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T-37A tank

The T-37A was a Soviet amphibious light tank. The tank is often referred to as the T-37, although that designation was used by a different tank which never left the prototype stage. The T-37A was the first series of mass-produced fully amphibious tanks in the world.[2]

T-37А amphibious scout tank
T-37А, displayed in Kubinka Tank Museum
TypeAmphibious light tank
Place of origin Soviet Union
Service history
In serviceFrom 1933
Used by Soviet Union
 Finland (captured)
 Romania (captured)
 Nazi Germany (captured)
 Hungary (captured)
Production history
DesignerN. Kozyrev, Factory No. 37, Moscow
Designed1931–33
Produced1933–36
No. built~1,200
VariantsT-37A (main production), T-37TU command tank, M1936
Specifications (T-37[1])
Mass3.2 tonnes
Length3.75 m (12 ft 4 in)
Width2.10 m (6 ft 11 in)
Height1.82 m (6 ft 0 in)
Crew2

Armour3–9 mm
Main
armament
7.62mm DT machine gun (585 rounds)
EngineGAZ-AA
40 hp (30 kW)
Power/weight13 hp/tonne
Suspensionsprung bogie
Fuel capacity100 litres
Operational
range
185 km
Maximum speed 35 km/h (22 mph)

The tank was first created in 1932, based on the British Vickers tankette and other operational amphibious tanks. The tank was mass-produced starting in 1933 up until 1936, when it was replaced with the more modern T-38, based on the T-37A. Overall, after four years of production, 2552 T-37As were produced, including the original prototypes.[3]

In the Red Army, they were used to perform tasks in communication, reconnaissance, and as defense units on the march, as well as active infantry support on the battlefield. The T-37A was used in large numbers during the Soviet invasion of Poland and in the Winter War against Finland. T-37As were also used by the Soviets in the beginning of the Great Patriotic War, but most of them were quickly lost. Surviving tanks fought on the front lines until 1944, and were used in training and auxiliary defense until the end of World War II.[4]

Early history edit

The Carden-Loyd tankettes by Carden-Loyd Tractors, Ltd., were promising enough that the company was purchased by Vickers-Armstrong. They developed light, floating tanks to General Staff requirements (A4E11 etc). In April 1931, Vickers-Armstrongs conducted several successful tests of these light vehicles in the presence of the press.[5] Publication of the design and testing by the press attracted the attention of the Department of Motorization and Mechanization of the Workers'–Peasants' Red Army (UMMRKKA), because the small tank was well suited to the new armament policies of the Red Army, as well as possibly being able to replace the older T-27 tankette, which never performed well in combat. At the Bolshevik OKMO plant in Leningrad, from the All Russian Co-Operative Society (Arcos), newspapers were handed in containing information about the British tankette, as well as photographs and technical specifications.[citation needed] Based on this information, Soviet engineers found out that the power plant of the Carden-Loyd tankette was originally from a light tractor produced by the company, and thus the overall layout must be similar. Accordingly, the Selezen ("Drake", Ru. Селезень) program was established in order to construct a similar amphibious tank with a layout based on that of the British prototype. The first Selezen prototype, which was designated the T-33, was built in March 1932 and showed good buoyancy during testing. However, the T-33 did not perform satisfactorily in other tests and was too complicated for the existing military-industrial complex to produce. As a result, it was not mass produced or equipped in large numbers.[6]

T-41 and T-37 edit

Even before the construction of the T-33, it was decided to increase the scale of work dedicated to creating an amphibious tank. In addition to the Leningrad OKMO, the Number 2 plant of the All-Soviet Automotive Union (VATO), which was already producing armored vehicles for the Red Army, was relegated to the development and production of amphibious armored vehicles. As a result, at the 2nd VATO plant, under the supervision of N. N. Kozyrev, the T-41 amphibious tank was produced, weighing 3.5 tons and using the GAZ-AA engine,[note 1] which was based on the T-27 power plant. The transmission was nearly identical to that of the T-27, and to the power take-off for the propeller, they added a rigid gear clutch. Its construction for turning off the propeller demanded stopping the tank and turning off the engine. The chassis was, in part, borrowed from the T-33, and the caterpillar tracks were entirely from the T-27. Leningrad builders likewise continued the development of a more suitable amphibious tank, and they designated their latest model as the “T-37”. It had the same GAZ AA engine as the T-41, the same transmission, wide use of automotive parts, and the Krupp chassis, which Soviet engineers first encountered as a result of a technological partnership with Weimar Germany. Although the T-41 was actually produced for the military in small numbers, after testing and battlefield trials the T-37 was denied production due to various minor faults and an incomplete development process.[7]

Deals with Vickers edit

Meanwhile, an opportunity to fully analyze the British prototype itself appeared. The British Army declined to put the Vickers prototype into service (although they were used as trials vehicles), and so the company decided to look for foreign buyers. Already interested since the April 1931 demonstration, the USSR, on February 5, 1932, made an offer, through Arcos representative Y. Skvirskiy, for the purchase of eight vehicles. Talks about filling the order did not drag on, and by June 1932, Vickers had already produced and shipped two of the first tanks for the Soviets.[8]

 
The Vickers-Carden-Loyd floating tank.

It is widely thought that the T-37A was a copy of the Vickers floating tank,[note 2] with the Soviet purchase of such tanks in mind. However, closer examination of the turn of events leads to the discrediting of such a theory, but it is true that the Soviet T-37A prototypes were heavily influenced by the British models. Nikolai Astrov, a Soviet engineer, having worked hard on the T-37A prototypes, wrote in his memoirs that "peace be unto the T-37A, born “Vickers-Carden-Loyd."[9]

Serial production edit

Even before the end of 1932, the high command of the Red Army was planning to order 30 T-37A’s. In order to facilitate faster production, Factory No. 37 (that is what the No. 2 VATO plant was renamed) was handed over all OKMO production related to the T-37, as well as one British Vickers tank. In 1933, the No. 37 plant was given an order of 1200 T-37A’s. However, the events that followed showed the excessive optimism shown by the leadership of the trust responsible for the factory. The trust itself was formed as a governing organ for coordinating large-scale efforts to develop new models of armored vehicles in a number of plants across the country, and subsequently played a significant role in the successful carrying out of this task, but at the beginning of 1933 it couldn’t overcome the “antediluvian” state of equipment at the No. 37 plant, as assessed by M. N. Svirin, purely with organizational measures.[7]

Problems with production edit

By its technological design, the T-37A was much more complicated than the T-27 tankette, which immediately caused complications not only at Factory No. 37, but to its subcontractor – the Podolsk Electric Locomotive Plant, which was producing the hulls of the new T-37A’s. In addition, in 1933 the T-27 tankette was still being produced, which stressed the lack of adequate resources needed to produce both vehicles simultaneously. This only worsened the situation and slowed the introduction of the T-37A. The technology for producing stamped cemented armor plates at the Podolsk plant was completely unrefined; the desired result had to be achieved using improvised and primitive methods. In the end, in the first half of 1933 the Factory No. 37 built 30 amphibious tanks (12 of which were T-41’s) instead of the 255 needed to fulfill the established plan.[citation needed] The then replacement People’s Defense Commissioner Mikhail Tukhochevsky wrote in his report “of the progress of completion of the tank program in the first half of 1933”:

Reasons for the unfulfillment [of the]… T-37 tank program:

  • Failure of the “Podolsk KrekIng” factory to produce the hulls;
  • An unready and unrefined technological manufacturing process;
  • Unsatisfactory steel casting quality…

… The Podolsk factory. The program for producing the T-27 hulls was fully completed. The T-37A program has, instead of 250, produced only one workable hull in this half of the year. The main reason for this situation is the transfer [of the hulls] to the stamping and cementation without serious enough preventive and preparative measures. At this time, it can be said that the factory has mastered the stamping process. The further completion of the program depends on the timely shipment of armor plates from the Kulebakskiy factory before May. It cannot produce and ship the armor in June due to a lack of ferroalloys. Currently, the factory has the necessary materials and has started to produce an armor sheet…[10]

The situation didn’t change during the second half of 1933; the leadership of the Army and Spetzmashtrest, the governing trust, demanded large amounts of T-37A’s to be produced at Factory No. 37, expecting to receive no more than 800 tanks. In reality, only 126 T-37A’s had been produced by 1 January 1934, two of which had built-in radios. Some of the tanks participated in a military parade on 7 November 1933 at the Red Square in Moscow. The early T-37A’s did not differ much from the later, series-produced tanks – the earlier ones lacked wave-diffusing shields and floats.

 
Soviet T-37A destroyed during the Winter War with Finland.

In 1934, the leadership of the Spetzmashtrest lent its attention to improving the conditions in the factories at which the tanks were produced. They purchased foreign equipment for two new wings of the No. 37 Factory, as well as increasing the number of workers and engineering/ technical personnel. These measures, however, did not improve the situation; the number of assembled tanks was significantly lower than planned. The Office of Motorization and Mechanization of the Red Army noted the insufficiency of the technical and general management at the No. 37 plant, and a lack of planning during the production process and "storming through" the operation. As a result, mid 1934 was marked by a change in leadership of the plant, and only towards the end of the year there had been a positive trend in the manufacturing process. Also, in 1934, slight changes were made to the T-37A design: the thickness of the sides and the front were increased to 10 mm, the curved stern piece hulls were replaced with stamped ones, and the over-track floats were rolled back and stuffed with cork, and they have become empty on the inside.[11]

The production of hulls remained as a limiting factor in the following year of 1935. The Podolsk Electric Locomotive Plant consistently failed to fulfill the plans for the production of parts in adequate numbers. To solve the problem, a year prior, it was decided to use the T-37A Izhorsky plant in Leningrad for additional hull production. But this enterprise, although there was considerable capacity, has been directed other orders for armored cars for the needs of Navy of the Soviet Union, as well as the production of hulls for the Leningrad plants producing armored cars and T-26 and T-28 tanks. As a result, most of the hulls of T-37A were sent to the № 37 plant from Podolsk. Hulls from different manufacturers had various methods of production: Izhorsk hulls were welded, and Podolsk hulls riveted. For a permanent solution to the production of hulls for amphibious tanks, engineers restructured them and altered the power plants.[10]

Memorial November parade 2011 edit

A detachment of tanks including three T-37s were shown in pass-through on Red Square on November 7, 2011. commemorating 70th anniversary of famous 1941 parade.[12]

Operators edit

Comparable vehicles edit

Notes edit

Notes
  1. ^ before the engines could be produced at GAZ plants, they had to be salvaged from imported Ford Model AA
  2. ^ For example, статья М. Барятинского, where it is stated that the T-37 was a development of the T-33, which, in turn, "differs little from the English (sic) prototype". However, the T-33 was created before the purchase of the British tanks, and has an entirely different power system, and the general layout of the chassis and transmission of the British and Soviet tanks have several significant differences.
Citations
  1. ^ Zaloga 1984, p 116.
  2. ^ Kholyavsky 1998
  3. ^ Svirin 2005, p. 161
  4. ^ Baryatinsky 2003
  5. ^ "Latest war tank at home on land or water", Popular Mechanics, 57 (2), HH Windsor, 200 East Ontario Street, Chicago, USA.: 208, February 1932, retrieved 23 December 2015
  6. ^ Svirin 2005, p. 153
  7. ^ a b Svirin 2005, p. 157
  8. ^ Svirin 2005, p. 152
  9. ^ Chobitok, V. ""Thus, experience was given," - From the Recollections of N. A. Astrov". armor.kiev.ua. Retrieved June 20, 2011.
  10. ^ a b Kolomiets 2003
  11. ^ Svirin 2005, p. 159
  12. ^ [1] June 2, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ a b c d Kolomiets 2003, p. 78
  14. ^ Kolomiets 2003, pp. 77–79
  15. ^ Oryx. "WWII's Absentee: German and Allied Equipment Used By The Turkish Republic". Oryx. Retrieved 2023-03-23.

References edit

  • Baryatinsky, B. (2003). Amphibians of the Red Army (Амфибии Красной армии) (in Russian). Moscow: Modelist-Konstruktor.
  • Svirin, N. (2005). History of the Soviet Tank, 1917-1937 (История советского танка 1917-1937) (in Russian). Moscow: Yauza. ISBN 5-699-13809-9.
  • Kholyavsky, G. (1998). Encyclopedia of Tanks (in Russian). Minsk: Khavrest. ISBN 985-13-8603-0.
  • Kolomiets, M. V. (2003). The T-37, T-38, and T-40 Amphibious Tanks (Танки-амфибии Т-37, Т-38, Т-40) (in Russian). Moscow: Strategia KM. ISBN 5-901266-01-3.

External links edit

  • U.S. World War II Newsmap, "Russian Armored Vehicles", hosted by the UNT Libraries Digital Collections
  • T-37, World War II vehicles
  • OnWar
  • Легкий плавающий танк T-37, T-38 at the Russian Battlefield
  • "Amphibian Tank Swims River in War Games" Popular Mechanics, January 1936

tank, this, article, about, soviet, tank, other, uses, disambiguation, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, russian, december, 2009, click, show, important, translation, instructions, view, machine, translated, ver. This article is about the Soviet tank For other uses see T37 disambiguation You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Russian December 2009 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Russian article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 1 220 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Russian Wikipedia article at ru T 37A see its history for attribution You may also add the template Translated ru T 37A to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The T 37A was a Soviet amphibious light tank The tank is often referred to as the T 37 although that designation was used by a different tank which never left the prototype stage The T 37A was the first series of mass produced fully amphibious tanks in the world 2 T 37A amphibious scout tankT 37A displayed in Kubinka Tank MuseumTypeAmphibious light tankPlace of origin Soviet UnionService historyIn serviceFrom 1933Used by Soviet Union Finland captured Romania captured Nazi Germany captured Hungary captured Production historyDesignerN Kozyrev Factory No 37 MoscowDesigned1931 33Produced1933 36No built 1 200VariantsT 37A main production T 37TU command tank M1936Specifications T 37 1 Mass3 2 tonnesLength3 75 m 12 ft 4 in Width2 10 m 6 ft 11 in Height1 82 m 6 ft 0 in Crew2Armour3 9 mmMainarmament7 62mm DT machine gun 585 rounds EngineGAZ AA40 hp 30 kW Power weight13 hp tonneSuspensionsprung bogieFuel capacity100 litresOperationalrange185 kmMaximum speed35 km h 22 mph The tank was first created in 1932 based on the British Vickers tankette and other operational amphibious tanks The tank was mass produced starting in 1933 up until 1936 when it was replaced with the more modern T 38 based on the T 37A Overall after four years of production 2552 T 37As were produced including the original prototypes 3 In the Red Army they were used to perform tasks in communication reconnaissance and as defense units on the march as well as active infantry support on the battlefield The T 37A was used in large numbers during the Soviet invasion of Poland and in the Winter War against Finland T 37As were also used by the Soviets in the beginning of the Great Patriotic War but most of them were quickly lost Surviving tanks fought on the front lines until 1944 and were used in training and auxiliary defense until the end of World War II 4 Contents 1 Early history 1 1 T 41 and T 37 1 2 Deals with Vickers 2 Serial production 2 1 Problems with production 2 2 Memorial November parade 2011 3 Operators 4 Comparable vehicles 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksEarly history editThe Carden Loyd tankettes by Carden Loyd Tractors Ltd were promising enough that the company was purchased by Vickers Armstrong They developed light floating tanks to General Staff requirements A4E11 etc In April 1931 Vickers Armstrongs conducted several successful tests of these light vehicles in the presence of the press 5 Publication of the design and testing by the press attracted the attention of the Department of Motorization and Mechanization of the Workers Peasants Red Army UMMRKKA because the small tank was well suited to the new armament policies of the Red Army as well as possibly being able to replace the older T 27 tankette which never performed well in combat At the Bolshevik OKMO plant in Leningrad from the All Russian Co Operative Society Arcos newspapers were handed in containing information about the British tankette as well as photographs and technical specifications citation needed Based on this information Soviet engineers found out that the power plant of the Carden Loyd tankette was originally from a light tractor produced by the company and thus the overall layout must be similar Accordingly the Selezen Drake Ru Selezen program was established in order to construct a similar amphibious tank with a layout based on that of the British prototype The first Selezen prototype which was designated the T 33 was built in March 1932 and showed good buoyancy during testing However the T 33 did not perform satisfactorily in other tests and was too complicated for the existing military industrial complex to produce As a result it was not mass produced or equipped in large numbers 6 T 41 and T 37 edit Even before the construction of the T 33 it was decided to increase the scale of work dedicated to creating an amphibious tank In addition to the Leningrad OKMO the Number 2 plant of the All Soviet Automotive Union VATO which was already producing armored vehicles for the Red Army was relegated to the development and production of amphibious armored vehicles As a result at the 2nd VATO plant under the supervision of N N Kozyrev the T 41 amphibious tank was produced weighing 3 5 tons and using the GAZ AA engine note 1 which was based on the T 27 power plant The transmission was nearly identical to that of the T 27 and to the power take off for the propeller they added a rigid gear clutch Its construction for turning off the propeller demanded stopping the tank and turning off the engine The chassis was in part borrowed from the T 33 and the caterpillar tracks were entirely from the T 27 Leningrad builders likewise continued the development of a more suitable amphibious tank and they designated their latest model as the T 37 It had the same GAZ AA engine as the T 41 the same transmission wide use of automotive parts and the Krupp chassis which Soviet engineers first encountered as a result of a technological partnership with Weimar Germany Although the T 41 was actually produced for the military in small numbers after testing and battlefield trials the T 37 was denied production due to various minor faults and an incomplete development process 7 Deals with Vickers edit Meanwhile an opportunity to fully analyze the British prototype itself appeared The British Army declined to put the Vickers prototype into service although they were used as trials vehicles and so the company decided to look for foreign buyers Already interested since the April 1931 demonstration the USSR on February 5 1932 made an offer through Arcos representative Y Skvirskiy for the purchase of eight vehicles Talks about filling the order did not drag on and by June 1932 Vickers had already produced and shipped two of the first tanks for the Soviets 8 nbsp The Vickers Carden Loyd floating tank It is widely thought that the T 37A was a copy of the Vickers floating tank note 2 with the Soviet purchase of such tanks in mind However closer examination of the turn of events leads to the discrediting of such a theory but it is true that the Soviet T 37A prototypes were heavily influenced by the British models Nikolai Astrov a Soviet engineer having worked hard on the T 37A prototypes wrote in his memoirs that peace be unto the T 37A born Vickers Carden Loyd 9 Serial production editEven before the end of 1932 the high command of the Red Army was planning to order 30 T 37A s In order to facilitate faster production Factory No 37 that is what the No 2 VATO plant was renamed was handed over all OKMO production related to the T 37 as well as one British Vickers tank In 1933 the No 37 plant was given an order of 1200 T 37A s However the events that followed showed the excessive optimism shown by the leadership of the trust responsible for the factory The trust itself was formed as a governing organ for coordinating large scale efforts to develop new models of armored vehicles in a number of plants across the country and subsequently played a significant role in the successful carrying out of this task but at the beginning of 1933 it couldn t overcome the antediluvian state of equipment at the No 37 plant as assessed by M N Svirin purely with organizational measures 7 Problems with production edit By its technological design the T 37A was much more complicated than the T 27 tankette which immediately caused complications not only at Factory No 37 but to its subcontractor the Podolsk Electric Locomotive Plant which was producing the hulls of the new T 37A s In addition in 1933 the T 27 tankette was still being produced which stressed the lack of adequate resources needed to produce both vehicles simultaneously This only worsened the situation and slowed the introduction of the T 37A The technology for producing stamped cemented armor plates at the Podolsk plant was completely unrefined the desired result had to be achieved using improvised and primitive methods In the end in the first half of 1933 the Factory No 37 built 30 amphibious tanks 12 of which were T 41 s instead of the 255 needed to fulfill the established plan citation needed The then replacement People s Defense Commissioner Mikhail Tukhochevsky wrote in his report of the progress of completion of the tank program in the first half of 1933 Reasons for the unfulfillment of the T 37 tank program Failure of the Podolsk KrekIng factory to produce the hulls An unready and unrefined technological manufacturing process Unsatisfactory steel casting quality The Podolsk factory The program for producing the T 27 hulls was fully completed The T 37A program has instead of 250 produced only one workable hull in this half of the year The main reason for this situation is the transfer of the hulls to the stamping and cementation without serious enough preventive and preparative measures At this time it can be said that the factory has mastered the stamping process The further completion of the program depends on the timely shipment of armor plates from the Kulebakskiy factory before May It cannot produce and ship the armor in June due to a lack of ferroalloys Currently the factory has the necessary materials and has started to produce an armor sheet 10 The situation didn t change during the second half of 1933 the leadership of the Army and Spetzmashtrest the governing trust demanded large amounts of T 37A s to be produced at Factory No 37 expecting to receive no more than 800 tanks In reality only 126 T 37A s had been produced by 1 January 1934 two of which had built in radios Some of the tanks participated in a military parade on 7 November 1933 at the Red Square in Moscow The early T 37A s did not differ much from the later series produced tanks the earlier ones lacked wave diffusing shields and floats nbsp Soviet T 37A destroyed during the Winter War with Finland In 1934 the leadership of the Spetzmashtrest lent its attention to improving the conditions in the factories at which the tanks were produced They purchased foreign equipment for two new wings of the No 37 Factory as well as increasing the number of workers and engineering technical personnel These measures however did not improve the situation the number of assembled tanks was significantly lower than planned The Office of Motorization and Mechanization of the Red Army noted the insufficiency of the technical and general management at the No 37 plant and a lack of planning during the production process and storming through the operation As a result mid 1934 was marked by a change in leadership of the plant and only towards the end of the year there had been a positive trend in the manufacturing process Also in 1934 slight changes were made to the T 37A design the thickness of the sides and the front were increased to 10 mm the curved stern piece hulls were replaced with stamped ones and the over track floats were rolled back and stuffed with cork and they have become empty on the inside 11 The production of hulls remained as a limiting factor in the following year of 1935 The Podolsk Electric Locomotive Plant consistently failed to fulfill the plans for the production of parts in adequate numbers To solve the problem a year prior it was decided to use the T 37A Izhorsky plant in Leningrad for additional hull production But this enterprise although there was considerable capacity has been directed other orders for armored cars for the needs of Navy of the Soviet Union as well as the production of hulls for the Leningrad plants producing armored cars and T 26 and T 28 tanks As a result most of the hulls of T 37A were sent to the 37 plant from Podolsk Hulls from different manufacturers had various methods of production Izhorsk hulls were welded and Podolsk hulls riveted For a permanent solution to the production of hulls for amphibious tanks engineers restructured them and altered the power plants 10 Memorial November parade 2011 edit A detachment of tanks including three T 37s were shown in pass through on Red Square on November 7 2011 commemorating 70th anniversary of famous 1941 parade 12 Operators edit nbsp Soviet Union nbsp Germany A small number of captured tanks were used 13 nbsp Finland 29 tanks 14 nbsp Romania At least 19 tanks 13 nbsp Hungary Some captured tanks 13 nbsp Sweden One tank gifted by Finland for brief evaluation only 13 nbsp Turkey 1 T 37A 1934 194 15 Comparable vehicles editGermany Panzer I Italy L3 33 L3 35 Japan Type 94 Poland TK 3 and TKS Romania R 1 Soviet Union T 27 T 38 Sweden Strv m 37 United Kingdom Light Tank Mk VINotes editNotes before the engines could be produced at GAZ plants they had to be salvaged from imported Ford Model AA For example statya M Baryatinskogo where it is stated that the T 37 was a development of the T 33 which in turn differs little from the English sic prototype However the T 33 was created before the purchase of the British tanks and has an entirely different power system and the general layout of the chassis and transmission of the British and Soviet tanks have several significant differences Citations Zaloga 1984 p 116 Kholyavsky 1998 Svirin 2005 p 161 Baryatinsky 2003 Latest war tank at home on land or water Popular Mechanics 57 2 HH Windsor 200 East Ontario Street Chicago USA 208 February 1932 retrieved 23 December 2015 Svirin 2005 p 153 a b Svirin 2005 p 157 Svirin 2005 p 152 Chobitok V Thus experience was given From the Recollections of N A Astrov armor kiev ua Retrieved June 20 2011 a b Kolomiets 2003 Svirin 2005 p 159 1 Archived June 2 2012 at the Wayback Machine a b c d Kolomiets 2003 p 78 Kolomiets 2003 pp 77 79 Oryx WWII s Absentee German and Allied Equipment Used By The Turkish Republic Oryx Retrieved 2023 03 23 References editBaryatinsky B 2003 Amphibians of the Red Army Amfibii Krasnoj armii in Russian Moscow Modelist Konstruktor Svirin N 2005 History of the Soviet Tank 1917 1937 Istoriya sovetskogo tanka 1917 1937 in Russian Moscow Yauza ISBN 5 699 13809 9 Kholyavsky G 1998 Encyclopedia of Tanks in Russian Minsk Khavrest ISBN 985 13 8603 0 Kolomiets M V 2003 The T 37 T 38 and T 40 Amphibious Tanks Tanki amfibii T 37 T 38 T 40 in Russian Moscow Strategia KM ISBN 5 901266 01 3 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to T 37 tank U S World War II Newsmap Russian Armored Vehicles hosted by the UNT Libraries Digital Collections T 37 World War II vehicles OnWar Legkij plavayushij tank T 37 T 38 at the Russian Battlefield Amphibian Tank Swims River in War Games Popular Mechanics January 1936 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title T 37A tank amp oldid 1204973501, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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