Stories about weapons. Infantry tank Mk.III "Valentine" outside and inside. Baryatinsky Mikhail Borisovich Tank Valentine in Soviet coloring

Not so long ago, when mentioning any equipment sent to the USSR under Lend-Lease, the authors always noted the insignificance of foreign supplies in comparison with domestic production, as well as the extremely poor quality and archaic design of these samples. Now that the fight against bourgeois counterfeiters has successfully ended with the victory of the latter, it is possible to more or less objectively analyze the advantages and disadvantages of individual models of armored vehicles of Anglo-American production, which were used in significant quantities in units of the Red Army. This article will focus on English light tank MK.III "Valentine", which became the most popular British armored vehicle used on the Soviet-German front, as well as in battles in the Far East.

MK.III "Valentine" (according to the documents of the Red Army "Valentin" or "Valentina") was developed by Vickers in 1938. Like the Matilda, it was an infantry tank, but in terms of mass - 16 tons - it was rather light. True, the thickness of the Valentine's armor was 60-65 mm, and the armament (depending on the modification) consisted of a 40-mm, 57-mm or 75-mm cannon. The Valentine I used an AEC carburetor engine with 135 hp, which was replaced in subsequent modifications by AEC and GMC diesel engines with 131, 138 and 165 hp. Maximum speed tank speed was 34 km/h.

By Soviet standards, "Valentines" had an archaic design - armor plates were attached to a frame made of corners using rivets. Armor elements were installed mainly almost vertically, without rational angles of inclination. However, “rational” armor was not always used on German vehicles - this approach significantly reduced the working internal volume of the tank, which affected the performance of the crew. But that's all English cars were equipped with radio (radio station No. 19), and also had a diesel engine, which facilitated their operation along with Soviet models.

"Valentines" were produced from 1940 to the beginning of 1945 in 11 modifications, differing mainly in armament and engine type. IN total Three English and two Canadian firms produced 8,275 tanks (6,855 in England and 1,420 in Canada). 2,394 British and 1,388 Canadian Valentines were sent to the Soviet Union (3,782 in total), of which 3,332 vehicles reached Russia. The Valentines were supplied to the USSR in seven modifications:

"Valentine II" - with a 42-mm cannon, AEC diesel engine, 131 hp. and an additional external fuel tank;

"Valentine III" - with a three-man turret and a crew of four people;

"Valentine IV" - "Valentine II" with a GMC diesel engine of 138 hp;

"Valentine V" - "Valentine III" with a GMC diesel engine of 138 hp;

"Valentine VII" - a Canadian version of the "Valentine IV" with a one-piece frontal hull part and a coaxial 7.62 mm Browning machine gun (instead of the 7.92 mm BESA machine gun installed on English-made Valentines);

"Valentine IX" - "Valentine V" with a 57-mm cannon with a barrel length of 45 or 42 calibers, mounted in a two-man turret without a coaxial machine gun;

"Valentine X" - "Valentine IX" with a 57-mm cannon with a barrel length of 45 or 42 calibers [most likely a typo. Further in the text - 52 caliber. A.A.], coaxial with a machine gun and a GMC engine with a power of 165 hp.

In addition to the main modifications of the "Valentine", in 1944 the Red Army also received the Mk.III "Valentine-Bridgelaer" - in Soviet terminology "Mk.ZM". Perhaps the Canadian version of the Valentine (modification VII) was even more reliable and technically advanced than its English predecessor. Canadian Valentines were supplied to the Red Army from 1942 to 1944, with the bulk of deliveries occurring in 1943. The most popular modifications in the Red Army were the Valentine IV and its Canadian equivalent, the Valentine VII, as well as the main variant of the final period of the war, the Valentine IX. Moreover, the model IX with an artillery system with a barrel length of 52 calibers was mainly supplied to the Soviet Union, while in british army models with a barrel length of 45 calibers were used. Model "XI" with a 75 mm cannon was not supplied to the USSR.

It should be noted that the designation system for British armored vehicles was quite complex and cumbersome. First, the index assigned to the tank by the War Department was indicated (Mk.II, Mk.III, Mk.IV, etc.), then the name of the vehicle ("Valentine", "Matilda", "Churchill", etc.) and its modification was indicated (in Roman numerals). Thus, the full designation of the tank could look like this; Mk.III "Valentine IX", Mk.IV " Churchill III", etc. To avoid confusion, we will use the designations of English tanks adopted in the Red Army during the war: name indicating the modification, for example: "Valentine IV", "Valentine IX", etc., or without indicating modifications, for example: Mk.III "Valentine".

During the four years of the war, foreign-made tanks and armored vehicles received various units, subdivisions | divisions and units of the armored forces of the Red Army. Therefore, there were many reports on their operational and combat characteristics. Moreover, the assessment of the same car command staff middle and senior management often did not coincide with the opinion of the tank crew. This is understandable, the command was primarily concerned with the tactical characteristics of the equipment - armament, speed on the march, power reserve, etc. - and for the crew, ease of operation, placement of units and the possibility of quick repairs, as well as other parameters of everyday and of a technical nature. The combination of these two points of view largely determined the conclusion about the presented model of armored vehicles.

In addition, foreign equipment was designed with a higher standard of production and operation in mind. In many ways, it was the technical illiteracy of the crews and the lack of units necessary for maintenance that became the reasons for the failure of allied equipment. However, the “gap” of the gap was not so great, and our tankers very soon became accustomed to foreign vehicles, modifying many of them to suit the specifics of operation on the Soviet-German front.

The first "Valentines" appeared in units of our active army at the end of November 1941, although in small numbers. At the same time, only part of the 145 Matildas, 216 Valentines and 330 Station Wagons received was used. So, on the Western Front on January 1, 1942, “Valentines” were part of the 146th (2-T-34, 10-T-60, 4-Mk.Sh), 23rd (1-T-34, 5 Mk. .III) and 20th (1-T-34, 1-T-26, 1-T-, 60, 2-Mk.Sh, 1-BA-20) tank brigades operating in battle formations 16, 49 and 3rd Army, as well as as part of the 112th TD (1-KV, 8-T-26, 6-Mk.Sh and 10-T-34), attached to the 50th Army. The 171st separate tank battalion, also equipped with Valentines (10-T-60, 12-Mk.II, 9-Mk.III), fought on the Northwestern Front (4th Contact Army).

German documents of the 4th Panzer Group note the fact of the first use of British tanks "Type 3" (Mk.III "Valentine". - Author's note) against 2 tank division November 25, 1941 in the Peshki area. The document stated: “For the first time, German soldiers were faced with the fact of real help from England, which Russian propaganda had been shouting about for so long. English tanks are much worse than Soviet ones. The crews that German soldiers took prisoner scolded “the old tin boxes that the British handed them.”

Judging by this report, it can be assumed that the crews of the Valentines had a very limited training period and had little knowledge of English materiel. In the units of the 5th Army, which covered the Mozhaisk direction, the first unit to receive foreign tanks was the 136th separate tank battalion. The battalion completed its formation on December 1, 1941, having ten T-34, ten T-60, nine Valentine and three Matilda tanks (British tanks were received in Gorky on November 10, 1941, tankers were trained directly at front). By December 10, during crew training, five Valentines, two Matildas, one T-34 and four T-60s were damaged. After putting the equipment in order, on December 15, 1911, 136th detachment. was assigned to the 329th Infantry Division (SD). Then, together with the 20th Tank Brigade, he took part in the counter-offensive near Moscow.

On January 15, 1942, the battalion command compiled a “Brief Report on the Actions. Mk.Sh” - apparently one of the first documents assessing the Allied equipment:

“The experience of using Valentines has shown:

1. The tanks' cross-country ability in winter conditions is good; movement on soft snow 50-60 cm thick is ensured. Ground traction is good, but spurs are required when there is icy conditions.

2. The weapon worked flawlessly, but there were cases of the gun not firing enough (the first five or six shots), apparently due to thickening of the lubricant. Weapons are very demanding in terms of lubrication and maintenance.

3. Observation through instruments and slits is good.

4. The engine group and transmission worked well up to 150-200 hours, after which a decrease in engine power is observed.

5. Good quality armor.

The crew personnel passed special training and handled tanks satisfactorily. The command and technical staff of the tanks had little knowledge. A great inconvenience was created by the crews’ ignorance of the elements of preparing tanks for winter. As a result of the lack of necessary heating, cars had difficulty starting in the cold and therefore remained hot all the time, which led to a large consumption of motor resources. In a battle with German tanks (December 20, 1941), three Valentines received the following damage: one had its turret jammed by a 37-mm shell, the gun of another was jammed, the third received five hits on the side from a distance of 200-250 meters. In this battle, the Valentines knocked out two medium German T-3 tanks.

Overall, Mk.Sh is good fighting machine With powerful weapons, good maneuverability, capable of operating against enemy personnel, fortifications and tanks.

Negative sides:

1. Poor adhesion of the tracks to the ground.

2. Greater vulnerability of the suspension bogies - if one roller fails, the tank cannot move. There are no high-explosive fragmentation shells for the gun."

Apparently, the latter circumstance was the reason for the order State Committee Defense about the rearmament of "Valentine" with a domestic artillery system. This task and in a short time frame was carried out at plant No. 92 by the design bureau under the leadership of Grabin. In December 1941, within two weeks, one Valen-Tayne was armed with a 45-mm tank gun and a DT machine gun. This car received the factory index ZIS-95. At the end of December, the tank was sent to Moscow, but things did not go further than a prototype.

A large number of Valentine tanks took part in the Battle of the Caucasus. In general, the North Caucasus Front in the period 1942-1943 had a very significant “share” of the British American tanks- up to 70% of the total number of cars. This situation was explained primarily by the proximity of the front to the Iranian supply channel for the Red Army with equipment and weapons, as well as the convenience of transporting tanks along the Volga that arrived at the northern ports of the USSR.

Of the armored units of the North Caucasus Front, the 5th Guards Tank Brigade was considered the most eminent and experienced. Fighting In the Caucasus, the brigade began on September 26, 1942, covering the Grozny direction to the Malgobek, Ozernaya area (at that time the brigade had 40 Valentines, three T-34s and one BT-7). On September 29, the brigade counterattacked German units in the Alkhanch-urt valley. In this battle, the crew of Captain Shenelkov's Guard in his "Valentine" destroyed five tanks, one self-propelled gun, a truck and 25 soldiers. 15 Over the next few days, fighting in this area continued. In total, during the fighting in the Malgobek area, the brigade destroyed 38 tanks (of which 20 were burned), one self-propelled gun, 24 guns, six mortars, one six-barreled mortar, and up to 1,800 enemy soldiers. The brigade's losses were two T-34s, 33 Valentines (eight of them burned out, the rest were evacuated and restored), 268 people were killed and wounded.

Returning to the use of the Valentine tank on the Soviet-German front, we can say that our commanders found the right decision- these tanks began to be used comprehensively, together with Soviet equipment. In the first echelon (according to documents from 1942) there were KV and Matilda CS tanks. (with a 76.2 mm howitzer), in the second echelon there are T-34s, and in the third echelon “Valentine” and T-70. This tactic very often yielded positive results. An example of this is the reconnaissance in force of the fire system of the German defensive zone in the North Caucasus - the Blue Line.

For the attack, forces from the 56th Army were brought in: the 5th Guards Tank Brigade (as of August 1, 1943 it had 13 M4A2, 24 Valentine, 12 T-34) and the 14th Guards Breakthrough Tank Regiment (16 KV- 1C), as well as the battalion of the 417th Infantry Division.

Exactly at six o'clock in the morning on August 6, 1943, a Katyusha salvo was fired at the village of Gorno-Vesely (Object of attack), and immediately behind the barrage of fire, three KV-1S rushed forward, followed by three Valentines under the command of Guard Senior Lieutenant G. P. Polosina. The infantry moved behind the slippers. Next, it is not without interest to cite the memories of battle participant G.P. Polosin:

“Maneuvering among shell explosions (a thirty-minute artillery barrage, of course, did not completely suppress the enemy’s fire system), my “Valentine” unexpectedly found itself literally in front of the houses of the farm. What luck! But what about other tanks?..

I looked around through the viewing slits. I saw that two more "Englishmen" of my platoon - Poloznikov's and Voronkov's vehicles - were walking slightly behind. But heavy HFs are not visible. Maybe they fell behind or were taken to the side: The infantry, of course, had been cut off from the tanks even earlier...

Destroying enemy machine-gun emplacements and bunkers along the way, our tanks reached the ravine. We stopped here. I gave the order over the radio:

Don't shoot without my order! Take care of the shells. It is still unknown how long it will take... And then we will have to fight our way to our own people...

The tank commanders answered briefly:

Then he tried to contact the guard company commander, Senior Lieutenant Maksimov. And I couldn't. The airwaves were filled to the limit with hysterical teams on German. Apparently, the Nazis were seriously concerned about the unexpected breakthrough of Russian tanks in this sector of their defense.

But our position was also unenviable. It just so happened that they were separated from the main group conducting reconnaissance in force, ammunition and fuel were running out, alone in the rear of the enemy, who, however, had not yet fully understood the situation, but this was a matter of time.

Having crushed a German anti-tank gun along the way, our tank jumped out of the ravine into the open space and saw a strange picture. There were Germans on Voronkov’s car, which was 30-40 meters to the right. They mistook the Valentines for their equipment, banged their butts on the armor and did not understand why the tankers did not get out. After waiting until there were up to a dozen Germans, I ordered a machine gun to hit them. Then, firing smoke grenade launchers (this is where these weapons, which were only on British tanks) and, having installed a smoke screen, the vehicles returned through the same ravine to the location of their troops. The battle was still going on near Gorno-Vesely. KV tanks were knocked out. One of them stood without a tower. Another a little further from him buried his gun in the ground. At its right, spread out caterpillar, two tankers fired their pistols away from the advancing Germans. Having dispersed the enemy infantry with cannon and machine gun fire, we dragged both wounded men into our Valentine. It immediately became clear that having failed to penetrate the armor of the KV anti-tank artillery, the Germans used guided mines against them."

During this short raid behind enemy lines, a platoon of guard senior lieutenant G.P. Polosin destroyed five anti-tank guns, crushed five bunkers, 12 machine guns, and shot up to a hundred Nazis. But most importantly, with his unexpected attack from the rear he forced the enemy to fully open his fire system. Which, in fact, was what was needed.

It remains to add that all crew members of Polosin’s platoon were awarded government awards for this. Personally, Georgy Pavlovich Polosin received the Order of the Red Star.

In the 196th Tank Brigade (30th Army of the Kalinin Front), which participated in the capture of the city of Rzhev, in August 1942, steel plates were welded onto each of the tracks of the Valentine tanks, increasing the track area. Shod in such “bast shoes”, the car did not fall through the snow and did not get stuck in swampy ground middle zone Russia. Mk.III were actively used in positional battles on the Western and Kalinin fronts until the beginning of 1944. Cavalrymen were very fond of the Valentine for its mobility and maneuverability. Until the end of the war, the Valentine IV and its further development, the Valentine IX and X, remained the main tank of the cavalry corps. The cavalrymen noted the lack of high-explosive fragmentation shells for the cannon as the main drawback. And one more thing: it was not recommended to make sharp turns on the Valentine, since this would bend the sloth’s crank and cause the caterpillar to jump off.

By the end of the war, modifications of the Valentine IX and X (along with the American Sherman) remained the only types of tanks that the USSR continued to request for delivery to the Red Army. For example, on June 22, 1944, the 5th Guards Tank Army (3rd Belorussian Front) had 39 Valentine IX tanks, and the 3rd Cavalry Corps had 30 Valentine III tanks. These vehicles ended their military career in the Far East in August-September 1945. The 1st Far Eastern Front included 20 Mk.III Valentine-Bridgelayer bridge tanks, the 2nd Far Eastern Front included 41 "Valentine III and IX" (267th Tank Regiment) and another 40 "Valentine IV" were in the ranks of the cavalry -mechanized group of the Transbaikal Front.

Dowry tank brigades armies 15 and 16, tank-bridge companies (10 Mk.IIIM each) marched together with tanks, but were not used, since tanks and self-propelled guns crossed small rivers and streams themselves, and large obstacles (over 8 m) could not be secured Mk.IIIM.

Canadian tanks "Valentine IV" in Soviet terminology were also designated as "Mk.III", so it is quite difficult to determine which are actually English and which are Canadian vehicles. Several Valentine VII vehicles took part in the liberation of Crimea. In the 19th Perekop Tank Corps there was the 91st separate motorcycle battalion, which had a Valentine VII bottom, ten BA-64s, ten Universal armored personnel carriers and 23 motorcycles.

However, this does not in the least diminish the Canadian share of supplies to the USSR. After all, almost half of the Valentines delivered were Canadian-made. These tanks, along with British products, took part in many operations of the Great Patriotic War.

One example of the use of Canadian vehicles was the battle of the 139th Tank Regiment of the 68th Mechanized Brigade of the 5th Mechanized Corps of the 5th Army to capture the village of Devichye Pole in November 1943. 139 TP (68 infantry brigade, 8 Mk, 5th Army) entered operational subordination to the 5th Army on November 15, 1943. With 20 T-34 tanks and 18 Valentine VII tanks, the regiment was fully equipped and was not used in battle until November 20. After the preparation of the material unit for battle was completed, on November 20, 1943, in cooperation with the 57th Guards Breakthrough Tank Regiment, armed with KV and T-34 vehicles, and the infantry of the 110th Guards Rifle Division, the tanks of the 139th Tank Division went forward. ,the attack was carried out on high speeds(up to 25 km/h) with a landing force of machine gunners (up to 100 people) and with anti-tank guns attached to the tanks. 30 Soviet tanks took part in this operation. The enemy did not expect such a massive rapid attack and was unable to provide effective resistance to the advancing units. When the first line of defense was broken, the infantry dismounted and, unhooking their guns, began to occupy enemy positions, preparing to repel a possible counterattack. The remaining units of the 110th Guards Infantry Division were brought into the breakthrough. However, the German counterattack did not take place; the German command was so stunned by the Soviet breakthrough that it was unable to organize resistance within 24 hours. During this day, our troops marched 20 km into the depths of the German defense and captured Maiden Field, losing 4 tanks (KV, T-34, two Valentine VII). At the end of the war, Valentine tanks were used mainly in tank companies of motorcycle reconnaissance regiments (10 tanks per staff), mixed tank regiments (standard M4A2 Sherman staff - 10, Mk.III Valentine (III, IV, VII, IX, X) - 11 vehicles) and various cavalry formations: cavalry corps and mixed cavalry-mechanized groups. In individual tank and motorcycle regiments, modifications "IX" and "X" predominated, and in the cavalry corps, modifications "IV" - "VII" predominated. Mk.III "Valentine" III-IV tanks were used on the Soviet-German front in significantly smaller numbers than other modifications and for some reason(?) prevailed in the Northwestern theater of operations as part of the Baltic fronts.

After the end of World War II, equipment supplied under Lend-Lease had to be returned former owners. However, most of the tanks were presented by the Soviet side as scrap and destroyed, and a smaller part of the repaired tanks was transferred to the National Liberation Army of China to fight against the Kuomintang forces.

KITOGRAPHY

Oddly enough, the 1/35 scale model of the British tank is produced exclusively in Russia. It was developed by the St. Petersburg company Alan, which was later divided into Alan itself and UM. The Tank went to UM. Some of the castings were sold to the Korean Dragon, which packed them in their own boxes. Then the Moscow “Maket” bought the mold from UM. So I dwelled in detail on the fate of the “Valentine IV” Mk.III model so that you are not confused by its diversity boxes - the plastic inside is the same.Recently, "Maket" added a new turret, rollers and accessories to the set, turning the tank into a Mk.Sh "Valentine X" or XI, depending on the gun barrel used (both are given).

Thus, only MK.III "Valentine IV" and "Valentine X/XI" exist in the form of models.

(I’ll add on my own behalf - 1/72 “Valentine Mk. III” was previously made by ESCI, now it seems Italeri will reissue it. A.A.)

Modern battle tanks of Russia and the world photos, videos, pictures watch online. This article gives an idea of ​​the modern tank fleet. It is based on the principle of classification used in the most authoritative reference book to date, but in a slightly modified and improved form. And if the last one is in his in its original form can still be found in the armies of a number of countries, others have already become museum pieces. And just for 10 years! The authors considered it unfair to follow in the footsteps of the Jane’s reference book and not consider this combat vehicle (very interesting in design and fiercely discussed in its time), which formed the basis of the tank fleet of the last quarter of the 20th century.

Films about tanks where there is still no alternative to this type of weapon ground forces. The tank was and will probably remain a modern weapon for a long time due to its ability to combine such seemingly contradictory qualities as high mobility, powerful weapons and reliable crew protection. These unique qualities of tanks continue to be constantly improved, and the experience and technology accumulated over decades predetermine new frontiers in combat properties and achievements of the military-technical level. In the eternal confrontation between “projectile and armor”, as practice shows, protection against projectiles is increasingly being improved, acquiring new qualities: activity, multi-layeredness, self-defense. At the same time, the projectile becomes more accurate and powerful.

Russian tanks are specific in that they allow you to destroy the enemy from a safe distance, have the ability to make quick maneuvers on off-road, contaminated terrain, can “walk” through territory occupied by the enemy, seize a decisive bridgehead, cause panic in the rear and suppress the enemy with fire and tracks . The war of 1939-1945 became the most difficult test for all humanity, since almost all countries of the world were involved in it. It was a clash of the titans - the most unique period that theorists debated in the early 1930s and during which tanks were used in large numbers by almost all belligerents. At this time, a “lice test” and a deep reform of the first theories of the use of tank forces took place. And it is the Soviet tank forces that are most affected by all this.

Tanks in battle have become a symbol of the past war, the backbone of the Soviet armored forces? Who created them and under what conditions? How did the USSR, which had lost most of its European territories and had difficulty recruiting tanks for the defense of Moscow, was able to release powerful tank formations onto the battlefields already in 1943? This book is intended to answer these questions, telling about the development of Soviet tanks “during the testing days ", from 1937 to the beginning of 1943. When writing the book, materials from Russian archives and private collections of tank builders were used. There was a period in our history that remained in my memory with some kind of depressing feeling. It began with the return of our first military advisers from Spain, and only stopped at the beginning of forty-three,” said former general designer of self-propelled guns L. Gorlitsky, “some kind of pre-storm state was felt.

Tanks of the Second World War It was M. Koshkin, almost underground (but, of course, with the support of “the wisest of the wise leaders of all nations”), who was able to create the tank that a few years later would shock the German tank generals. And not only that, he not only created it, the designer managed to prove to these military fools that it was his T-34 that they needed, and not just another wheeled-tracked "motor vehicle." The author is in slightly different positions, which formed in him after meeting the pre-war documents of the RGVA and RGEA. Therefore, working on this segment of the history of the Soviet tank, the author will inevitably contradict something “generally accepted.” This work describes the history of Soviet tank building in the most difficult years - from the beginning of a radical restructuring of the entire activity of design bureaus and people's commissariats in general, during the frantic race to equip new tank formations of the Red Army, transfer industry to wartime rails and evacuation.

Tanks Wikipedia, the author would like to express his special gratitude to M. Kolomiets for his assistance in selecting and processing materials, and also thank A. Solyankin, I. Zheltov and M. Pavlov, the authors of the reference publication “Domestic armored vehicles. XX century. 1905 - 1941” , since this book helped to understand the fate of some projects that was previously unclear. I would also like to remember with gratitude those conversations with Lev Izraelevich Gorlitsky, the former chief designer of UZTM, which helped to take a fresh look at the entire history of the Soviet tank during the Great Patriotic War of the Soviet Union. For some reason today it is common for us to talk about 1937-1938. only from the point of view of repression, but few people remember that it was during this period that those tanks were born that became legends of the wartime...” From the memoirs of L.I. Gorlinky.

Soviet tanks, a detailed assessment of them at that time was heard from many lips. Many old people recalled that it was from the events in Spain that it became clear to everyone that the war was getting closer and closer to the threshold and it was Hitler who would have to fight. In 1937, mass purges and repressions began in the USSR, and against the backdrop of these difficult events, the Soviet tank began to transform from “mechanized cavalry” (in which one of its combat qualities was emphasized at the expense of others) into a balanced combat vehicle, simultaneously possessing powerful weapons, sufficient to suppress most targets, good maneuverability and mobility with armor protection capable of maintaining its combat effectiveness when fired by the most widespread anti-tank weapons probable enemy.

It was recommended that large tanks be supplemented with only special tanks - amphibious tanks, chemical tanks. The brigade now had 4 separate battalions of 54 tanks each and was strengthened by moving from three-tank platoons to five-tank ones. In addition, D. Pavlov justified the refusal to form three additional mechanized corps in addition to the four existing mechanized corps in 1938, believing that these formations were immobile and difficult to control, and most importantly, they required a different rear organization. The tactical and technical requirements for promising tanks, as expected, were adjusted. In particular, in a letter dated December 23 to the head of the design bureau of plant No. 185 named after. CM. Kirov new boss demanded that the armor of new tanks be strengthened so that at a distance of 600-800 meters (effective range).

The newest tanks in the world, when designing new tanks, it is necessary to provide for the possibility of increasing the level of armor protection during modernization by at least one stage...” This problem could be solved in two ways: Firstly, by increasing the thickness of the armor plates and, secondly, by “using increased armor resistance." It is not difficult to guess that the second way was considered more promising, since the use of specially strengthened armor plates, or even two-layer armor, could, while maintaining the same thickness (and the mass of the tank as a whole), increase its durability by 1.2-1.5 It was this path (the use of especially hardened armor) that was chosen at that moment to create new types of tanks.

Tanks of the USSR at the dawn of tank production, armor was most widely used, the properties of which were identical in all areas. Such armor was called homogeneous (homogeneous), and from the very beginning of armor making, craftsmen sought to create just such armor, because homogeneity ensured stability of characteristics and simplified processing. However, at the end of the 19th century, it was noticed that when the surface of an armor plate was saturated (to a depth of several tenths to several millimeters) with carbon and silicon, its surface strength increased sharply, while the rest of the plate remained viscous. This is how heterogeneous (non-uniform) armor came into use.

For military tanks, the use of heterogeneous armor was very important, since an increase in the hardness of the entire thickness of the armor plate led to a decrease in its elasticity and (as a consequence) to an increase in fragility. Thus, the most durable armor, with other equal conditions It turned out to be very fragile and often pricked even from the explosions of high-explosive fragmentation shells. Therefore, at the dawn of armor production, when producing homogeneous sheets, the task of the metallurgist was to achieve the maximum possible hardness of the armor, but at the same time not to lose its elasticity. Surface-hardened armor with carbon and silicon saturation was called cemented (cemented) and was considered at that time a panacea for many ills. But cementation is a complex, harmful process (for example, treating a hot plate with a jet of illuminating gas) and relatively expensive, and therefore its development in a series required large expenses and improved production standards.

Wartime tanks, even in operation, these hulls were less successful than homogeneous ones, since for no apparent reason cracks formed in them (mainly in loaded seams), and it was very difficult to put patches on holes in cemented slabs during repairs. But it was still expected that a tank protected by 15-20 mm cemented armor would be equivalent in level of protection to the same one, but covered with 22-30 mm sheets, without a significant increase in weight.
Also, by the mid-1930s, tank building had learned to harden the surface of relatively thin armor plates by uneven hardening, known since the end of the 19th century in shipbuilding as the “Krupp method.” Surface hardening led to a significant increase in the hardness of the front side of the sheet, leaving the main thickness of the armor viscous.

How tanks fire video up to half the thickness of the slab, which was, of course, worse than cementation, since while the hardness of the surface layer was higher than with cementation, the elasticity of the hull sheets was significantly reduced. So the “Krupp method” in tank building made it possible to increase the strength of armor even slightly more than cementation. But the hardening technology that was used for thick naval armor was no longer suitable for relatively thin tank armor. Before the war, this method was almost not used in our serial tank building due to technological difficulties and relatively high cost.

Combat use of tanks The most proven tank gun was the 45-mm tank gun model 1932/34. (20K), and before the event in Spain it was believed that its power was quite sufficient to perform most tank tasks. But the battles in Spain showed that a 45-mm gun could only satisfy the task of fighting enemy tanks, since even shelling of manpower in the mountains and forests turned out to be ineffective, and it was only possible to disable a dug-in enemy firing point if direct hit. Firing at shelters and bunkers was ineffective due to the low high-explosive effect of a projectile weighing only about two kg.

Types of tanks photos so that even one shell hit can reliably disable an anti-tank gun or machine gun; and thirdly, to increase the penetrating effect of a tank gun against the armor of a potential enemy, since in the example French tanks(already having an armor thickness of about 40-42 mm) it became clear that the armor protection of foreign combat vehicles tends to be significantly strengthened. There was a sure way for this - increasing the caliber of tank guns and simultaneously increasing the length of their barrel, since a long gun of a larger caliber fires heavier projectiles with a higher initial velocity over a greater distance without correcting the aiming.

The best tanks in the world had a large-caliber cannon, and also had big sizes breech, significantly greater weight and increased recoil response. And this required an increase in the mass of the entire tank as a whole. In addition, placing large-sized rounds in a closed tank volume led to a decrease in transportable ammunition.
The situation was aggravated by the fact that at the beginning of 1938 it suddenly turned out that there was simply no one to give the order for the design of a new, more powerful tank gun. P. Syachintov and his entire design team were repressed, as well as the core of the Bolshevik design bureau under the leadership of G. Magdesiev. Only the group of S. Makhanov remained in the wild, who, since the beginning of 1935, had been trying to develop his new 76.2-mm semi-automatic single gun L-10, and the staff of plant No. 8 was slowly finishing the “forty-five”.

Photos of tanks with names The number of developments is large, but mass production in the period 1933-1937. not a single one has been accepted..." In fact, none of the five air-cooled tank diesel engines, work on which was carried out in 1933-1937 in the engine department of plant No. 185, was brought to series. Moreover, despite the decisions the highest levels about the transition in tank building exclusively to diesel engines, this process was constrained by a number of factors. Of course, diesel had significant efficiency. It consumed less fuel per unit of power per hour. Diesel fuel was less susceptible to fire, since the flash point of its vapor was very high.

New tanks video, even the most advanced of them, the MT-5 tank engine, required a reorganization of engine production for serial production, which was expressed in the construction of new workshops, the supply of advanced foreign equipment (they did not yet have their own machines of the required accuracy), financial investments and strengthening of personnel. It was planned that in 1939 this diesel would produce 180 hp. will go to serial tanks and artillery tractors, but due to investigative work to determine the causes of tank engine failures, which lasted from April to November 1938, these plans were not implemented. The development of a slightly increased six-cylinder gasoline engine No. 745 with a power of 130-150 hp was also started.

Brands of tanks had specific indicators that suited tank builders quite well. The tanks were tested according to new technique, specially developed at the insistence of the new head of ABTU D. Pavlov in relation to combat service in war time. The basis of the tests was a run of 3-4 days (at least 10-12 hours of daily non-stop movement) with a one-day break for technical inspection and restoration work. Moreover, repairs were allowed to be carried out only by field workshops without the involvement of factory specialists. This was followed by a “platform” with obstacles, “swimming” in water with an additional load that simulated an infantry landing, after which the tank was sent for inspection.

Super tanks online, after improvement work, seemed to remove all claims from the tanks. And the overall progress of the tests confirmed the fundamental correctness of the main design changes - an increase in displacement by 450-600 kg, the use of the GAZ-M1 engine, as well as the Komsomolets transmission and suspension. But during testing, numerous minor defects again appeared in the tanks. Chief designer N. Astrov was suspended from work and was in custody and under investigation for several months. In addition, the tank received a new turret with improved protection. The modified layout made it possible to place on the tank more ammunition for a machine gun and two small fire extinguishers (previously there were no fire extinguishers on small tanks of the Red Army).

US tanks as part of modernization work, on one production model of the tank in 1938-1939. The torsion bar suspension developed by the designer of the design bureau of plant No. 185 V. Kulikov was tested. It was distinguished by the design of a composite short coaxial torsion bar (long monotorsion bars could not be used coaxially). However, such a short torsion bar did not show good enough results in tests, and therefore the torsion bar suspension did not immediately pave the way for itself in the course of further work. Obstacles to overcome: climbs of at least 40 degrees, vertical wall 0.7 m, covered ditch 2-2.5 m."

YouTube about tanks, work on the production of prototypes of D-180 and D-200 engines for reconnaissance tanks are not being carried out, jeopardizing the production of prototypes." Justifying his choice, N. Astrov said that a wheeled-tracked non-floating reconnaissance aircraft (factory designation 101 or 10-1), as well as a variant of an amphibious tank (factory designation 102 or 10-1 2), are a compromise solution, since it is not possible to fully satisfy the requirements of the ABTU. Option 101 was a tank weighing 7.5 tons with a hull-like hull, but with vertical side sheets of cemented armor 10-13 mm thick, since : “The inclined sides, causing serious weighting of the suspension and hull, require a significant (up to 300 mm) widening of the hull, not to mention the complication of the tank.

Video reviews of tanks in which the tank’s power unit was planned to be based on the 250-horsepower MG-31F aircraft engine, which was being developed by industry for agricultural aircraft and gyroplanes. 1st grade gasoline was placed in the tank under the floor of the fighting compartment and in additional onboard gas tanks. The armament fully corresponded to the task and consisted of coaxial machine guns DK 12.7 mm caliber and DT (in the second version of the project even ShKAS is listed) 7.62 mm caliber. Combat weight tank with torsion bar suspension was 5.2 tons, with spring suspension - 5.26 tons. Tests took place from July 9 to August 21 according to the methodology approved in 1938, with special attention paid to tanks.

The first British tanks (20 vehicles) were delivered to Arkhangelsk by caravan PQ-1 on October 11, 1941. At the same time, to improve the selection and supply of armored vehicles necessary for the needs of the Red Army, three officers of the Red Army Armored Directorate arrived in London. They were sent to the central tank depot in Chilville. Together with military experts from other regions, tankers became part of the Engineering Department of the People's Commissariat Foreign trade, which was headed by Captain 1st Rank Soloviev. A similar group of military specialists was sent to the United States, where they arrived in January 1942.

The MK.P "Matilda II" and MK.III "Valentine I" tanks sent to the USSR, in accordance with the British concept, belonged to the infantry class and therefore were slow-moving, but well armored.


Infantry tank The British adopted “Matilda I” on the eve of the Second World War. This 27-ton vehicle was protected by 78 mm armor, which was not penetrated by any German tank or anti-tank gun(with the exception of the 88-mm anti-aircraft gun), and was armed with a 40-mm cannon or a 76-mm howitzer. The engine used was a pair of LES or Leyland diesel engines. total capacity 174 or 190 hp, which allowed the tank to reach speeds of up to 25 km/h.

In total, until August 1943, 2987 Matildas were produced in Great Britain, of which 1084 were sent, and 916 arrived in the USSR (the rest died en route).


The English tank bridge layer "Valentine" (Valentine-Bridgelayer) is being tested at the NIBT training ground of the Main Armored Directorate of the Red Army. Kubinka, 1944

MK.1P "Valentine" (according to the documents of the Red Army "Valentin" or "Valentine") was developed by Vickers in 1938. Like the Matilda, it was an infantry tank, but in terms of mass - 16 tons - it was rather light. True, the thickness of the Valentine’s armor was 60-65 mm, and the armament (depending on the modification) consisted of a 40-mm, 57-mm or 75-mm cannon. The Valentine I used an ABS carburetor engine with 135 hp, which was replaced in subsequent modifications by AEC and GMC diesel engines with 131, 138 and 165 hp. The maximum speed of the tank was 34 km/h.
"Valentines" were produced from 1940 to the beginning of 1945 in 11 modifications, differing mainly in armament and engine type. A total of 8,275 tanks were produced by three English and two Canadian companies (6,855 in England and 1,420 in Canada). 2,394 British and 1,388 Canadian Valentines (3,782 in total) were sent to the Soviet Union, of which 3,332 vehicles reached Russia. Seven modifications of “Valentines” were supplied to the USSR:
"Valentine II" - with a 40-mm cannon, AEC diesel engine with a power of 131 hp. and an additional external fuel tank;
"Valentine 111" - with a three-man turret and a crew of four;
“Valentine IV” - “Valentine II” with a GMC diesel engine of 138 hp;
“Valentine V” - “Valentine III” with a GMC diesel engine of 138 hp;
"Valentine VII" - a Canadian version of the "Valentine IV" with a solid frontal part of the hull and a coaxial 7.62 mm Browning machine gun (instead of the 7.92 mm BESA machine gun installed on the English-made Valentines);
"Valentine IX" - "Valentine V" with a 57-mm cannon with a barrel length of 42 calibers, installed in a two-man turret without a coaxial machine gun;
"Valentine X" - "Valentine IX" with a 57 mm cannon with a barrel length of 50 calibers, coaxial with a machine gun, and a GMC engine with a power of 165 hp.
In addition to the main modifications of the Valentine, in 1944 the Red Army also received the MK.II1 Valcntine-Bridgelayer - in Soviet terminology, MK.ZM.
Perhaps the Canadian version of the Valentine (modification VII) was even more reliable and technically advanced than its English predecessor.
Canadian Valentines were supplied to the Red Army from 1942 to 1944, with the bulk of deliveries occurring in 1943.
Another vehicle that began supplying allied weapons to the USSR is the English armored personnel carrier “Universal” (in Soviet terminology, MK.I “Universal”, or U-1, or “Bren”). This light tracked vehicle weighing about 3.5 tons was the most popular armored personnel carrier of the Second World War. From 1935 to 1945, 89,595 vehicles of this class were produced in Great Britain, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and the USA, of which 2008 (English and Canadian production) ended up in the USSR. The Universal armored personnel carrier was armed with Bren machine guns and a Boys anti-tank rifle; the armor thickness was 7-11 mm. Ford engine 85 hp. allowed a 3.5-ton vehicle with a crew of two and three to four paratroopers to reach speeds of up to 50 km/h.
In the first year of operation of the supply system, the Red Army received 361 MK.P Matilda and MK.III Valentine tanks, as well as 330 Universal armored personnel carriers. True, only a few of this number were used in battles in 1941, so the role British armored vehicles in the battles near Moscow she was more than modest.
It should be noted that the designation system for British armored vehicles was quite complex and cumbersome. First, the index assigned to the tank by the War Ministry was indicated (MK.II, MK.Sh, MK.IV, etc.), then the name of the vehicle (“Valentine”, “Matilda”, “Churchill”, etc.) and its modification was indicated (in Roman numerals). Thus, the full designation of the tank could look like this: MK.Sh “Valentine IX”, MK.IV “Churchill III”, etc. To avoid confusion in this book we will use the designations of British tanks adopted in the Red Army during the war: a name with an indication of the modification, for example, “Valentine IV”, “Valentine IX”, etc., or without an indication, for example MK.IV "Churchill", MK.Sh "Valentine", MK.II "Matilda", etc.

In January 1942, 20 of the 177 MK.VII Tetrarch tanks produced (Soviet designation Vickers VII or MK. VII) were delivered to the USSR. These were light reconnaissance vehicles, weighing 7.6 tons, armed with a 40 mm cannon and a 7.92 mm BESA machine gun and protected by 16 mm armor. The 165-strong Meadows MAT carburetor engine allowed the tank to reach a speed of 64 km/h. Most likely, the supply of this type of tank is due to interest in the results of its use on the Soviet-German front.
Since the summer of 1942, heavy British MK tanks began to arrive in the Soviet Union in small batches. IV "Churchill". They were produced in Great Britain from the summer of 1941 until the end of the Second World War in 16 modifications. Only two were delivered to the USSR, differing in the way the turrets were made: “Churchill III” - with a welded turret and “Churchill IV” - with a cast turret (in Soviet documents these modifications did not differ in any way, and all tanks were designated MK.IV, MK.IV " Churchill" or simply "Churchill"). Protected by 77...175 mm armor, the 40-ton tank had a 350-horsepower Bedford carburetor engine and reached speeds of up to 25 km/h. The Churchill's armament consisted of a 57 mm cannon and two BESA machine guns. Beginning in the fall of 1942, these vehicles were sent to staff heavy breakthrough tank regiments. Of the 5,640 produced and 344 sent to the USSR, only 253 Churchill III and IV ended up.
From the beginning of 1942, the United States joined in organizing deliveries under Lend-Lease on a typical scale, and began sending to our country tanks MZ "General Stewart" (in Soviet terminology, MZ light, or MZl) and MZ "General Lee" (in Soviet terminology, MZ average, or MZs).
MZ "Stuart" was the most widespread light tank Second World War. From 1941 to 1944, two American companies manufactured 13,859 vehicles of three modifications. The USSR received modifications of the MZ and MZA1, differing in the shape of the turret, the method of manufacturing the hull and the number of machine guns. These were 13-ton vehicles, protected by 13...45 mm armor and armed with a 37 mm cannon and three (on MZA1) - five (on MZ) 7.62 mm Browning machine guns. Continental carburetor engine rated at 250 hp. (or a Guiberson diesel engine with 210 hp) accelerated the tanks to 50 km/h. In 1942-1943, 340 MZ and 1336 MZA1 were sent to the USSR, and 1232 tanks were delivered (including 211 diesel ones).

The Lee MZ, developed in 1941, was a rather archaic design with a three-tier arrangement of weapons. The production of these three-meter monsters took place at the factories of five companies, where in 1941-1942 6258 tanks of six modifications were produced, differing mainly in manufacturing technology and engine type. The USSR mainly supplied vehicles of the MZ modification, weighing 29 tons, having 22-50 mm armor and armament consisting of 75 mm and 37 mm guns and three Browning machine guns. Continental R-975-EC2 radial carburetor engine producing 340 hp. (or Guiberson diesel) accelerated this car to 42 km/h.
In 1942-1943, 1386 MZs tanks were sent from the USA to our country, and 976 vehicles were received, which were actively used in the battles of 1942-1943.

American medium tank M2A1


Also, judging by Soviet documents, along with the first batches of American MZ medium tanks in 1942, several of its “predecessors” - M2A1 tanks (Soviet designation M2 medium) - arrived in the USSR. Weighing 17.2 tons, the M2 tank was armed with a 37 mm cannon in the turret and six 7.62 mm Browning machine guns in the hull. The M2A1 had 32 mm thick armor and a 400 hp engine. allowed him to accelerate to 42 km/h. Only 94 of these tanks were manufactured in the USA and were used in American army for educational purposes only.
However, the most popular foreign tank in the Red Army was the American-made M4 General Sherman. The first vehicles arrived in the USSR at the end of 1942, but the peak of deliveries occurred in 1944, when 2345 M4A2 tanks were sent to our country, which accounted for more than 2/3 of all deliveries of foreign armored vehicles that year. In total, 49,234 Shermans of 13 modifications were manufactured in the United States from February 1942 to August 1945. The USSR supplied modifications M4A2 (with a 75-mm cannon) and M4A2 (76)W (with a 76-mm cannon) with a GMC diesel engine with a power of 375 hp. The mass of the tanks was (depending on weapons) 31-33 tons, armor - 50...100 mm, speed - up to 40 km/h.
During the war years, 10,960 M4A2 tanks were manufactured at American enterprises, 4,063 vehicles were sent to the USSR (1,990 with a 75-mm gun, 2,073 with a 76-mm gun), and 3,664 vehicles were received by military acceptance, including a small number of M4A2 76 (W ) HVSS with new horizontal suspension in June 1945, which participated in the war with Japan.
In addition to the line ones, the Red Army received 127 repair tanks M31 (Soviet designation T-2), manufactured on the basis of the medium tank, on which the main armament was dismantled and crane equipment and a winch were installed.
In 1944, 52 M10 self-propelled artillery mounts were received from the United States, which were sent to form two self-propelled artillery regiments. Built on the basis of the M4A2 tank, the self-propelled gun had armor of 25...57 mm and was armed with a powerful 76.2 mm cannon in a rotating turret open on top. GMC diesel with 375 hp. allowed a self-propelled gun weighing 29.5 tons to reach a speed of 48 km/h.

In addition to tanks, armored personnel carriers and various vehicles based on them came to the USSR from the USA in large quantities.
American wheeled armored personnel carriers were represented in the Red Army by the Scout Car MZA1 from White (in Soviet documents it is referred to as an “armored personnel carrier,” armored vehicle,” or “semi-armored vehicle” MZA1, or “Scout”). "Scout" was perfectly suited for reconnaissance purposes. Weighing 5.6 tons, the vehicle had an armor thickness of up to 12.7 mm and could carry 8 people (2 crew, 6 troops). The 110-horsepower carburetor engine allowed the armored personnel carrier to reach speeds of up to 105 km/h. The standard armament of the Scout included 12.7 mm heavy and 7.62 mm Browning machine guns, not counting the personal crew. In the Red Army, Scout armored personnel carriers were used as part of reconnaissance companies of tank and mechanized brigades, motorcycle battalions of corps subordination, and in separate motorcycle regiments of tank armies. During the war years, 20,894 Scout vehicles were built in the United States, of which 3,034 ended up in the armored and mechanized forces of the Red Army.
American half-track armored personnel carriers M2, MZ, M9 arrived in units subordinate to the GBTU in small quantities (118 units in total), since the bulk of these vehicles - 1082 pieces - were sent to artillery (mainly anti-tank fighter), where they were used for towing 76...100 mm guns.
In tank formations, these armored personnel carriers, capable of carrying from 10 to 13 people, were turned into command vehicles for brigades, corps, and armies. 16-mm armor, a 147 hp engine that allowed the vehicle to reach speeds of up to 72 km/h, and the presence of an awning allowed the headquarters or operational group of a mechanized unit to control the battle with satisfactory comfort. The M2's defensive armament consisted of two Browning machine guns and was identical to the wheeled Scout.



Repair and recovery tank M31 based on the MZ "Li" during testing in Kubinka.


On the basis of half-track armored personnel carriers of the M2-M9 family, various self-propelled guns were manufactured, which were also supplied to our country.
Self-propelled guns T-48 (Soviet designation SU-57) were a 57-mm cannon mounted in fighting compartment American half-track armored personnel carrier MZ. Initially, the order for this design was issued by Great Britain, but then, due to the relative weakness of the weapons and uncertainty with tactical use, some of the vehicles were transferred to the USSR. SU-57 in the amount of 650 units entered service with light self-propelled artillery brigades (sabr), as well as divisional and battery-by-battery units in separate armored reconnaissance companies and motorcycle battalions (regiments).
The M15 anti-aircraft SU was a half-track MZ armored personnel carrier with a combined machine-gun armament installed on it, consisting of a 37-mm M1A2 cannon and two Browning M2 machine guns of 12.7 mm caliber. This formidable weapon, capable of destroying not only low-flying air targets, but also lightly armored targets, was supplied to the USSR in small quantities. Of the 2,332 M15 ZSUs produced in the United States, only 100 vehicles were in tank units of the Red Army.

The M17 anti-aircraft SU was armed with four 12.7 mm Browning M2 machine guns in an aircraft rotating mount mounted on the M5 armored personnel carrier. All 1000 Ml7 anti-aircraft SUs manufactured in the USA were delivered to the Soviet Union.
All ZSUs supplied from the United States were used as part of the mechanized and tank forces of the Red Army. They, along with Soviet towed guns, equipped individual anti-aircraft regiments, battalions and companies of corps and tank armies. For example, as of January 1945, the 7th Guards Tank Corps included the 287th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment, consisting of 16 37-mm anti-aircraft guns and ten M17 ZSUs.
Standing apart among the armored vehicles supplied under Lend-Lease is the 13-ton heavy armored high-speed tractor M5. Built on chassis light tank MZ "General Stewart", the tractor had a Continental R6572 engine with a power of 235 hp. and was capable of towing guns with a caliber of up to 155 mm, while simultaneously transporting 8-9 people at a speed of 56 km/h. The cabin was open type, with a canvas roof. The driver and gun crew were located in the front of the vehicle. Of the 5,290 vehicles produced by International Harvester, 200 M5s reached the USSR in 1944-1945, which were sent exclusively to the artillery units of the RGK, where they were used to tow 122 and 152 mm hull guns.
In addition to combat vehicles, various repair and recovery equipment were supplied to the Red Army throughout the entire period of the war. Along with the already mentioned repair and recovery tank M31, the Red Army received wheeled English Scammel tractors in two modifications and American vehicles RE028XS, Diamond T-980.
The Scammel heavy rescue tractor was developed for English army in tank towing (Scammell TRMU/30) and recovery vehicle (Scammell PIONEER SV/2S) versions. Gardner GL diesel engine with 102 hp. allowed using a trailer to tow a load of up to 30 tons along paved roads. However, during the battles in North Africa Scammel TRMU/30 even brought 42-ton Churchills to the front line. The recovery PIONEER SV/2S was equipped with a powerful winch-crane for repair work.
Deliveries of Scammel to our country began in 1942 and were extremely limited. However, in Great Britain itself, during the entire period of the war, 548 Scammell TRMU/30 and 768 Scammell SV/2S were produced, so several dozen of these tractors delivered to the Red Army were an impressive figure in comparison with the total production volume. Before the start of mass American deliveries, these vehicles were distributed to the fronts literally one by one. So, on the Leningrad Front, the front evacuation company had only one Scammell tractor (the rest of the equipment was Soviet-made), etc.
The American REO transporter with a special trailer was intended for transporting tanks and self-propelled guns weighing up to 20 tons on paved and dry dirt roads. The design of the trailer made it possible to load and unload equipment under its own power; when transporting faulty tanks, loading onto the trailer was done using a winch. The RE028XS transporter had a six-cylinder Cummings HB-600 water-cooled diesel engine with a power of 150 hp. For the safety of transporting tanks and self-propelled guns, there was a set of fastening devices (chains, blocks, guy wires, etc.). During 1943-1944, the Red Army received 190 of these vehicles, however, due to the general trend of increasing tank weight, a tractor capable of towing heavier vehicles was required. It was the new American ballast tractor Diamond T-980. The transporter consisted of a three-axle 8-ton tractor and a three-axle wheeled 45-ton Roger Trailer. It could be used to transport loads weighing up to 45 tons on dry dirt roads and paved roads. For ease of unloading and loading tanks, the Diamond T-980 transporter was equipped with a powerful engine-driven winch. In addition, the design of the trailer made it possible to load serviceable tanks under its own power. The Hercules DFXE engine power reached 200 hp, which ensured the transportation of cargo on a trailer at a speed of 26 km/h. From 1943 to 1945, 295 Diamond T-980 tractors were produced. These vehicles were placed at the disposal of evacuation units of fronts and armies. Thus, the 1st Guards Tank Army included the 67th evacuation squadron, which, in addition to the Voroshilovites and Cominterns, included 2 T-980s as of January 1945. Usually, no more than two vehicles were allocated to the army evacuation vehicles. On August 5, 1945, to ensure the evacuation of armored vehicles of units and formations prepared to attack Japanese troops in Manchuria, the 1st Armored Repair and Evacuation Center was created, from which mixed evacuation groups were allocated to meet army needs. The 1st Red Banner Army received 3 tractors based on the T-34 and 2 T-980 Diamond, and the 5th Army received 6 T-34 and 2 Diamond. By the end of the war, reports from repair and recovery services were full of proposals to increase the number of tractor-trailers to 4-5 per army.
In the Red Army, wheeled tractors with trailers for transporting tanks to the front line were used extremely rarely. Due to their relative scarcity and the presence of winches, the Scammell, REO, Diamond tractors were primarily necessary for the rapid evacuation of heavy armored vehicles, especially from areas with swampy terrain.

T-2 (M31) tanks in tandem are towing a heavy KV-1. NIBT training ground, winter 1942-43.


Since the end of 1943, automobile repair shops of American and Canadian production began to arrive in large quantities in the Soviet Union.
The full fleet of American workshops consisted of up to ten different repair units and was essentially a field tank repair plant. It consisted of the following machines:
1. Mechanical workshop M16A (on Studebacker US-6 chassis).
2. Mechanical workshop M16B (on US-6 chassis).
3. Metalworking and mechanical workshop M8A (on US-6 chassis).
4. Forging and welding workshop M12 (on US-6 chassis).
5. Electrical repair shop M18 (on US-6 chassis).
6. Workshop for repairing M7 weapons (on US-6 chassis).
7. Tool workshop (on StudebekkerUS-6 chassis).
8. M14 warehouse vehicles (on US-6 chassis).
9. 10-ton crane Ml or M1A1 (on the WARD LaFRANCE 1000 M1A1 chassis, less often on the KENWORTH 570 Ml chassis).
10. Repair tank M31 (T-2).
The full fleet of Canadian workshops was smaller than the American one and consisted of the following machines:
1 Mechanical workshop A3 (on US-made GMC chassis - 353).
2. Mechanical workshop D3 (on an American-made GMC -353 chassis).
3. Mobile charging station (MCS) OFP-3 (on Canadian-made Ford C298QF/F60L chassis).
4. Electric welding workshop KL-3 (on a Canadian-made Ford F15A chassis).
5. Electrical repair shop (on an American-made GMC 353 chassis).
6. 9 kW power plant on a trailer.
American and Canadian fleets were used mainly to staff repair units of army and front-line subordination (mobile tank repair plants, separate repair and restoration battalions, etc.). This made it possible to carry out not only medium, but also major repairs of armored vehicles, while Soviet equipment of this type was designed mainly for routine repairs.
The USSR also supplied a separate forging and welding workshop (on an American or Canadian-made GMC Chevrolet 7107 chassis), which was used to staff repair units directly in tank units. In total, in 1944-1945, 1,590 field repair workshops of all types were supplied to the USSR from Canada (the authors do not have data on the number of American workshops).

ZSU M15A1, Kubinka, 1944.


Thus, during the entire period of the war, the USSR received not only combat vehicles and spare parts for them, but also modern repair equipment of foreign production, which ensured the entire cycle of competent operation of the Red Army tank fleet, both domestic and foreign production.
In conclusion, it should be noted that one of the problems in assessing the volume of deliveries under Lend-Lease is the counting system. In most domestic and foreign works devoted to this topic, the authors operate with Western data, which exceed Soviet data by 3-4 hundred units. This is due, firstly, to the loss of some tanks during transportation by Northern convoys (especially in 1942-1943), and secondly, to the fact that applications from the Soviet Union for one or another type of equipment were often taken as shipping data. Therefore, different authors have completely different quantitative data.

In addition, most domestic archival materials relating to Lend-Lease are still inaccessible to most researchers. Therefore, it is not yet possible to estimate the actual volumes of supplies.
The tables presented here are compiled according to data from the admissions committees of the GBTU of the Red Army and seem to the authors to be closest to the truth (Table 3, 4 and 5).
Table 3. Supplies of armored vehicles to the USSR from Great Britain and Canada from 1941 to 1945 (according to the admissions committees of the GBTU KA)


1 Of these, 27 are from Canada. Of these, all 16 are from Canada.
2 From 1943 to 1945, British cruiser tanks "Cromwell" (six pieces), converted into mine trawls "Sherman" under the name "Sherman-Crab" (three pieces), flamethrower vehicles "Churchill-Crocodile" were supplied to the USSR from Great Britain for evaluation purposes "(five pieces), AES and Daimler armored vehicles (one copy each), a flamethrower version of the Universal armored personnel carrier called "Wasp", as well as Canadian Bombardier snowmobiles (six pieces).

Table 4. Supplies of armored vehicles to the USSR from the USA from 1941 to 1945 (according to the admissions committees of the GBTU KA)


3 In 1943, from the bottom of the Northern Arctic Ocean 12 MZS tanks from the supply for 1942 were recovered from the sunken transport by the repair units of the Karelian Front. After the inclusion of 11 MZs in the units of the Karelian Front, the number of tanks of this type delivered to the USSR in 1943 began to amount to 175 units.
2 In 1942, several American M2A1 medium tanks were delivered to the USSR under the MZ medium brand.
3 3Here we provide data only on armored personnel carriers that came under the jurisdiction of GBTU KA. In addition, from 1942 to 1945, 1082 armored personnel carriers M2, MZ, M9 were transferred to the Main Artillery Directorate for use as artillery tractors. Thus, total half-track armored personnel carriers delivered under Lend-Lease to the Soviet Union amount to 1,200 pieces.
For testing and evaluation in 1943-1945, one heavy tank T26 “General Pershing”, five light tanks M5, two light tanks M24 “General Chaffee” and five self-propelled guns T-70 were sent from the USA to the USSR in 1943-1945.

Table 5. Supplies of wheeled tank transporters from the USA to the USSR in 1941-1945 (according to the admissions committees of the GBTU KA)

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Hello everyone and welcome to the site! Friends, today our guest is perhaps one of the most unusual vehicles in World of Tanks, a Tier 4 Soviet light premium tank. Valentine II guide.

What makes it unique, you ask? Everything is very simple, this device has a very comfortable preferential battle level - 4. This means that Valentine II WoT never fights against the fifth levels, we are thrown only towards classmates and machines at a lower level.

TTX Valentine II

But despite its remarkable benefits, you need to know the parameters of this baby and we will start with the fact that we have at our disposal a very good safety margin by LT-4 standards, as well as a good, but not best review at 350 meters.

At the same time, Valentine II characteristics armor is one of its advantages, although in reality, the armor here is not that strong.

Let's start with the body and in the frontal projection the yellow areas for the fourth level are very thick, the reduction here is 93 millimeters. However, the orange parts of the body, as can be seen on the side of the model, are devoid of slopes, their thickness does not exceed 65 millimeters and here Valentine II tank it breaks through quite easily, only machine guns will not harm us.

Things are more interesting with the tower. Due to the fact that in the frontal projection there is a gun mantlet, various slopes, layers of armor plates and other things, the given armor values ​​​​here range from 41 to 137 millimeters, that is, to catch ricochets and non-penetration light tank Valentine II the forehead of the tower can often.

As for the side projection, you need to take care of it and not expose it sideways to the enemy. Basically, the armor here is 60-65 millimeters thick, but the engine compartment, which Valentine II World of Tanks sticks out above the body, is protected very poorly (40 mm). However, when the tank is positioned in a diamond shape, both the front of the hull and the side begin to hold the blow, this can be used.

But if this baby’s armor is still good, then in terms of mobility it’s definitely not a light tank, rather a heavy one. Valentine II WoT is the owner of a poor maximum speed, very dull dynamics (even 9 horses per ton of weight were not gained), and only with maneuverability everything is fine, but you won’t feel it because of the general slowness.

gun

As often happens, the tank’s armament deserves special attention, but make no mistake, in our case there will be little good, because there is a second-level cannon installed on board.

So, have Valentine II gun has a very small one-time damage and a very high rate of fire. However, even with this, we can only produce about 1250 units of damage per minute, which is not enough. By the way, our ammunition load is also small, for such and such a rate of fire.

Penetration is also bad for us, there are only enough armor-piercing shells to deal damage to third-level vehicles and soft fours, otherwise we will have to load sub-calibers. As an example, if light tank Valentine II will meet the German tank destroyer Hetzer, it will not be able to penetrate its forehead even with gold.

The only tolerable point in terms of weapons can be considered accuracy. Yes, we have a large field of view and poor stabilization, but thanks to the very fast aiming you will hardly notice this, although it is effective to shoot at long distances Valentine II World of Tanks still can't.

The final note will be the elevation angles, the barrel bends down 6 degrees, this is not very bad, but far from perfect.

Advantages and disadvantages

The naked eye can see that in terms of general characteristics and even more so in armament, this specimen turned out to be rather weak. However, now we will try to highlight the main advantages and disadvantages Valentine II WoT, for clarity.
Pros:
Very comfortable level of fighting;
Good safety margin;
Decent review;
Not bad frontal armor;
High rate of fire.
Minuses:
Very poor mobility;
Little Alphastrike;
Poor damage per minute;
Weak penetration;
Small ammunition.

Equipment for Valentine II

Equipment always gives the tanker a chance to “groom” his tank, make it more comfortable, smooth out the disadvantages and improve the advantages. In our case this also occurs, but for Valentine II equipment presented in a very meager selection, so the picture will be something like this:
1. – will give a pleasant increase to the important characteristics of the machine, in particular, it will improve the DPM, information, and visibility.
2. – the review we have is not bad, so why not make it even better?
3. is the only normal alternative out of all the rest, and increasing the mixing speed even more is not such a bad option.

Crew training

Although we only have three people in the tank, there’s not much you can do, but you can’t leave the crew without proper training, because this is another good way improve the combat vehicle. In our case, on tank Valentine II perks It's better to download it like this:
Commander (gunner) – , , , .
Driver mechanic - , , , .
Loader (radio operator) – , , , .

Equipment for Valentine II

You will see absolutely nothing new in terms of consumables. Despite the fact that our car is premium, you won’t be able to farm a lot on it, and if you don’t have a lot of silver, take , , . For lovers of comfort and reliability, there is a more expensive set; with such preferences, take it to Valentine II equipment as , , . In this case, you can also replace the last element with.

Tactics for playing Valentine II

Before us is a very slow vehicle with frankly weak weapons, but capable of repelling something with armor, so how will it manage such benefits?

The first thing I want to say is for Valentine II tactics combat involves choosing and pushing through one direction; we will not be able to change the flank due to poor mobility. At the same time, take into account the factor of allies; if the team is weak and begins to merge, it is better to start moving towards the base in advance in order to have time to defend it.

Regarding damage, for Valentine II World of Tanks Medium distances are best. In such cases, you can hit the enemy more effectively, and it will also be easier to use your armor, which is not the strongest, but still available.

If we talk about tanking, put your light tank Valentine II diamond, try to dance, but if possible, it is better to drive away to cover between shots.

It’s even better to show only the turret to the enemy; it is armored better than the hull, and also has a compact size.

Otherwise, everything is typical, beware of artillery, watch the mini-map and try to maintain your safety margin. Thanks to the preferential level of battles Valentine II WoT is an interesting car, but in view significant shortcomings To play it well, you need to get used to it.

Built on the initiative of Vickers-Armstrong, the Valentine tank met the basic principle that was adopted in the interwar period in the British Army and provided for the presence of two types - cruising, intended to carry out operations previously carried out by cavalry, and heavy tanks to support infantry. For these latter, armor took precedence over all other fighting qualities. However, during the development of the Valentine, Vickers designers used a number of components and assemblies from their cruising tanks, which were built by order of the War Ministry, which allowed them to save time and labor costs on the development of “their” tank. As a result, when the Valentine was born, it was rather heavily armored cruiser tank than purely infantry. However, its low speed was a drawback that constantly made itself felt when operating in open areas.

The tank owes its name to Saint Valentine, on whose day - February 14, 1938 - the project was submitted to the War Ministry. The order was placed only in July 1939, when the minister demanded the production of 275 new tanks in the shortest possible time. The first vehicles entered service in May 1940, with some of the tanks going to equip cavalry units to compensate for losses suffered at Dunkirk, and only later did they appear in tank brigades, where they began to fulfill their inherent role of supporting infantry. Serial production of the Valentine infantry tanks ended at the beginning of 1944, but before that, 8,275 vehicles had left the assembly lines of the factories. About 1,420 tanks were built in Canada. 1290 of them, along with 1300 cars assembled in Great Britain, went to the USSR in accordance with the Lend-Lease program. In the Soviet Union, new tanks immediately entered front-line tank units, where they immediately won the love of tankers with their simplicity of design and reliability of the engine and transmission. But the Valentine's armament completely disappointed them: the caliber of the gun mounted on the tank had long ago become a complete anachronism on the Eastern Front. In a number of cases, instead of weak English guns, Soviet specialists installed excellent domestic 76.2 mm tank guns, which had proven themselves well on T-34 tanks.


As part of the British army, "Valentine" was baptized in North Africa in 1941. All subsequent modifications of this tank were used in the same theater of operations until the end of the African campaign. A number of tanks reached Tunisia as part of the 1st Army. These Valentines were operated in desert conditions and earned an excellent reputation for their reliability. After the battle of El Alamein, some of them covered another 4,830 km under their own power, following the 8th Army. In 1942, one squadron of Valentines was used in the invasion of Madagascar; tanks of the same type were in service with the 3rd New Zealand Division, which fought in the Pacific theater of operations. Some of these vehicles received new armament: the 2-pounder gun gave way to a 3-inch howitzer for close infantry support. A small number of Valentines were sent to Burma and operated in Arakan; several vehicles reinforced the Gibraltar garrison. In 1944, when the invasion of Normandy was being prepared, the Valentine was reclassified as a battle tank, but by that time its hull and chassis had already served as the basis for the creation of many armored vehicles for a wide variety of purposes, and it was in this form that the Valentines large quantities appeared in France.

No other tank had as many modifications as the Valentine. As a battle tank, the vehicle was built in eleven versions, one after another. To these should be added Valentine DD amphibious tanks, bridge layers, flamethrower tanks and several types of minesweepers. The basic model was perfect for the most incredible experiments.

Like most tanks, the Valentine's hull was divided into three sections: control, combat and power. The driver was located along the axis of the car and did not have a single extra square centimeter of area. He entered the tank through a hatch located above his seat, and after the hatch lid slammed shut, his view was provided only by a narrow viewing slit and two periscopes.

The turret was located above the fighting compartment and was absolutely unsuccessful. In all modifications it remained tight and uncomfortable. In versions with a crew of three, two tankers were constantly in the turret and performed not only their own functions, but also those of others. At least this concerned the tank commander: in addition to his main job, he had to load the gun, indicate targets to the gunner and maintain radio communication. His visibility was very limited, since the tower had neither a dome nor a commander's cupola, and during the battle, when all the hatches were closed, the commander had to rely on one single periscope. Naturally, for this reason, he left the hatch open so that he could look out from time to time. The consequence of this was numerous losses among personnel. At the rear of the turret was Radio Station No. 19, which included a small shortwave radio for communicating with infantry during a joint operation. Thus, the tank commander had to work with two radio stations and, in addition, use an intercom to direct the actions of his crew. Considering all this, one cannot help but understand the tank commanders who preferred the four-seat versions of the Mk III and V to all modifications of the Valentines, despite the fact that the volume of their turrets was no larger and the observation devices remained just as bad.

As for the cannon, it matched the tower. 2-pound, it had only one advantage - high accuracy of combat. However, it became obsolete back in 1938 and remained in service in the initial stages of battles in the desert only because it could somehow cope with Italian and the lightest German tanks at a range not exceeding 1 km. Another serious drawback of the gun was that it did not have high-explosive ammunition for firing at unarmored targets. The tank's ammunition consisted of 79 rounds and 2,000 rounds of ammunition for the BESA machine gun coaxial with the cannon. The Valentines Mk VIII, IX and X were armed with a 6-pounder gun, but even this more powerful weapon proved obsolete from its introduction. In addition, due to the incredible frivolity of the Mk VIII and IX modifications, they did not have a coaxial machine gun, and the crew had to use the main armament of the tank against infantry. The Mk X had a machine gun, but it “ate up” the already meager internal volume of the tank. Most Valentines had a Bren light machine gun inside the turret, which could be mounted on the turret if necessary. Only the tank commander could use it, exposing himself to enemy fire. Canadian-built Valentines had American 7.62mm Brownings instead of BESA machine guns, and some (very few) tanks also had smoke grenade launchers, which were mounted on the sides of the turret.


The turret was rotated using a hydraulic drive, which ensured good guidance, but the final rotation was done manually. The 2-pound cannon was aimed vertically by the gunner, who used a shoulder rest for this. On subsequent modifications, the gun was aimed vertically using the flywheel of the manual aiming mechanism.
The power department was the complete opposite of the combat department. It was spacious and provided easy access to the engine, the maintenance of which was simple, which was especially appreciated by driver mechanics and repairmen. In general, the tank’s power plant satisfied almost any operating conditions. The Mk I modification had an AEC carburetor engine, but all subsequent versions were equipped with diesel engines. The transmission group included a five-speed Meadows gearbox and onboard clutches.

The armor plates of the "Valentines" were fastened with rivets and did not have rational angles of inclination. The front plates of the Canadian-made tanks, as well as the Mk X and XI versions, which were built in the UK, were cast and, accordingly, more durable and cheaper, but in general the armor of the Valentines left much to be desired. If the frontal part of the tanks had more or less satisfactory protection, then on the stern and roof the thickness of the armor was reduced from 65 mm to 8 mm, which was clearly not enough.

The chassis, typical of that period, was “low-speed” and consisted of two three rollers per side, which were suspended on horizontal springs. The front and rear rollers had a larger diameter than the intermediate ones and the tank's body was located quite high above the ground. Three small support rollers prevented the tracks from sagging. Generally chassis proved itself quite well, however, when operating the tank in winter in the Soviet Union, the tracks often slipped in deep snow. The Valentine DD amphibious tank was used primarily for training purposes, but several of these vehicles took part in the invasion of Italy. The DD version was a regular Valentine, which was carefully sealed and equipped with a folding screen that kept the tank afloat when submerged in water. A screen was also attached to the top, which was removed after the vehicle went ashore.

Not so long ago, when mentioning any equipment sent to the USSR under Lend-Lease, the authors always noted the insignificance of foreign supplies in comparison with domestic production, as well as the extremely poor quality and archaic design of these samples. Now that the fight against bourgeois counterfeiters has successfully ended with the victory of the latter, it is possible to more or less objectively analyze the advantages and disadvantages of individual models of armored vehicles of Anglo-American production, which were used in significant quantities in units of the Red Army. This article will focus on the English light tank MK.III "Valentine", which became the most popular British armored vehicle used on the Soviet-German front, as well as in battles in the Far East.

MK.III "Valentine" (according to the documents of the Red Army "Valentin" or "Valentina") was developed by Vickers in 1938. Like the Matilda, it was an infantry tank, but in terms of mass - 16 tons - it was rather light. True, the thickness of the Valentine's armor was 60-65 mm, and the armament (depending on the modification) consisted of a 40-mm, 57-mm or 75-mm cannon. The Valentine I used an AEC carburetor engine with 135 hp, which was replaced in subsequent modifications by AEC and GMC diesel engines with 131, 138 and 165 hp. The maximum speed of the tank was 34 km/h.

By Soviet standards, "Valentines" had an archaic design - armor plates were attached to a frame made of corners using rivets. Armor elements were installed mainly almost vertically, without rational angles of inclination. However, “rational” armor was not always used on German vehicles - this approach significantly reduced the working internal volume of the tank, which affected the performance of the crew. But all English cars were equipped with radio (radio station No. 19), and also had a diesel engine, which made them easier to operate together with Soviet models.

"Valentines" were produced from 1940 to the beginning of 1945 in 11 modifications, differing mainly in armament and engine type. A total of 8,275 tanks were manufactured by three English and two Canadian firms (6,855 in England and 1,420 in Canada). 2,394 British and 1,388 Canadian Valentines were sent to the Soviet Union (3,782 in total), of which 3,332 vehicles reached Russia. The Valentines were supplied to the USSR in seven modifications:

"Valentine II" - with a 42-mm cannon, AEC diesel engine, 131 hp. and an additional external fuel tank;

"Valentine III" - with a three-man turret and a crew of four;

"Valentine IV" - "Valentine II" with a GMC diesel engine of 138 hp;

"Valentine V" - "Valentine III" with a GMC diesel engine of 138 hp;

"Valentine VII" - a Canadian version of the "Valentine IV" with a one-piece frontal hull part and a coaxial 7.62 mm Browning machine gun (instead of the 7.92 mm BESA machine gun installed on English-made Valentines);

"Valentine IX" - "Valentine V" with a 57-mm cannon with a barrel length of 45 or 42 calibers, mounted in a two-man turret without a coaxial machine gun;

"Valentine X" - "Valentine IX" with a 57-mm cannon with a barrel length of 45 or 42 calibers [most likely a typo. Further in the text - 52 caliber. A.A.], coaxial with a machine gun and a GMC engine with a power of 165 hp.


In addition to the main modifications of the "Valentine", in 1944 the Red Army also received the Mk.III "Valentine-Bridgelaer" - in Soviet terminology "Mk.ZM". Perhaps the Canadian version of the Valentine (modification VII) was even more reliable and technically advanced than its English predecessor. Canadian Valentines were supplied to the Red Army from 1942 to 1944, with the bulk of deliveries occurring in 1943. The most popular modifications in the Red Army were the Valentine IV and its Canadian equivalent, the Valentine VII, as well as the main variant of the final period of the war, the Valentine IX. Moreover, the Soviet Union was mainly supplied with Model IX with an artillery system with a barrel length of 52 calibers, while the British Army used models with a barrel length of 45 calibers. Model "XI" with a 75 mm cannon was not supplied to the USSR.

It should be noted that the designation system for British armored vehicles was quite complex and cumbersome. First, the index assigned to the tank by the War Department was indicated (Mk.II, Mk.III, Mk.IV, etc.), then the name of the vehicle ("Valentine", "Matilda", "Churchill", etc.) and its modification was indicated (in Roman numerals). Thus, the full designation of the tank could look like this; Mk.III "Valentine IX", Mk.IV "Churchill III", etc. To avoid confusion, we will use the designations of British tanks adopted in the Red Army during the war: a name indicating the modification, for example: “Valentine IV”, “Valentine IX”, etc., or without indicating the modification, for example: Mk. III "Valentine".

During the four years of the war, foreign-made tanks and armored vehicles received various units, subdivisions | divisions and units of the armored forces of the Red Army. Therefore, there were many reports on their operational and combat characteristics. Moreover, the assessment of the same vehicle by mid- and senior-level commanders often did not coincide with the opinion of the tank crew. This is understandable, the command was primarily concerned with the tactical characteristics of the equipment - armament, speed on the march, power reserve, etc. - and for the crew, ease of operation, placement of units and the possibility of quick repairs, as well as other parameters of everyday and of a technical nature. The combination of these two points of view largely determined the conclusion about the presented model of armored vehicles.

In addition, foreign equipment was designed with a higher standard of production and operation in mind. In many ways, it was the technical illiteracy of the crews and the lack of units necessary for maintenance that became the reasons for the failure of allied equipment. However, the “gap” of the gap was not so great, and our tankers very soon became accustomed to foreign vehicles, modifying many of them to suit the specifics of operation on the Soviet-German front.

The first "Valentines" appeared in units of our active army at the end of November 1941, although in small numbers. At the same time, only part of the 145 Matildas, 216 Valentines and 330 Station Wagons received was used. So, on the Western Front on January 1, 1942, “Valentines” were part of the 146th (2-T-34, 10-T-60, 4-Mk.Sh), 23rd (1-T-34, 5 Mk. .III) and 20th (1-T-34, 1-T-26, 1-T-, 60, 2-Mk.Sh, 1-BA-20) tank brigades operating in battle formations 16, 49 and 3rd Army, as well as as part of the 112th TD (1-KV, 8-T-26, 6-Mk.Sh and 10-T-34), attached to the 50th Army. The 171st separate tank battalion, also equipped with Valentines (10-T-60, 12-Mk.II, 9-Mk.III), fought on the Northwestern Front (4th Contact Army).

German documents of the 4th Panzer Group note the fact of the first use of British Type 3 tanks (Mk.III "Valentine" - Author's note) against the 2nd Panzer Division on November 25, 1941 in the Peshki area. The document stated: “For the first time, German soldiers were faced with the fact of real help from England, which Russian propaganda had been shouting about for so long. English tanks are much worse than Soviet ones. The crews that German soldiers took prisoner scolded “the old tin boxes that the British handed them.”

Judging by this report, it can be assumed that the crews of the Valentines had a very limited training period and had little knowledge of English materiel. In the units of the 5th Army, which covered the Mozhaisk direction, the first unit to receive foreign tanks was the 136th separate tank battalion. The battalion completed its formation on December 1, 1941, having ten T-34, ten T-60, nine Valentine and three Matilda tanks (British tanks were received in Gorky on November 10, 1941, tankers were trained directly at front). By December 10, during crew training, five Valentines, two Matildas, one T-34 and four T-60s were damaged. After putting the equipment in order, on December 15, 1911, 136th detachment. was assigned to the 329th Infantry Division (SD). Then, together with the 20th Tank Brigade, he took part in the counter-offensive near Moscow.


On January 15, 1942, the battalion command compiled a “Brief Report on the Actions. Mk.Sh” - apparently one of the first documents assessing the Allied equipment:
“The experience of using Valentines has shown:
1. The tanks' cross-country ability in winter conditions is good; movement on soft snow 50-60 cm thick is ensured. Ground traction is good, but spurs are required when there is icy conditions.

2. The weapon worked flawlessly, but there were cases of the gun not firing enough (the first five or six shots), apparently due to thickening of the lubricant. Weapons are very demanding in terms of lubrication and maintenance.

3. Observation through instruments and slits is good.
4. The engine group and transmission worked well up to 150-200 hours, after which a decrease in engine power is observed.
5. Good quality armor.

The crew personnel underwent special training and had satisfactory command of tanks. The command and technical staff of the tanks had little knowledge. A great inconvenience was created by the crews’ ignorance of the elements of preparing tanks for winter. As a result of the lack of necessary heating, cars had difficulty starting in the cold and therefore remained hot all the time, which led to a large consumption of motor resources. In a battle with German tanks (December 20, 1941), three Valentines received the following damage: one had its turret jammed by a 37-mm shell, the gun of another was jammed, the third received five hits on the side from a distance of 200-250 meters. In this battle, the Valentines knocked out two medium German T-3 tanks.

In general, the Mk.Sh is a good combat vehicle with powerful weapons, good maneuverability, and capable of operating against enemy personnel, fortifications and tanks.

Negative sides:

1. Poor adhesion of the tracks to the ground.
2. Greater vulnerability of the suspension bogies - if one roller fails, the tank cannot move. There are no high-explosive fragmentation shells for the gun."

Apparently, the latter circumstance was the reason for the order of the State Defense Committee to rearm the Valentine with a domestic artillery system. This task and in a short time frame was carried out at plant No. 92 by the design bureau under the leadership of Grabin. In December 1941, within two weeks, one Valen-Tayne was armed with a 45-mm tank gun and a DT machine gun. This car received the factory index ZIS-95. At the end of December, the tank was sent to Moscow, but things did not go further than a prototype.

A large number of Valentine tanks took part in the Battle of the Caucasus. In general, the North Caucasus Front in the period 1942-1943 had a very significant “share” of Anglo-American tanks - up to 70% of the total number of vehicles. This situation was explained primarily by the proximity of the front to the Iranian supply channel for the Red Army with equipment and weapons, as well as the convenience of transporting tanks along the Volga that arrived at the northern ports of the USSR.

Of the armored units of the North Caucasus Front, the 5th Guards Tank Brigade was considered the most eminent and experienced. The brigade began fighting in the Caucasus on September 26, 1942, covering the Grozny direction to the Malgobek, Ozernaya area (at that time the brigade had 40 Valentines, three T-34s and one BT-7). On September 29, the brigade counterattacked German units in the Alkhanch-urt valley. In this battle, the crew of Captain Shenelkov's Guard in his "Valentine" destroyed five tanks, one self-propelled gun, a truck and 25 soldiers. 15 Over the next few days, fighting in this area continued. In total, during the fighting in the Malgobek area, the brigade destroyed 38 tanks (of which 20 were burned), one self-propelled gun, 24 guns, six mortars, one six-barreled mortar, and up to 1,800 enemy soldiers. The brigade's losses were two T-34s, 33 Valentines (eight of them burned out, the rest were evacuated and restored), 268 people were killed and wounded.

Returning to the use of the Valentine tank on the Soviet-German front, we can say that our commanders found the right solution - they began to use these tanks comprehensively, together with Soviet equipment. In the first echelon (according to documents from 1942) there were KV and Matilda CS tanks. (with a 76.2 mm howitzer), in the second echelon there are T-34s, and in the third echelon “Valentine” and T-70. This tactic very often yielded positive results. An example of this is the reconnaissance in force of the fire system of the German defensive zone in the North Caucasus - the Blue Line.

For the attack, forces from the 56th Army were brought in: the 5th Guards Tank Brigade (as of August 1, 1943 it had 13 M4A2, 24 Valentine, 12 T-34) and the 14th Guards Breakthrough Tank Regiment (16 KV- 1C), as well as the battalion of the 417th Infantry Division.

Exactly at six o'clock in the morning on August 6, 1943, a Katyusha salvo was fired at the village of Gorno-Vesely (Object of attack), and immediately behind the barrage of fire, three KV-1S rushed forward, followed by three Valentines under the command of Guard Senior Lieutenant G. P. Polosina. The infantry moved behind the slippers. Next, it is not without interest to cite the memories of battle participant G.P. Polosin:

“Maneuvering among shell explosions (a thirty-minute artillery barrage, of course, did not completely suppress the enemy’s fire system), my “Valentine” unexpectedly found itself literally in front of the houses of the farm. What luck! But what about other tanks?..

I looked around through the viewing slits. I saw that two more "Englishmen" of my platoon - Poloznikov's and Voronkov's vehicles - were walking slightly behind. But heavy HFs are not visible. Maybe they fell behind or were taken to the side: The infantry, of course, had been cut off from the tanks even earlier...

Destroying enemy machine-gun emplacements and bunkers along the way, our tanks reached the ravine. We stopped here. I gave the order over the radio:

Don't shoot without my order! Take care of the shells. It is still unknown how long it will take... And then we will have to fight our way to our own people...

The tank commanders answered briefly:

Got it.

Then he tried to contact the guard company commander, Senior Lieutenant Maksimov. And I couldn't. The airwaves were filled to the brim with hysterical commands in German. Apparently, the Nazis were seriously concerned about the unexpected breakthrough of Russian tanks in this sector of their defense.

But our position was also unenviable. It just so happened that they were separated from the main group conducting reconnaissance in force, ammunition and fuel were running out, alone in the rear of the enemy, who, however, had not yet fully understood the situation, but this was a matter of time.

Having crushed a German anti-tank gun along the way, our tank jumped out of the ravine into the open space and saw a strange picture. There were Germans on Voronkov’s car, which was 30-40 meters to the right. They mistook the Valentines for their equipment, banged their butts on the armor and did not understand why the tankers did not get out. After waiting until there were up to a dozen Germans, I ordered a machine gun to hit them. Then, having fired smoke grenade launchers (this is where these weapons, which were only on British tanks, came in handy) and, having installed a smoke screen, the vehicles returned through the same ravine to the location of their troops. The battle was still going on near Gorno-Vesely. KV tanks were knocked out. One of them stood without a tower. Another a little further from him buried his gun in the ground. At its right, spread out caterpillar, two tankers fired their pistols away from the advancing Germans. Having dispersed the enemy infantry with cannon and machine gun fire, we dragged both wounded men into our Valentine. It immediately became clear that, having failed to penetrate the KV’s armor with anti-tank artillery, the Germans used guided mines against them.”

During this short raid behind enemy lines, a platoon of guard senior lieutenant G.P. Polosin destroyed five anti-tank guns, crushed five bunkers, 12 machine guns, and shot up to a hundred Nazis. But most importantly, with his unexpected attack from the rear he forced the enemy to fully open his fire system. Which, in fact, was what was needed.
It remains to add that all crew members of Polosin’s platoon were awarded government awards for this. Personally, Georgy Pavlovich Polosin received the Order of the Red Star.

In the 196th Tank Brigade (30th Army of the Kalinin Front), which participated in the capture of the city of Rzhev, in August 1942, steel plates were welded onto each of the tracks of the Valentine tanks, increasing the track area. Shod in such “bast shoes”, the car did not fall through the snow and did not get stuck in the marshy soil of central Russia. Mk.III were actively used in positional battles on the Western and Kalinin fronts until the beginning of 1944. Cavalrymen were very fond of the Valentine for its mobility and maneuverability. Until the end of the war, the Valentine IV and its further development, the Valentine IX and X, remained the main tank of the cavalry corps. The cavalrymen noted the lack of high-explosive fragmentation shells for the cannon as the main drawback. And one more thing: it was not recommended to make sharp turns on the Valentine, since this would bend the sloth’s crank and cause the caterpillar to jump off.

By the end of the war, modifications of the Valentine IX and X (along with the American Sherman) remained the only types of tanks that the USSR continued to request for delivery to the Red Army. For example, on June 22, 1944, the 5th Guards Tank Army (3rd Belorussian Front) had 39 Valentine IX tanks, and the 3rd Cavalry Corps had 30 Valentine III tanks. These vehicles ended their military career in the Far East in August-September 1945. The 1st Far Eastern Front included 20 Mk.III Valentine-Bridgelayer bridge tanks, the 2nd Far Eastern Front included 41 "Valentine III and IX" (267th Tank Regiment) and another 40 "Valentine IV" were in the ranks of the cavalry -mechanized group of the Transbaikal Front.

Attached to tank brigades by armies 15 and 16, tank-bridge companies (10 Mk.IIIM each) marched together with tanks, but were not used, since tanks and self-propelled guns overcame small rivers and streams themselves, and large obstacles (over 8 m) were not could be provided with Mk.IIIM.

Canadian tanks "Valentine IV" in Soviet terminology were also designated as "Mk.III", so it is quite difficult to determine which are actually English and which are Canadian vehicles. Several Valentine VII vehicles took part in the liberation of Crimea. In the 19th Perekop Tank Corps there was the 91st separate motorcycle battalion, which had a Valentine VII bottom, ten BA-64s, ten Universal armored personnel carriers and 23 motorcycles.

However, this does not in the least diminish the Canadian share of supplies to the USSR. After all, almost half of the Valentines delivered were Canadian-made. These tanks, along with British products, took part in many operations of the Great Patriotic War.
One example of the use of Canadian vehicles was the battle of the 139th Tank Regiment of the 68th Mechanized Brigade of the 5th Mechanized Corps of the 5th Army to capture the village of Devichye Pole in November 1943. 139 TP (68 infantry brigade, 8 Mk, 5th Army) entered operational subordination to the 5th Army on November 15, 1943. With 20 T-34 tanks and 18 Valentine VII tanks, the regiment was fully equipped and was not used in battle until November 20. After the preparation of the material unit for battle was completed, on November 20, 1943, in cooperation with the 57th Guards Breakthrough Tank Regiment, armed with KV and T-34 vehicles, and the infantry of the 110th Guards Rifle Division, the tanks of the 139th Tank Division went forward. The attack was carried out at high speeds (up to 25 km/h) with a landing of machine gunners (up to 100 people) and with anti-tank guns attached to the tanks. 30 Soviet tanks took part in this operation. The enemy did not expect such a massive rapid attack and was unable to provide effective resistance to the advancing units. When the first line of defense was broken, the infantry dismounted and, unhooking their guns, began to occupy enemy positions, preparing to repel a possible counterattack. The remaining units of the 110th Guards Infantry Division were brought into the breakthrough. However, the German counterattack did not take place; the German command was so stunned by the Soviet breakthrough that it was unable to organize resistance within 24 hours. During this day, our troops marched 20 km into the depths of the German defense and captured Maiden Field, losing 4 tanks (KV, T-34, two Valentine VII). At the end of the war, Valentine tanks were used mainly in tank companies of motorcycle reconnaissance regiments (10 tanks per staff), mixed tank regiments (standard M4A2 Sherman staff - 10, Mk.III Valentine (III, IV, VII, IX, X) - 11 vehicles) and various cavalry formations: cavalry corps and mixed cavalry-mechanized groups. In individual tank and motorcycle regiments, modifications "IX" and "X" predominated, and in the cavalry corps, modifications "IV" - "VII" predominated. Mk.III "Valentine" III-IV tanks were used on the Soviet-German front in significantly smaller numbers than other modifications and for some reason(?) prevailed in the Northwestern theater of operations as part of the Baltic fronts.

After the end of World War II, equipment supplied under Lend-Lease had to be returned to its former owners. However, most of the tanks were presented as scrap by the Soviets and destroyed, and a smaller part of the repaired tanks were transferred to the Chinese National Liberation Army.



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