopedia of Weapons of World War II Sterling Publishing Company Inc ISBN 978 1 58663 762 0 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to KV tanks OnWar specifications KV 1 M39 KV 1e M40 KV 1 M41 KV 1S KV 85 KV 2 World War II Vehicles Walkaround KV 85 from Avtovo Saint Petersburg Russia KV tanks KV tanks in museum and monuments KV 2 test drive video Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kliment Voroshilov tank amp oldid 1180294144, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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