The Soviet Barbarossa Surprise! The Soviet Barbarossa Surprise!
The Introduction Of The T-34 and KV
with Wayne Turner

In 1941, the Germans and their various allies invaded the Soviet Union and generally had the upper hand in the early months of the fighting. However, on occasion they would run into some tanks that were surprisingly resistant to their tank weapons. What could stop the seemingly unstoppable German Wehrmacht war machine? The answer was two new designs, the T-34 medium tank and the KV heavy tank.

The T-34 resulted from a project started at the Khakov tank factory under a project to build a better protected fast tank for use with mechanised forces. The prototypes abandoned the track and wheeled concept of the BT tanks and went for a purely tracked design. The Prototype A-32 design used a 76.2mm L-11 gun, a longer and more powerful weapon than the one used in the T-28. The first model of T-34, the T-34 obr 1940, was put into production and distributed to the mechanised corps in 1940.
In 1938, as part of the review of the current heavy tanks design, a number of new tanks designs were put on the table to consideration. Among these were some new multiple turret designs to replace the T-35 heavy tank. Two of these were the T-100 and the SMK, both armed with one 76.2mm gun armed turret and a single 45mm gun armed turret. The multiple turret had begun to fall out of favour for a more compact design sporting a high-performance gun in a single well-armoured turret. The tank designers took much of the hull and track design from the SMK prototype and a new heavy tank design was created with just a single turret armed with a 76.2mm gun. The design was put together at the Kirov Works in Leningrad and named the KV (Kliment Voroshilov, after the Marshal of the Soviet Union and People’s Commissar for Defence). All three designs were tested in in combat during the 1939 Winter War in Finland. The single-turret KV design proved the superior model. The first model was the KV-1 obr 1939 armed with a 76.2mm L-11 gun.
T-34 obr 1940
Crew: 4 men. Weight: 26.3 tons. Main Armament: 1x 76.2mm L-11 (1939 model) tank gun. Secondary Armament: 2x 7.62mm DT machine-guns. Ammunition: 76x 76.2mm rounds, up to 4725x 7.62mm rounds. Hull Armour: Front: 45mm, Sides: 45mm, Rear: 40mm, Top: 15-20mm, Bottom: 15-20mm
.Turret Armour: Front: 45mm, Sides: 45mm, Rear: 45mm, Top: 16mm. Engine: V-12 W-2/34 Diesel, 500 hp at 1800 rpm. Length: 5920mm, Width: 3000mm, Height: 2400mm. Ground clearance: 400mm. Top Speed: 53 kph, Range: 400 km.
The Soviet Barbarossa Surprise!
The T-34 obr 1940 in Flames Of War
      Armour
   
Name Mobility
Front
Side
Top
Equipment and Notes
Weapon
Range
ROF
Anti-tank
Firepower
 
T-34 obr 1940
Standard Tank
6
5
1
Co-ax MG, Hull MG, Fast tank,
Limited vision, Unreliable, Wide-track.
76mm L-11 gun
24"/60cm
2
8
3+
 
A second model, mounting 152mm howitzer in a much larger turret, was introduced in 1940. It was designate the KV-2 obr 1940. In the tradition of previous artillery tanks such as the BT-7A, its role was to destroy or supress enemy anti-tank positions. Both KV tanks were put into service in support of the tanks of the mechanised corps.

The T-34 and KV tanks had good armour, powerful guns, and wide-tracks with low ground pressure for better cross-country mobility.
The Soviet Barbarossa Surprise!
The two new Soviet tanks were first encountered by the Germans on the second day of the invasion. The strength of the new tank’s armour of both the T-34 and KV took the Germans by surprise, despite the capture of one of the test KV tanks by the Finns in 1939. In early encounters, the Germans poured shots into the advancing tanks with little or no effect. The new tanks just seems invulnerable to the anti-tank rounds of the 3.7cm and 5cm guns of the Panzer III tanks. One German report described an
encounter:

“Half a dozen anti-tank guns fire shells at him [T-34], which sound like a drumroll. But he drives staunchly through our line like an impregnable prehistoric monster... It is remarkable that Lieutenant Steup’s tank made hits on a T-34, once at about 20 meters and four times at 50 meters, with Panzergranate 40 (5cm calibre), without any noticeable effect.”

(from On Flexibility, by Meir Finkel)
The Soviet Barbarossa Surprise! KV-1 obr 1040
Crew: 5 men. Weight: 43.5 tons. Main Armament: 1x 76.2mm ZIS-5 or F-34 tank gun. Secondary Armament: 3x 7.62mm DT machine-guns. Ammunition: 111-114x 76.2mm rounds, up to 3024x 7.62mm rounds. Hull Armour: Front: 75mm, Sides: 75mm, Rear: 60-75mm, Top: 30-40mm, Bottom: 30-40mm. Turret Armour: Front: 90mm, Sides: 75mm, Rear: 75mm, Top: 35mm. Engine: V-12 W-2-K Diesel, 600 hp at 2000 rpm. Length: 6750mm, Width: 3320mm, Height: 2710mm. Ground clearance: 450mm. Top Speed: 35 kph, Range: 335 km.

The KV-1 obr 1940 in Flames Of War
      Armour
   
Name Mobility
Front
Side
Top
Equipment and Notes
Weapon
Range
ROF
Anti-tank
Firepower
 
KV-1 obr 1940
Slow Tank
8
7
2
Co-ax MG, Hull MG, Turret-rear MG,
Limited vision, Unreliable.
76mm F-34 gun
32"/80cm
2
9
3+
 
The Soviet Barbarossa Surprise!
Another German commander was shocked when he inspected an abandoned T-34 obr 1940. He had been told nothing by his superiors of the existence of this imposing vehicle whose armour, armament, and mobility were all superior to those of any German tank.

It was during Battle of Raseiniai (Lithuania) that the Germans encountered the KV heavy tank for the first time. The Soviet 2nd Tank Division (3rd Mechanised Corps) attacked and overran elements of the German 6. Panzerdivision near Skaudvilė on 23 June 1941. Unfortunately the Germans were equipped with the lightly armed Czech Panzer 35(t) tanks, and they and the division’s anti-tank weapons proved ineffective against the KV heavy tanks. Even with some of the KVs out of ammunition, the Soviet heavy tanks were able to close with and destroy a German anti-tank gun unit by driving over them and crushing them with their tracks. An account of the same battle from 1. Panzerdivision:

“The KV-1 and KV-2, which we first met here, were really something! Our companies opened fire at about
800 yards, but [they] remained ineffective. We moved closer and closer to the enemy, who for his part continued to approach us unconcerned. Very soon we were facing each other at 50 to 100 yards. A fantastic exchange of fire took place without any visible German success. The Russian tanks continued to advance, and all armour-piercing shells simply bounced off them. Thus we were presently faced with the alarming situation of the Russian tanks driving through the ranks of 1st Panzer Regiment towards our own infantry and our hinterland. Our Panzer Regiment therefore about turned and rumbled back with the KV-1s and KV-2s roughly in line with them.”


(from Hitler Moves East, by Paul Carrell)
The Soviet Barbarossa Surprise!
Similar encounters continued through June and July 1941 with the Germans unable to defeat either the T-34 or KV heavy tanks with their tanks alone. Often they would use their superior communications and vehicle reliability to bypass the Soviet armoured concentrations.

However, the new Soviet tanks has their drawbacks. These early production models suffered from limited reliability and poor maintenance due to a lack of spare parts and training among the units’ mechanics. In fact, the Soviet mechanised corps lost more T-34 and KV tanks to during their movement to the battle than in the actual fighting.


German Solutions
The Germans soon began to come up with ways of disabling and destroying these new threats. Initially tank crews began to target the running gear, drive sprockets, and tracks to immobilise these beasts, but often the Soviet crew would keep firing while they still had ammunition.

Panzer III commander, Oberfeldwebel Herman Bix, made a name for himself by silencing a KV-1 tank by putting a round through its barrel at extremely close range. However, this sort of action took extreme nerve and an excellent gunner.

Unit commanders also called up pioneers to knock out the vehicles with anti-tank mines and explosives, targeting the engine deck, while the Panzer gave supporting fire to distract the Soviet crew.

A third option was to call up either 8.8cm FlaK36 anti-aircraft guns from the Luftwaffe or the s10cm K18 guns of the artillery to knock out the Soviet tanks with direct fire. These proved very successful in knocking out both the T-34 and KV tanks.

KV-2
Crew: 6 men. Weight: 52 tons. Main Armament: 1x 152.4mm obr 1938/40 tank howitzer. Secondary Armament: 3x 7.62mm DT machine-guns. Ammunition: 36x 152.4mm rounds, up to 3087x 7.62mm rounds. Hull Armour: Front: 75mm, Sides: 75mm, Rear: 60-75mm, Top: 30-40mm, Bottom: 30-40mm. Turret Armour: Front: 110mm, Sides: 75mm, Rear: 75mm, Top: 35mm. Engine: V-12 W-2-K Diesel, 600 hp at 2000 rpm. Length: 6800mm, Width: 3350mm, Height: 3250mm. Ground clearance: 450mm. Top Speed: 26 kph. Range: 250 km.
The Soviet Barbarossa Surprise!
The KV-2 in Flames Of War
      Armour
   
Name Mobility
Front
Side
Top
Equipment and Notes
Weapon
Range
ROF
Anti-tank
Firepower
 
KV-2
Slow Tank
8
7
2
Hull MG, Turret-rear MG,
Limited vision, Unreliable.
152mm obr 1938/40 howitzer
24"/60cm
1
10
1+
Bunker buster.
The Soviet Barbarossa Surprise!
Influence On Future Designs
The introduction of the T-34 and KV tanks to the war influenced German tank design, while the Soviets looked to improve and develop both tanks further.

The first Soviet modifications to the designs was already underway. The next models of the both the T-34 and the KV-1 were fitted with the longer and more powerful 7.62mm F-34 gun (T-34 obr 1941 and KV-1 obr 1940), giving them better armour penetration and greater range. This was quickly followed by up-armouring the KV-1 further, first with bolt-on extra armour, then by uparmouring production models of the KV-1.

As the war went on, modifications to the T-34 saw improved turret design with twin hatches, the addition of a cupola to improve the commander’s vision (T-34 obr 1942), and eventually the up-gunning with an 85mm gun (T-34/85 obr 1943).

These modern Soviet tanks also influenced the design of German tanks, both in the form of up-armouring and upgunning of the Panzer III and Panzer IV tank, as well as influencing new designs.

The Tiger I E heavy tank owes its existence to those early encounters with T-34 and KV tanks. Though, a heavy tank design had been on the drawing board since 1937, encounters with the new Soviet tank brought a new impetus to the design process. No longer did the designers attempt to balance firepower with mobility and armour as had been done with the Panzer III and Panzer IV medium tanks. Instead, armour and firepower were prioritised, which led to a much heavier and slower tank. Nevertheless the design that would prove superior to the Soviet’s designs in firepower with its 8.8cm gun. Its front armour is was much more resilient than the T-34 and equal to that of the uparmoured KV-1 models. The Tiger I E first went into action in on 23 September 1942.
In Service
The new T-34 and KV tanks were issued to the mechanised corps, but 15,000 T-34 and KV tanks were required to fully equip all the corps’ tank divisions. Soviet industry in 1940 could not produce more that 5,500 of all tank types per year, and by the time of the German invasion on 22 June 1941, only a portion of the divisions had received the new tanks.
T-34 and KV Tanks in Service, 22 June 1941.
1st Mechanised Corps
8 T-34, 6 KV
2nd Mechanised Corps
46 T-34, 10 KV
3rd Mechanised Corps
109 T-34, 52 KV
4th Mechanised Corps
359 T-34, 99 KV
6th Mechanised Corps
238 T-34, 114 KV
7th Mechanised Corps
30 T-34, 30 KV
11th Mechanised Corps
28 T-34, 3 KV
8th Mechanised Corps
100 T-34, 71 KV
15th Mechanised Corps
72 T-34, 64 KV
19th Mechanised Corps
2 T-34, 6 KV
The Soviet Barbarossa Surprise!
The German Panther tank was a direct response to the threat of the T-34 and KV tanks. At the insistence of General Heinz Guderian a special commission was set-up to access the T-34 medium tank. The things noted by the Germans as important aspects of the T-34 design were its sloping armour, which increased the effective thickness of the armour, its wide tracks, which reduced its ground pressure and improved its mobility, and it superior 76.2mm gun. Daimler-Benz and Maschinenfabrik Augsburg-Nürnberg AG (MAN) were asked to design a new 30 to 35-ton tank. The result was the Panther medium tank, which incorporated the sloped armour of the T-34, as well as its wide-tracks. It went further than the T-34 by being armed with the excellent 7.5cm KwK42 gun, probably one of the most effective tank guns of the war. However, all this took time and resulted in a tank, though superior to the T-34, which was also much more complicated and time consuming to manufacture and maintain than its Soviet rival. The Panther first saw action during the Battle of Kursk in July 1943.

While these new German tanks time to get to the front, modification to existing German designs were somewhat quicker to implement. Additional armour had already begun to make an appearance in newer Panzer III and Panzer IV model tanks during 1941. New guns and improved ammunitions also went some way to giving the German tanks a chance against the T-34, though KV still proved frighteningly difficult to deal with.

The introduction of the long L60 5cm gun to the Panzer III in 1942 improved the armour penetration of the Panzer III J tank. The addition of a high-explosive Anti-tank (HEAT) round to the short L24 7.5cm gun of the Panzer IV increase its firepower, but not its shorter range compared to the T-34’s gun.

During 1942, the Germans decided the life of the Panzer III as the main combat tank was drawing to a close and that the larger Panzer IV provided a better platform for upgrades. This eventually led to the fitting of a modified version of the 7.5cm PaK40 gun, the 7.5cm KwK40 gun, to the Panzer IV F2 medium tank, which gave it the same range as the T-34 and better armour penetration. Later models improved the Panzer IV tank’s armour, but to never to the extent of the T-34.

The Soviet Barbarossa Surprise!
The KV’s and T-34’s Impact On The Rest Of The War
The T-34 went on to become one of the most numerous tanks manufactured by any nation during the war, only rivalled by the American Sherman tank. The T-34 in its many forms and variants became the core of the Soviet armoured forces, taking part in every Soviet offensive between 1941 and 1945. Some would argue it was the tank that won the war.

The KV, on the other hand, did not have the same longevity during the war. However, its design was to influence its replacement, the IS (Iosef Stalin) line of heavy tanks. It’s main problem was its 76.2mm gun, which became less effective as the war went on. While still powerful enough to deal with Panzer III and Panzer IV tanks, it could do little against the newer German Tiger and Panther tanks.

Initial solutions included the KV-1s, which had less armour and better speed, opening the option to out flank the enemy, but it was still armed with the 76.2mm gun.

Another variant was the KV-85, which mounted the 85mm gun giving the tank greater penetration. But only small numbers were built as a new tank was about to hit the production line, the Iosef Stalin tank.

The Iosef Stalin tank took many of the key elements of the KV series such as it thick armour, suspension and basic hull design and combined them with a new cast turret, and better shaped and distributed armour. Initially, the turret mounted an 85mm gun as the IS-1 (or IS-85), but the intention was to mount either a 122mm or 100mm gun to it. In the end the 122mm D25T gun was decided on because of its superior high-explosive round and a short supply of the 100mm gun. The 122mm was still a formidable anti-tank weapon, but was slow to load due to its two-part ammunition and single loader.

The Soviet Barbarossa Surprise!
The T-34 after World War Two
The T-34/85 was such a successful design that its life stretched way beyond the end of World War II. It continued to be used throughout the Eastern Block and Third World, fighting in many and various conflicts around the globe.

The T-34/85 saw service in conflicts all over the world between 1945 and the 1990s. It was used in Korea by the North Koreans and Chinese, in Vietnam by the North Vietnamese, during the Arab-Israeli wars by the Syrians and Egyptians, as well as various local wars in Africa and Asia. It saw action with the Soviets in Germany in 1953, and the putting down the Hungarian uprising in 1956, where it was also used by Hungarian forces. It was even used as late as the 1990s in Bosnia. Iraq had some in service during the first Gulf War in 1991 as airfield defence. The Soviets and Finns retired their T-34 tanks in the 1960s, while many nations, especially in Africa, still have them in service. It was also manufactured
by various Eastern Block nations such as Czechoslovakia and Poland for their own use and for export. Further development of the T-34 during 1945 to 1947 led to the T-44 and the T-54 tanks. The T-54/55 is still in service with many countries around the world.

~ Wayne.


Last Updated On Wednesday, October 15, 2014 by Blake at Battlefront