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T-64

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T-64
T-64BV model 2017 in 2021
TypeMain battle tank
Place of originSoviet Union
Service history
In service1966–present
Used bySeeOperators
Wars
Production history
DesignerKMDB
Designed1951–1962
ManufacturerMalyshev Factory
Produced1963–1987
No.built≈13,000
Specifications (T-64A[2])
Mass38 tonnes (42short tons;37long tons)
Length9.225 m (30 ft 3.2 in) (gun forward)
Width3.415 m (11 ft 2.4 in)
Height2.172 m (7 ft 1.5 in)
Crew3 (driver, commander, gunner)

ArmourGlass-reinforced plasticsandwiched between layers of steel.

ERA plates on later versions

Hull & turret –
370 mm to 440 mm vsAPFSDS
500 mm to 575 mm vsHEAT[1]
Main
armament
125 mm smoothbore gun 2A26(M/M-1) (T-64A), 125 mm smoothbore gunD-81T(aka 2A46)
Secondary
armament
7.62 mmPKMTcoaxialmachine gun, 12.7 mmNSVTanti-aircraft machine gun
Engine5TDF5-cylinderdiesel13.6 litre
700 hp (522 kW)
Power/weight18.4 hp/tonne (13.7 kW/ton)
SuspensionTorsion bar
Operational
range
500 km (310 mi), 700 km (430 mi) with external tanks
Maximum speed45–60 km/h (28–37 mph) depending on version

TheT-64is aSoviettankmanufactured inKharkiv,and designed byAlexander Morozov.The tank was introduced in the early 1960s. It was a more advanced counterpart to theT-62:the T-64 served in tank divisions, while the T-62 supported infantry in motor rifle divisions. It introduced a number of advanced features includingcomposite armour,a compact engine and transmission, and asmoothbore125-mm gun equipped with anautoloaderto allow the crew to be reduced to three so the tank could be smaller and lighter. In spite of being armed and armoured like aheavy tank,the T-64 weighed only 38 tonnes (42short tons;37long tons).

These features made the T-64 expensive to build, significantly more so than previous generations of Soviet tanks. This was especially true of the power plant, which was time-consuming to build and cost twice as much as more conventional designs. Several proposals were made to improve the T-64 with new engines, but chief designerAlexander Alexandrovich Morozov's political power inMoscowkept the design in production in spite of any concerns about price.[citation needed]

The T-64 formed the design basis of the SovietT-80,[3]which entered service in 1976. The tank is in use in a few nations or regions as of 2023. The T-64 is undergoing significant factory overhauls and modernization inUkraine.

Overview

[edit]

The T-64 was conceived at theKharkiv Morozov Machine Building Design Bureau,as the next-generation main battle tank by Alexander A. Morozov, the designer of theT-54(which, in the meantime, would be incrementally improved byLeonid N. Kartsev'sNizhny Tagil bureau,by the models T-54A, T-54B, T-55, and T-55A).

The T-64 was the first Soviet tank to use anautoloaderfor its 125-mm gun, allowing one crew member's position to be omitted and helping to keep the size and weight of the tank down. Tank crewmen would joke that the designers had finally caught up with their unofficial hymn,Three Tankers,a song written to commemorate the crewmen fighting in theBattle of Khalkhin Gol,in 3-manBT-5 tanksin 1939.[4]

The T-64 also pioneered other Soviet tank technology: the T-64A model of 1967 introduced the 125-mm smoothbore gun, and the T-64B of 1976 would be able to fire ananti-tank guided missilethrough its gun barrel. Soviet military planners considered the T-64 the first of the third-generation tanks[5]and the firstmain battle tank.[6]

The T-64 design was used as basis byLKZfor the gas turbine-poweredT-80main battle tank. The T-64A turret was adopted for early T-80 tank models, with its main gun and automatic loading mechanism, and upgraded armour.

The T-64 was only supplied to the Soviet Army and its successors. It was never exported before 1991, unlike the T-54/55. The tank equipped elite and regular formations in Eastern Europe and elsewhere, the T-64A model being first deployed with East Germany'sGroup of Soviet Forces in Germany(GSFG) in 1976, and some time later in Hungary'sSouthern Group of Forces(SFG). By 1981, the improved T-64B began to be deployed in East Germany and later inHungary.While it was believed that the T-64 was reserved for elite units, it was also used by much lower level "non-ready formations", for example, theOdesaMilitary District's 14th Army.

With the break-up of the Soviet Union in 1991, T-64 tanks remained in the arsenals of Russia, Ukraine, Belarus and Uzbekistan. In mid-2014, slightly fewer than 2,000 of the former Soviet inventory of T-64 tanks were in service with the military ofUkraineand about 4,000 were out of service and awaiting destruction in Russia.[7]

Development history

[edit]

Object 430

[edit]
Object 430 prototype on display at theKubinka Tank Museumin September 2008

Studies for the design of a new battle tank started as early as 1951. The KB-60M team was formed at theKharkivdesign bureau of the Kharkiv transport machine-building factory No. 75 named for Malyshev (Russian:конструкторское бюро Харьковского завода транспортного машиностроения №75 им. Малышева) by engineers coming back fromNizhniy Tagil,with Morozov at its head.

A project named obyekt 430 gave birth to three prototypes which were tested inKubinkain 1958.[8]Those vehicles had characteristics that were going to influence and radically alter the design of tanks on this side of theIron Curtain.For the first time, an extremely compactopposed-piston enginewas used: the 4TD, designed by the plant's engine design team. Thetransmissionsystem comprised two lateral gears on each side of the engine. Those two innovations yielded a very short engine compartment with the opening located beneath the turret. The engine compartment volume was almost half that of the T-54. An improved cooling system and a new lightweight suspension was fitted, featuring hollow metallic wheels of a small diameter andcaterpillar trackswith rubber joints.

The tank would be armed with the D-54TS and would have frontal armour of 120 mm. As it did not present a clear superiority in combat characteristics when compared to theT-55,which was entering active service, Morozov decided that production was not yet ready given the project's drawbacks. However, studies conducted on the Object 430U, featuring a 122 mm gun and 160 mm of armour, demonstrated that the tank had the potential to carry the firepower and armour of a heavy tank on to a medium tank chassis. A new project was consequently started, the Object 432.

Object 432

[edit]

The gun fitted on this new tank was a powerful 115 mm D-68 (2A21). This was a potentially risky decision to replace the human loader by an electro-hydraulic automatic system, since the technology was new to Russian designers. The crew was reduced to three, which allowed a considerable reduction in internal volume and external visible silhouette, and consequently in weight, from 36 tonnes (obyekt 430) to 30.5 tonnes. The height dropped by 76 mm.

However, the arrival of the British105 mm L7 gunand the US M68 variant of it, fitted to theCenturionandM60tanks, forced the team to undertake another audaciouspremière,with the adoption of composite armour. The recently created process was called "K combination" by Western armies: this protection consisted of an aluminium alloy[citation needed]layer between two high strength steel layers. As a consequence, the weight of the prototype rose eventually to 34 tonnes. But, as the engine was now a 700 hp (515 kW) 5TDF (also locally designed), its mobility remained excellent, far superior to that of theT-62.The obyekt 432 was ready in September 1962 and production started in October 1963 in the Kharkiv plant. On 30 December 1966, it entered service as the T-64.

T-64A

[edit]
Obyekt 447 at theNational Museum of the History of Ukraine in the Second World War, Kyiv,Ukraine
The T-64 has a characteristic exhaust vent in the rear
T-64AK at the T-34 Tank History Museum in Russia

Even as the first T-64s were rolling off the assembly lines, the design team was working on a new version, named Object 434, which would allow it to maintain firepower superiority. The brand new and very powerful 125 mm D-81T gun, from thePermweapons factory, was fitted to the tank. This gun was merely a scaled-up version of the 115 mm smoothbore cannon from the T-62. The larger size of the 125 mm ammunition meant that less could be carried inside the T-64, and with a fourth crewman loader taking up space as well, the tank would only have a 25-round capacity. This was unacceptably low for the Soviet designers, but strict dimensional parameters forbade them from enlarging the tank to increase interior space. The solution was to replace the human loader with a mechanical autoloader, cutting the crew to three and marking the first use of autoloaders in a Soviet MBT.[9]The 6ETs10 autoloader has 28 rounds and can fire 8 shots per minute; the stabiliser, a 2E23, was coupled to the new TPD-2-1 (1G15-1) sight. Night driving was also adapted with the new TPN-1-43A periscope, which would benefit from the illumination of a powerful infrared L2G projector, fitted on the left side of the gun. The shielding was improved, with fibreglass replacing the aluminium alloy in the armour, and small spring-mounted plates fitted along the mudguards (known as theGillskirt), to cover the top of the suspension and the side tanks. They were, however, extremely fragile and were often removed. Some small storage spaces were created along the turret, with a compartment on the right and three boxes on the front left. Snorkels were mounted on the rear of the turret. AnNBC protection systemwas fitted and the hatches were widened.

Prototypes were tested in 1966 and 1967 and, as production began after the six hundredth T-64, it entered service in theSoviet Armyunder the designation T-64A. Chief engineer Morozov was awarded theLenin Prizefor this model's success.

Designed for elite troops, the T-64A was constantly updated as available equipment was improved. After only three years in service, a first modernisation occurred, regarding:

  • fire control, by replacing the sights with the TPD-2-49 day sight with an opticalcoincidence rangefinderand a TPN-1-49-23 night sight, and stabilisation by mounting a 2E26 system.
  • theradioby mounting a R-123M
  • night vision with a TBN-4PA for the driver and a TNP-165A for the tank leader. His battlepost was transformed by mounting a small stabilised turret with an anti-aircraft NSVT 12.7 mm × 108 machine gun, electrically guided through an optical PZU-5 sight, and fed with 300 rounds. It could be used from within the tank so that the tank leader could avoid being exposed (as on previous tanks). The possibility of mounting a KMT-6 anti-mine system was also added.

A derived version appeared at the same time, designed for the commanding officer and named T-64AK. It comprised a R-130M radio with a 10 m telescopic antenna, which could be used only in a static position as it required shrouds, an artillery aiming circle PAB-2AM and TNA-3 navigation station; all of these could be powered by an auxiliary gasoline-fired generator.

In 1976, the weapons system was improved by mounting a D-81TM (2A46-1), stabilised by a 2E28M2, supplied by an automatic 6ETs10M. The night sight was replaced by a TNPA-65 and the engine could accept different fuels, including diesel fuel,keroseneor gasoline. The production, first carried on the B variant, stopped in 1980.

The majority of T-64As were further modernised after 1981, by mounting a six smokegrenade-launcher 81 mm 902A on each side of the gun, and by replacing thegillplates by a rubber skirt for a longer life. Some of them seem to have been fitted with reactive bricks (as the T-64AV) after 1985, or even withlaserTPD-K1 telemeters instead of the optical TPD-2-49 optical coincidence rangefinder (1981). Almost all T-64s were modernised into T-64R, between 1977 and 1981, by reorganising external storage and snorkels, similar to the T-64A.

T-64B

[edit]

The design team was carrying on its work on new versions. Problems with the setup of the 5TDF engine occurred as the local production capacity was proven to be insufficient against a production done in three factories (Malyshev inKharkiv,Kirov inLeningradand Uralvagonzavod).

From 1961, an alternative to the Object 432 was studied, with a 12 V-cylinder V-45 engine: the Object 436. Three prototypes were tested in 1966 in theChelyabinskfactory. The order to develop a model derived from the 434 with the same engine given to the Object 438, later renamed as the Object 439. Four tanks of this type were built and tested in 1969, which showed the same mobility as the production version, but mass production was not started. They served however as a basis for the design of theT-72engine compartment.

At the beginning of the 1970s, the design team was trying to improve the tank further. The T-64A-2M study in 1973, with its more powerful engine and its reinforced turret, served as a basis for two projects:

  • Object 476with a 6TD 1000 hp (735 kW) engine which served as a model for theT-80combat compartment.
  • Object 447which featured a new fire control with alaser telemeter,and which was able to fire gun launched anti-tank guidedmissiles.

For the latter, the order was given to start its production under the name T-64B, as well as a derived version (which shared 95% of its components), the Object 437, without the missile guidance system for cost reasons. The latter was almost twice as much produced under the designation T-64B1. On 3 September 1976, the T-64B and the T-64B1 were declared good for the service, featuring the improved D-81Tm gun (2A46-2) with a 2E26M stabiliser, a 6ETs40 loader and a 1A33 fire control, including:

Its ford capacity reaches 1.8 m without equipment. The T-64B had the ability to fire the new 9M112 "Kobra" radio-guided missile (NATO code "AT-8 Songster"). The vehicle then carries 8 missiles and 28 shells. The missile control system is mounted in front of the tank leader small turret and has many changes. The T-64B1 carries only 37 shells and has 2,000 7.62 mm rounds, against 1,250 for the T-64B.

They were modernised in 1981 by the replacement of the gun by a 2A46M1, the stabiliser by a 2E42, and the mounting of a 902A "Tucha-1" smoke grenade launcher in two groups of four, on each side of the gun. Two command versions are realised, very similar to the T-64AK: the T-64BK and the T-64B1K.

The decision in October 1979 to start production of the 6TD engine, and its great similarity with the 5TDF engine, allowed after some study to fit it in versions B and B1, but also A and AK, yielding the new models T-64AM, T-64AKM, T-64BM and T-64BAM, entering service in 1983.

Production of all versions ended in 1987. Total production reached almost 13,000.

Modernisation in Ukraine

[edit]
Ukrainian T-64BM Bulat on parade

After the dissolution of theUSSR,Ukraine carried on the development of T-64 modernization, as the original and main factory was in this country. As a result, modernized variants of the T-64 had become the most common tank in the Ukrainian inventory by 2022.[10]Two different upgrade packages were developed in 1999:[11]

  • T-64BM2with a 57DFM 850-hp (625 kW) engine, a new 1A43U fire control, a new 6ETs43 loader and the possibility to fire the 9M119 missile (NATO code "AT-11 Sniper").
  • T-64Uwhich integrated on top the 1A45 fire control (from the T-80U and T-84), PNK-4SU and TKN-4S optics for the tank commander and PZU-7 for the AA machine gun. The tank commander is then able to drive the tank and to use the gun directly if needed.[citation needed]

The two variants are also protected byKontakt-5modularreactive armour,able to resist to kinetic energy projectiles, as opposed to the first models which were efficient only againsthigh-explosive anti-tank(HEAT)shaped chargeammunition. Those two variants could also be re-motorised with the 6TDF 1,000 hp (735 kW) engine.[citation needed]

  • T-64BM BulatUkrainian army on use modernization, incorporatingNizh (Knife) reactive armourthat offers better performance dealing with tandem warheads than the Soviet Kontakt-5, new Ukrainian-made 125 mm KBA3 gun, TO1-KO1ER night sight and capability of firing the UkrainianKombat[uk;ru]tandem-warheadanti-tank guided missile.

In 2010, the KharkivMalyshev Factoryupgraded ten T-64B tanks (originally produced in Kharkiv in 1980) to T-64BM Bulat standard, and a further nineteen were delivered in 2011. These twenty-nine tanks are being upgraded under a ₴200 million ($25.1M) contract signed in April 2009. As of October 2011, the Ukrainian Army has 76 T-64BM Bulat in service. According to Malyshev Factory chief engineer Konstantin Isyak, the T-64BM Bulat is armoured to the level of modern tanks. It has Nizh (Knife) reactive armour, and Varta active protection system. The Bulat weighs 45 tonnes (44 long tons), and with its 850 hp (630 kW) 5TDFM multi-fuel diesel engine can travel at 70 km/h (43 mph), with a range of 385 km (239 mi). It retains the 125 mm smoothbore gun with an autoloader for 28 rounds, some of which can be guided missiles. It has a 12.7 mm AA machinegun, and a 7.62 mm coaxial machinegun.[12][13]

T-64BM2 Bulat during preparations for the 2021 Independence Day parade.
  • T-64BM2 Bulat

A 2019 modernization program with TPN-1TPV thermal sight, 1A43U fire-control system, 1H46M sight for the Kombat ATGM, Lybid-2 radios, Basalt battlefield information system, raised turret ring, improved KhSChVK Nizh reactive armour, armour shield above the commander's cupola, 12 mm armour for external fuel tanks, anti-RPG screens beside the engine compartment, and new 1000-hp 6TD-1 engine and transmission (new 5TD engines were no longer manufactured).[14][15][16]This was conducted at the Kharkiv Armoured-Vehicle Plant (KhBTZ), with the engine compartment enlarged for the new engine by the Malyshev Factory (ZIM).[15]Upgraded tanks were field tested in April 2021,[16]and several were paraded in the August Independence Day parade.

T-64BV model 2017 during a rehearsal for the Independence Day parade in Kyiv, August 2018. This version is recognizable by the absence of an infrared searchlight on the left of the main gun.
  • T-64BV model 2017

In 2019,Ukroboronpromreported that the Kharkiv Armoured Plant (KhBTZ) had delivered over 100 updated tanks to the Ukrainian Armed Forces.[17]The upgraded tanks included new thermal imaging for all crew, remove Luna infrared searchlight, include TPN-1-TPV Ukrainian night sight in place of TPN1-49-23, Nizh reactive armour modules designed for bolt-on replacement on T-64BV turrets, SN-4215 networked satellite navigation unit, and Lybid K-2RB digital radio (under license from Motorola) providing secure communications with a 70 km range.[citation needed]In August 2019, Ukroboronprom announced the Lviv Armoured Plant (LBTZ) had also started modernizing T-64s to the 2017 standard.[18]

  • T-64BV model 2022

In early 2022 Ukroboronprom was reported to be testing another modernization of the T-64BV, ordered by the Ministry of Defence of Ukraine. The tank has "new third-generation surveillance and sighting units" and is equipped with a new 12.7mm Snipex Laska K-2 heavy machine gun. It features "new up-to-date radio stations" and additional "navigation, internal and external communication systems which fully meets NATO standards." The exterior fuel tanks are now also protected by 12mm steel plates.[19]


Production history

[edit]

Sources differ on the initial production date of the tank that is set between 1963 and 1967; however it is established that the T-64 formally entered service with the Soviet army in 1967 and was publicly revealed in 1970.[20][21]The T-64 was KMDB's high-technology offering, intended to replace theIS-3andT-10heavy tanks in independent tank battalions. Meanwhile, the T-72 was intended to supersede the T-55 and T-62 in equipping the bulk of the Soviet tank and mechanized forces, as well as for export partners and east-block satellite states.

The T-64 introduced a new autoloader, which is still used on all T-64s currently in service, as well as all variants of the T-80 except the UkrainianT-84-120. T-64 prototypes and the first several hundred examples produced had the same 115 mm smoothbore gun as the T-62; the T-64A and subsequent full-scale production variants had the 125 mm gun.

While the T-64 was the superior tank, it was more expensive and physically complex, and was produced in smaller numbers. The T-72 is mechanically simpler and easier to service in the field, and its manufacturing process is correspondingly simpler. In light of Soviet doctrine, the superior T-64s were kept ready and reserved for the most important mission: a potential outbreak of a war in Europe.

In Soviet times, T-64 was mostly in service with units stationed in East Germany opposing the Chieftain-equipped units of theBAOR.No T-64s were exported. Many T-64s ended up in Russian and Ukrainian service after the breakup of the Soviet Union.

Models

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  • Ob'yekt430 (1957) – Prototype withD-10T100-mm gun, 120 mmarmour,4TPD 580 hp (427 kW) engine, 36 tonnes.
  • Ob'yekt430U – Project, equipped with a 122-mm gun and 160 mm of armour.
  • T-64orOb'yekt432 (1961) – Prototype with a D-68 115-mm gun, then initial production version with the same features, about 600 tanks produced.[22]
  • T-64R(remontirniy,rebuilt)[23]orOb'yekt432R – Redesigned between 1977 and 1981 with external gear from the T-64A but still with the 115-mm gun. T-64 upgraded to T-64A standard. Preserving the 115 mm gun is questionable.
  • T-64AorOb'yekt434 – 125-mm gun, "gill" armour skirts, a modified sight, and suspension on the fourth road wheel.
  • T-64T(1963) – Experimental version with a GTD-3TL 700 hp (515 kW)gas turbine.
  • Ob'yekt436 – Alternative version ofOb'yekt432 with a V-45 engine. Three built.
  • Ob'yekt438 andOb'yekt439 –Ob'yekt434 with V-45 diesel engine.
  • T-64AKorOb'yekt446 (1972) – Command version, with a R-130M radio and its 10 m (33 ft) telescoping antenna, a TNA-3 navigation system, without antiaircraft machine gun, carrying 38 rounds of main gun ammunition.
  • Ob'yekt447 – Prototype of the T-64B. Basically a T-64A fitted with the9K112 "Kobra" systemand a 1G21 gunsight. This is the "T-64A" displayed in the Kyiv museum.
  • T-64BorOb'yekt447A (1976) – Fitted with redesigned armour, 1A33 fire control system, 9K112-1 "Kobra"ATGMsystem (NATO code "AT-8 Songster" ), TPN-1-49-23 sight, 2A46-2 gun, 2E26M stabiliser and 6ETs40 loader. Later B/BV models have more modern systems 1A33-1, TPN-3-49, 2E42 and a 2A46M-1 gun. From 1985 the T-64B was fitted with stronger glacis armour; older tanks were upgraded with a 16-mm armour plate. Tanks, equipped with the 1,000 hp 6DT engine are known asT-64BM.
  • T-64BV– Features "Kontakt-1" reactive armour and "Tucha" 81-mm smoke grenade launchers on the left of the turret.
  • T-64BM2orOb'yekt447AM-2 – "Kontakt-5" reactive armour, rubber protection skirts, 1A43U fire control, 6ETs43 loader and able to fire the 9K119 missile (NATO code "AT-11A Sniper" ), 5TDFM 850 hp (625 kW) engine.
  • T-64U,T-64BM Bulat,orOb'yekt447AM-1 – Ukrainian modernisation, bringing the T-64B to the standard of theT-84.Fitted withNizhreactive armour,9K120 Refleksmissile (NATO code AT-11 Sniper), 1A45 Irtysh fire control, TKN-4S commander's sight, PZU-7 antiaircraft machine-gun sight, TPN-4E Buran-E night vision, 6TDF 1,000-hp (735 kW) engine. T-64U is one of 2 variants of the modernization program in 1990s, while Bulat is the most recent modernization from 2004.
  • T-64B1orOb'yekt437 – Same as the B without the fire control system and "Kobra", carrying 37 shells.
  • T-64B1M– T-64B1 equipped with the 1,000-hp 6TD engine, redesigned turret and improved armour. Modernization program from 1970s (resulted in T-64AM, AKM, BM and B1M; BM is not the same as T-64BM "Bulat" from 2004). Never entered mass production.
  • T-64BKandT-64B1KorOb'yekt446B – Command versions, with an R-130M radio and its 10-m telescoping antenna, a TNA-3 navigation system and AB-1P/30 APU, without antiaircraft machine gun, carrying 28 shells.
  • Obyekt 476 – Five prototypes with the 6TDF engine, prototypes for T-80UD development.
  • BREM-64orOb'yekt447T – Armoured recovery vehicle with a light 2.5-tonne crane, dozer blade, tow bars, welding equipment, etc. Only a small number were built.
  • T-55-64– Heavily upgraded T-55 with the complete hull and chassis of the T-64, fitted with "Kontakt-1" ERA. Prototype.
  • T-Rex– Ukrainian T-64 concept with unmanned turret.[24]
  • T-64 With T-72A Turret- An Uzbekistani T-64 that had the T-72A turret installed.[25]

Modernisations

[edit]

T-64

  • 1977–1981 – brought to theT-64Rstandard, reorganisation of external equipment as on the T-64A.

T-64A,T-64AK

  • 1972 redesign, fire control improvement (TPD-2-49 and TPN-1-49-23), inclusion of the NSVT machine gun on an electrical turret, R-123M radio.
  • 1973 redesigned turret with improved armour protection.
  • 1975 redesign, new 2E28M stabiliser, 6ETs10M loader, multi-fuel engine, 2A46-1 gun and TNPA-65night vision.
  • 1979 introduced smoke grenade launchers "Tucha".
  • 1980 rubber skirts on the suspension instead of the Gill protection.
  • 1981 redesign, two sets of six 902A smoke grenade launchers.
  • 1983T-64AM,T-64AKM,some tanks were equipped with the 6TDF engine during maintenance.
  • 1985 installation of ERA "Kontakt-1" during overhaul. Upgraded tanks designated T-64AV. Due to ERA installation, "Tucha" was repositioned from the front of the turret to the left side.

T-64B,T-64B1,T-64BK,T-64B1K

  • 1979 introduced smoke grenade launchers "Tucha".
  • 1980 rubber skirts on the suspension instead of the Gill protection.
  • 1981 redesign, 2 sets of four 902B2 smoke grenade launchers (in fact this is related to the ERA installation since 1985), 2A26M1 gun.
  • 1983T-64BM,T-64B1M,T-64BMKandT-64B1MK:some tanks were equipped with the 6TDF engine during maintenance.
  • 1985T-64BV,T-64BV1,T-64BVKandT-64BV1K:with "Kontakt-1" reactive armour, smoke grenade launchers on the left of the turret.
  • BM Bulat– T-64 modernization by theMalyshev Factoryin Ukraine (see above).[12][13]
  • 2011T-64E
  • 2017T-64BV type 2017:Night sight TPN1-49-23 replaced with TPN-1-TPV from Trimen-Ukraine, added СН-4215 satellite navigation system from Orizon-Navihatsiia, new Lybid-K 2RB digital radio, Luna infrared searchlight removed, and improved reactive armour units.[26][27][28]This upgrade for T-64BV tanks was received by the14th Mechanized Brigade,participated inStrong Europe Tank Challenge2017, and over two hundred of these were in service by 2020.[29][30]
  • 2020T-64MV– T-64 modernization for theArmed Forces of the Republic of Uzbekistan,consists of an installation of a more modern engine, ERA,slat armourand a digital radio system.[25][31]

Variants

[edit]
BAT-2 combat engineering vehicle
  • BMPV-64– Heavy infantry fighting vehicle, based on the chassis of the T-64 but with a completely redesigned hull with a single entry hatch in the rear. Armament consists of a remote-controlled 30mm autocannon and 7.62 mm machine gun. Combat weight is 34.5 tons. The first prototype was ready in 2005.[32][33]
  • BTRV-64– Similar APC version.[33]
  • UMBP-64– Modified version that will serve as the basis for several (planned) specialized vehicles, including a fire support vehicle, an ambulance and an air-defence vehicle.
  • BMPT-K-64– This variant is not tracked but has a new suspension with 4 axles, similar to the Soviet BTR series. The vehicle is powered by a 5TDF-A/700 engine and has a combat weight of 17.7 tons. It is fitted with a RCWS and can transport 3+8 men. Prototype only.
  • BMPT-64 Strahz(cyrrillic:Страж,translates to guardian) – Fire support vehicle armed with 230mm autocannons,2PK machine guns,4 ATGM-launchers and oneAG-17grenade launcher, developed byZhytomyr Armoured Plant.[34][35]

  • BAT-2– Fastcombat engineering vehiclewith the engine, lower hull and "small roadwheels" suspension of the T-64.[36]The 40-ton tractor sports a very large, all axis adjustable V-shaped hydraulic dozer blade at the front, a single soil ripper spike at the rear and a 2-ton crane on the top. The crew compartment holds 8 persons (driver, commander, radio operators plus a five-mansappersquad for dismounted tasks). The highly capable BAT-2 was designed to replace the oldT-54/AT-T basedBAT-M,butWarsaw Pactallies received only small numbers due to its high price and the old and new vehicles served alongside during the late Cold War.
  • UMR-64– Ukrainian development using surplus T-64s to create a Heavy APC/IFV design, which in turn is intended as the basis of a new family of combat and support vehicles. The basic conversion includes moving the engine compartment forward, and at the same time removing the turret and normal crew compartment. This allows the installation of any one of 15 different 'functional modules', weighing up to 22 tons. One resulting option is the Heavy IFV, designatedBMP-64E,which combines accommodation for up to 10 troops (not including the driver) with aremote weapons system.The Heavy APC version is designated theBTR-64E,and can not only carry more troops (at the cost of the RWS) but comes with large armoured double hatches at the rear for rapid loading and disembarkation. Other options include a universal supplies carrier (UMBP-64), a 'highly secure command and staff car with a weight up to 41 tons', and a 120 mm mortar carrier. The Kharkiv Armour Repair Plant (Zavod 311) is behind the project.[37]Current status of the program is unclear as of early 2014.

Service history

[edit]

Soviet Union

[edit]

The T-64 entered service in 1967 with the41st Guards Tank Divisionin theKiev Military District,[38]the suggestion being that this was prudent due to the proximity of the division to the factory, and significant teething problems during induction into service that required constant presence of factory support personnel with the division during acceptance and initial crew and service personnel training on the new type. It appears that the tank remained secret to the West for some years between its entry into production in the first half of 1960s and the official acceptance in the Soviet Army in 1967.

A Soviet T-64 of the21st Motor Rifle DivisioninPerleberg,East Germany, in the 1980s.

The T-64A began deployment to the Soviet Union's western military districts during the 1970s, and was gradually deployed to first line units in the Group of Soviet Forces in Germany in East Germany and Soviet troops in neighboringWarsaw Pactstates. The first GSFG unit to receive the T-64A was the14th Guards Motor Rifle DivisionatJüterbog,which became the 32nd Guards Tank Division in 1982. WhenNATOdetected the new tank after it was first deployed to East Germany, it was initially misidentified as the T-72. The T-64 mainly served with Soviet tank units in northern East Germany that were part of the2nd Guards Tank Army,the3rd Army,and the20th Guards Army,although it began to be phased out and replaced by the newer T-80BV/T-80U before Soviet troops were withdrawn from Germany in the late 1980s and early 1990s. However, when the Soviet troops withdrew from Germany, two divisions and the6th Separate Guards Motor Rifle Brigadestill operated the T-64.[39]

In September 1990, the Soviet Union had 3,982 T-64s in service west of the Urals, with 2,091 of these in Ukraine. 1,386 of these were T-64As, 220 T-64AKs, 1,192 T-64Bs, 159 T-64BVs, 420 T-64B1s, 27 T-64B1K/BV1K, and 578 T-64Rs.[39]During the Soviet period, the T-64 was never exported.[40]

It is normally reported that the T-64 was not used in theSoviet–Afghan Warsince the40th Soviet Armythat was deployed there used T-54/55 and T-62 tanks, possibly due to the limited usefulness of tanks in mountain warfare. A small number of T-64 tanks were tested in Afghanistan[41]during January 1980, but were quickly withdrawn without seeing combat because their engines did not perform well in the high altitude necessary for Afghan operations.[40]

Post-Soviet period

[edit]
Ukrainian Army T-64BM during a training exercise

After thedissolution of the Soviet Unionin 1991, the newRussian Ground Forcesdecided to standardize the tank fleet with the T-72 and the T-80, and the T-64s were gradually put in reserve storage or scrapped.[39]

In June 1992, 18 former Soviet T-64BV tanks from theOdesa Military District's59th Guards Motor Rifle Divisionwere taken over by theTransnistrian Army,fighting in theTransnistria War.Two T-64s were disabled byMoldovan Ground Forcestroops nearBenderduring Transnistrian counterattacks,[42]one of which was knocked out by anMT-12100mm anti-tank gun. These actions were the first combat use of the tank.[40]

Ukraine

[edit]

Ukraine deployed its T-64s during the initial outbreak of thewar in Donbas.[43]About 300 Ukrainian T-64s were reported lost to enemy action in 2014.[43]At least 20 were abandoned during disorderly withdrawals and subsequently captured by pro-Russian separatists of theDonetsk People's RepublicandLuhansk People's Republic.[43]In June 2014, Russia began reactivating T-64s from its reserve stocks and donating them to the separatists as well.[44][45]Donating surplus T-64s to the separatists was seen as cost-effective and deniable because the Russian military no longer had any use for the tanks and they could be passed off as individual examples captured from the Ukrainian Army.[46]US intelligence officials noted that "Russia will claim these tanks were taken from Ukrainian forces...[but] we are confident that these tanks came from Russia."[46]Separatist T-64s donated by Russia could be distinguished by their lack of Ukrainian markings and upgrades.[45]By early 2022, the separatist armies collectively operated a little over 100 T-64s of various marks and configurations.[43]

Captured Ukrainian T-64BV used byLuhansk People's Republicforces

There were around 40 T-64BVs stationed inCrimeain February 2014.[43]Russia initially seized these tanks following itsannexation of the peninsula,although they were returned to the Ukrainian government in June.[43]

T-64s are used by both Ukraine and the pro-Russian separatists during the2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.[47][48]Amidst the early phases of the invasion, Russian forces captured a number of Ukrainian T-64s, which they passed on to the separatists.[43]By the end of 2022, the Ukrainian Army had lost 276 T-64s either captured or destroyed.[49]Pro-Russian forces had also lost 50 T-64s in 2022.[50]

The crews of T-64s have been called upon to act as artillery leading to shortages in 125 mm ammunition. Crews of the T-64 tanks rely on attack helicopters and drones, after firing at a target they move positions and fire again. If the Russian forces send infantry directly onto the battle field then the T-64 crews are required to directly support the infantry. On 21 December 2022 the Biden administration announced an aid package with an extra 100,000 rounds of 125 mm tank ammunition for the first time.[51][52][53][54]

Other foreign service

[edit]

Five T-64s were delivered toUNITAforces at some point during theAngolan Civil War.[55]The origin of these tanks is not clear, but some number of them were also captured byMPLAforces.[56]According to video evidence, at least one was destroyed in combat.[57]

TheArmed Forces of the Democratic Republic of the Congoreceived 25 T-64B1M from late 2016. They were seen in mid-2017 patrolling inKasaïduring theKamwina Nsapu rebellion.[58]

Capabilities and limitations

[edit]

A rather unconventional design, the T-64 had several features which set it apart not only from previous tanks, but from the visually similar T-72, many related to its higher mechanical complexity:

Firepower

[edit]
  • The T-64's hydraulic "Basket" autoloader places the projectiles horizontally at the bottom of the turret facing towards the center, and the propellant charges vertically along the outer rim of the turret race, front-down. By contrast, the T-72's "Cazette" mechanism places the propellant charge on top of the corresponding projectile, also horizontally.
    • Being hydraulic, the Basket-type created a risk of hydraulic fluid fire if damaged in combat. The Cazette, by contrast, is electric.
    • Basket-type folds the projectile cradle upwards off the floor and vertically against the projectile cradle to which it is hinged, moving both pieces into the upper turret. Approaching the gun, the projectile cradle is moved forwards, unfolding both cradles and ammunition pieces to a straight line, ready for insertion. The Cazette's cradles are fixed, stacked propellant on top of projectile, and the two-cradle assembly must raise the propellant part above the gun to load the projectile first, then drawing back the mechanical pusher, lowering the propellant part, and inserting it with a second use of the pusher. This increases the time of loading of the T-72 by approximately one second. Total loading time is thus ~6-13s for T-64/80 against ~7–15 of T-72.
    • Because of greater diameter, Basket-type holds projectile and propellant parts for 6 additional shots over the Cazette of T-72 (28 vs 22).
    • Because of greater diameter of projectile cradle ring of the Basket-type, T-64 and later T-80 have a higher limit to the maximum length ofarmour-piercing fin-stabilized discarding sabot(APFSDS) projectiles, providing superior anti-armour performance relative to shorter projectiles used by T-72.
    • The automatic loader of T-64 is more reliable, and less sensitive to jolting when running off-road. It also has a "sequence" fire mode that feeds the gun with shells of the same type in less than five seconds. In the modern versions it is also able to turn backwards to keep a good speed at the end of the loading sequence
    • Early versions of the basket autoloader lacked safety features and were dangerous to the tank crews (especially the gunner, who sits nearby): Limbs could be easily caught in the machinery rotating around the crew, leading to injuries and deaths. A sleeve unknowingly snagged on one of the autoloader's moving parts could also drag a crewman into the apparatus upon firing.[9]
  • The tank commander's cupola provides good vision, the antiaircraft machine gun can be operated from inside the turret; the commander can also control the main gun sight if necessary
  • The turret was poorly configured to allow the crew to manually load the gun should the autoloader break. In such situations, rate of fire usually slowed to an abysmal one round per minute as the gunner fumbles with the awkward task of working around the broken machine to load the gun.[9]
  • Although two-piece ammunition allows for fast reloading of the gun in combat, replenishing the autoloader is quite slow.

Movement

[edit]
  • Because of a lower weight than T-72 (by ~3 tonnes), T-64 has slightly superior strategic and operational mobility (less wear and tear on tank transportation equipment, and lower fuel consumption per distance traveled.
  • Driving seems much less exhausting for the crew, thanks to assisted controls and a more flexible suspension.[59]
  • The suspension system featured an entirely new and advanced design, and suffered various failures of unusually high frequency. Due to these problems, teams of civilian mechanics from the T-64 factories were "semi-permanent residents" of Soviet tank units early in the T-64's initial adoption phase.[60]
  • The 5TDFopposed-piston engine,while powerful and compact, was very finicky and prone to malfunctions and fires. Russian expertViktor Murakhovsky,then a battalion commander inGroup of Soviet Forces in Germanyreflected that in his unit the rate of the engines requiring a major overhaul was close to one per tank in a year. He also noted the difficulty of starting this engine, especially in the damp German winters, and that starting aids used by soldiers, like the high-pressure air and/or oil injection, often caused engine fires.

Protection

[edit]
  • Basket-type autoloader stores, as stated previously, propellant charges vertically, the rear ends almost the same height as the roof of the hull. Combined with greater diameter of the complete autoloader assembly, the overall greater size of this type compared to the cazette significantly increases chance of ammunition being ignited by direct hit of any weapon penetrating into the crew compartment. The problem is largely irrelevant if a full ammunition load outside autoloader is carried, but T-72 carrying only autoloader ammunition is far more survivable than a T-64 in a similar situation thanks to the compact dimensions of Cazette-type ammunition storage.
  • Small and lightly constructed roadwheels of T-64 have been found to be less resistant to antitank mines than the larger roadwheels of T-72 and previous Soviet medium tanks.
  • Because of the small-diameter roadwheels and vertical placement of propellant charges in the autoloader, charges are dangerously exposed against hits penetrating the 85mm hull side armour, and are located at such height that they are too high to be protected by the roadwheels, yet too low to be fully protected by the sideskirt armour panels.
  • While many previous tanks used 4 or 5-man crews, T-64 and T-72 have crews of three men. This allows the fourth man to remain in relative safety away from combat and perform other duties until the tank returns for maintenance and resupply. Potentially, he and other would-be loaders can be reassigned to vehicle maintenance and resupply duty to assist the crews of other returning tanks, improving the quality of maintenance as the crew inside the tanks will likely be exhausted after several hours of operation.
  • Because of smaller physical characteristics thanks to the 3-men +autoloader design, T-64 and T-72 have a lower theoretical logistical footprint than tanks of equal number using a human loader. This decreases the chance of the logistics chain being detected and attacked, and decreases potential losses.
  • Counter to the benefit of leaving the fourth crew man in favour of using an automatic loader, this also creates difficulties in immediately replacing an injured crewman while in combat. In comparison with 4-man tanks, there exists a possibility of an injured crewman being dragged from his seat and into the loader's space for immediate treatment of injury while the tank retreats. In more cramped 3-man designs such empty space is not immediately available and moving between the turret and hull may be more difficult in the first place. There is also an argument that a fourth crewman can replace any other of the three in case of injury, however, this possibility can also exist in 3-man designs if redundancy of weapon controls allows for temporary 1-man operation of turret.
  • Because of weight limitations of the powertrain, T-64 had lower overall capacity for improvements which add weight to the tank. Because improvements of armour tend to have a greater cost in weight than, say, replacement of gun optics and turret/gun laying drives with more precise versions, this means T-64 suffers greater limitations in terms of protection improvement than the heavier T-72, which was designed with a more durable powertrain from the start.

Concerns of 3-man and 4-man crew maintenance

[edit]

While having smaller tank crews (three vs. the usual four) is advantageous since more tanks can theoretically be fielded using the same number of soldiers, there are also serious downsides. Tanks require frequent maintenance and refueling, and much of this is physically demanding work that several people must work together to accomplish. Most of the time, these duties are also performed at the end of a long day of operations, when everyone in the tank is exhausted. Having one less crewman for these tasks increases the strain on the remaining three men and increases the frequency of botched or skipped maintenance. This problem worsens if the tank's commander is also an officer who must often perform other duties such as higher-level meetings, leaving only two men to attend to the tank.[61]All of this means that tanks with three-man crews are more likely to suffer from performance-degrading human exhaustion, and mechanical failures that take longer to fix and that keep the tank from reaching the battlefield. These problems are exacerbated during prolonged time periods of operations.

Operators

[edit]
Operators
Current
Former

Current operators

[edit]
  • Democratic Republic of the Congo– 25 to 50 T-64B1M tanks received from Ukraine in 2016.[62][63][64][65]
  • TransnistriaTransnistria– 18 T-64BVs are in service.
  • Russia– approximately 4,000 in 1995. In 2014, Russia had approximately 2,000 which it had phased out of service and believed to be slated for destruction,[7]according toNATO[66]and theUnited States Department of State.[67]T-64As and T-64BVs, including Zr. 2017 variants, have been used by pro-Russian forces in theinvasion of Ukraine.[68][69]
  • Ukraine– 2,345 were in service as of 1995,[70]2,250 as of 2000,[71]2,215 as of 2005,[72]1,667 as of 2010,[73]700 T-64BV and T-64BM Bulat in service and 650 T-64 in storage as of 2015.[74]By August 2019, Ukraine's Kharkiv Armoured-Vehicle Factory (KhBTZ) had upgraded over 150 T-64BV to the new Model 2017 standard, and the Lviv Armoured -Vehicle Factory (LBTZ) had started delivering this model as well.[30]In 2020, Ukraine had over 720 T-64BV 2017, T-64BM Bulat and T-64BV in service, and 578 T-64 in storage.[75]During the 2022 invasion of Ukraine, some older T-64As and T-64Bs have also been spotted.[76]
  • Uzbekistan– 100 in service as of 2017.[78]

Former operators

[edit]

Specifications (T-64BV)

[edit]
T-64BV

Dimensions

[edit]
  • Length (gun to the front): 9.225 m[82]
  • Length (without the gun): 6.54 m
  • Breadth: 3.6 m[82]
  • Height: 2.17 m[82]
  • Weight: 42.5 t[82]

Crew

[edit]

Three men:

  • commander
  • driver
  • gunner

Propulsion

[edit]
  • Engine: 5TDFmultifuel(diesel,keroseneand petrol) with 5 opposed cylinders, 10 piston, 13.6 L. Developing 700 hp (515 kW) at 2,800 rpm, consumption of 170 to 200 litres per 100 km.
  • Transmission: two lateralgearboxeswith seven forward and one backward gear.
  • Three internal tanks for a 740 litres fuel capacity, two on the mudguards with 140 litres and two droppable 200 litres tanks on the aft end of the chassis.

Performance

[edit]
  • Max. road speed: 60.5 km/h.
  • Max off-road speed: 35 km/h.
  • Power-to-weight ratio:16.2 hp/t (11.9 kW/t).
  • Range: 500 km, 700 km with additional tanks.
  • Ground pressure: 0.9 kgf/cm2(88 kPa, 12.8 psi).
  • Able to ford in 1.8 m of water without preparation and 5 m withsnorkels.
  • Crosses a 2.8 m wide trench.
  • Crosses a 0.8 m high obstacle.
  • Max. slope 30°.

Armament

[edit]
  • 125 mm smoothbore 2A46M-1 gun (D-81TM)with carousel 6ETs40 loader, 28 shots, fire rate 8 shots per minute, 36 embedded shots (8 x 9M112M "Kobra" (NATO code "AT-8 Songster" ), 28 shells). Available shells are all fin-stabilised:
    • anti-personnel (APERS) version of the 3UOF-36, 3OVF-22, with several perforating abilities.
    • armour-piercing shells (APFSDS) 3UBM-17 or 3UBM-19 or older ones with a supplementary charge giving them an initial speed of about 1800 m/s.
    • hollow charge shells, 3VUK-25 or 3UBK-21.
  • coaxial machine gun 7.62 mm PKT with 1,250 rounds.
  • remote-controlled air-defence machine gun 12.7 mm NSVT "Utyos" with 300 rounds.
  • 4+4 (T-64B) or 6+6 (T-64A) 81 mm smoke mortars 902B "Tucha-2".

Equipment

[edit]
  • The 1A33 fire control system, with:
    • Radio control of the 9K112 "Kobra" missiles (NATO code "AT-8 Songster" ) launched from the gun.
    • The 2E28M hydraulic stabiliser (vertical range −5°20' to +15°15')
    • The gunner day sight 1G42 with embedded laser telemeter.
    • The TPN-1-49-23 active IR night sight.
    • The L2G IR projector left of the gun for illumination.
    • The 1V517 ballistic calculator.
    • The 1B11 anemometric gauge.
  • The tank commander's cupola is equipped with:
    • The PKN-4S combined day and night sight which allows a 360° vision and to fire the main weapons.
    • The PZU-6 AA sight.
    • The 2Z20 2-axis electrical stabiliser (vertical range −3° to +70°).
  • The TPN-3-49 or TPN-4 and TVN-4 night vision for the driver.
  • An R-173M radio.
  • ACBRNprotection, with radiation detectors and global compartment overpressure.
  • Twosnorkelsfor crossing rivers with a depth up to 5 m.
  • A KMT-6 mine clearing plough can be fitted at the front.

Protection

[edit]
  • 3-layer composite armour (K formula), with a thickness between 450 and 20 mm:
    • Front: 120 mm steel, 105 mm glass fibre, 40 mm steel.
    • Sides: 80 mm steel.
    • Front of the turret: 150 mm steel, 150 mm glass fibre, 40 mm steel
  • Lateral rubber skirts protecting the top of the suspension.
  • Kontakt-1 reactive bricks covering:
    • The front and the side of the turret
    • The glacis
    • The lateral skirts

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Soviet Tank ProgramsArchived2015-09-24 at theWayback Machinepage 12 published by the CIA under the Freedom of Information Act
  2. ^T-64A Main Battle TankArchived2015-02-09 at theWayback MachineKharkiv Morozov Machine Building
  3. ^Sewell 1998,p. 28-29.
  4. ^Три танкистаArchived2011-07-19 at theWayback Machine(Three Tankers)
  5. ^Sewell 1998,p. 46: "The Soviets saw tank generations in this manner: 1920–1945, first generation; 1946–1960, second generation; 1961–1980, third generation; and 1981–present, fourth generation. Since the last really new tank design, the T-80, came out in 1976, they feel that they have not produced a true Fourth Generation Tank Design. In comparison, they count the M1, Challenger, and Leopard 2 as Fourth Generation and the LeClerc as Fifth Generation."
  6. ^T-64 manual ( "Танк Т-64А. Техническое описание и инструкция по эксплуатации. 1984" ) state T-64 as "main battle" tank, while previous T-62 and T-55 (in corresponding military manuals, like "Танк Т-62. Руководство по материальной части и эксплуатации. 1968" ) stated as "medium" tanks
  7. ^abAdrian Croft (14 June 2014)."NATO says images raise suspicions that Russia moved tanks into Ukraine".Reuters.Archivedfrom the original on 14 June 2014.Retrieved14 June2014.phased out of service and were slated for destruction
  8. ^"Основной боевой танк Т-64".Archived fromthe originalon 2009-09-19.Retrieved2010-04-22.Main battle tank T-64 (Основной боевой танк Т-64)
  9. ^abcPerrett 1987,p. 42.
  10. ^"On the battlefield, Ukraine uses Soviet-era weapons against Russia".The Washington Post.29 April 2022.Retrieved29 April2022.
  11. ^"KMDB – Armoured Vehicle Upgrade Projects".morozov.ua. Archived fromthe originalon 14 May 2011.Retrieved25 October2014.
  12. ^abwknews.ruУкраинская армия получила десять модернизированных Т-64,28 October 2010Archived7 November 2010 at theWayback Machine
  13. ^ab"Kharkiv Morozov Machine Building Design BureauMain Characteristics of the Upgraded BM Bulat Battle Tank".Archived fromthe originalon 19 October 2004.Retrieved15 November2014.
  14. ^"'Завод імені Малишева' відновив чергову партію 'Булатів' для українського війська "[Malyshev Factory refurbished the next batch of Bulats for the Ukrainian army].UkrOboronProm(in Ukrainian). 2019-05-03.Retrieved2019-07-22.
  15. ^abZhurets, Serhii (2021-07-12)."Битва за оновленний Т-64 як танк перехідного періоду: чи побачимо його на параді".Defence Express(in Ukrainian).Retrieved2021-11-19.
  16. ^ab"Модернізований" Булат "Т-64БМ2 успішно пройшов вогневі випробування (ексклюзивне відео)".Defence Express(in Ukrainian). 2021-04-23.Retrieved2021-11-19.
  17. ^"Модернізований Т-64 зразка 2017 року від ДП" Харківський бронетанковий завод "– нові бойові можливості серійної бойової машини"[Modernized T-64 Model 2017 from DP Kharkiv Armour Factory: New Combat Capabilities of a Serial-Production Fighting Vehicle].UkrOboronProm(in Ukrainian). 2019-02-11.Retrieved2019-07-22.
  18. ^"ЛБТЗ налагодив серійну модернізацію Т-64 до зразка 2017р".12 August 2019.
  19. ^"Kharkiv Armored Plant runs tests of T-64BV mod. 2022 tank".
  20. ^ARG."T-64 Main Battle Tank | Military-Today".military-today.Archivedfrom the original on 17 October 2014.Retrieved25 October2014.
  21. ^"T64 Tank".fas.org.Archivedfrom the original on 19 October 2014.Retrieved25 October2014.
  22. ^Foss 2011,p. 119.
  23. ^Sewell 1998,p. 45.
  24. ^Administrator (23 January 2017)."Ukraine to develop the T-Rex a new main battle tank to compete the Russian T-14 Armata MBT 12301171 – January 2017 Global Defense Security army news industry – Defense Security global news industry army 2017 – Archive News year".armyrecognition.Archivedfrom the original on 12 April 2018.Retrieved9 May2018.
  25. ^ab"Samarqand Steel: Uzbekistan's Fighting Vehicles".
  26. ^"Нова модернізація Т-64 пройде Хрещатиком"[A new T-64 modernization will parade on Khreshchatyk].MIL.IN.UA(in Ukrainian). 2018-08-20.Archivedfrom the original on 2019-04-14.Retrieved2019-04-14.
  27. ^"Модернізація танку Т-64БВ з тепловійзійним прицілом, GPS навігацією та іншими опціями почала надходити до Збройних Сил України"[T-64BV tank modernization with thermal-vision sight, GPS navigation, and other options began deliveries to the Ukrainian Armed Forces].MIL.IN.UA(in Ukrainian). 2017-05-02.Archivedfrom the original on 2019-01-18.Retrieved2019-04-14.
  28. ^"Модернізований Т-64 зразка 2017 року від ДП" Харківський бронетанковий завод "– нові бойові можливості серійної бойової машини".Ukroboronprom(in Ukrainian). 2019-02-11.Archivedfrom the original on 2019-04-14.Retrieved2019-04-14.
  29. ^"ЗСУ отримали понад 100 танків Т-64 модифікації 2017р"[Ukrainian Armed Forces received over 100 T-64 type 2017 tanks]. 11 February 2019.Archivedfrom the original on 2019-04-14.Retrieved2019-04-14.
  30. ^ab"ХБТЗ ПОСТАВИВ ЗСУ ВЖЕ ПОНАД 150 МОДЕРНІЗОВАНИХ ТАНКІВ Т-64 ЗРАЗКА 2017 РОКУ (ФОТО)".Defence-ua. 2016-01-29.Retrieved2022-03-08.
  31. ^"Uzbekistan begins upgrading its T-64 MBTs".Janes.28 July 2020.
  32. ^"BMPV-64 Prototype Heavy Armored Personnel Carrier".Military-Today.Archivedfrom the original on 2013-01-29.
  33. ^abТ-64: Чи піде «під ніж» унікальна техніка?Archived2017-12-01 at theWayback Machine(T-64: Will Unique Technology go "Under the Knife"?) atВійсько України(Ukrainian Army)
  34. ^"Strazh new Ukrainian BMPT fire support vehicle based on T-64 MBT | Arms and Security 2017 Online Show Daily News | Defence security military exhibition 2017 daily news category".armyrecognition.27 October 2017.Retrieved2023-05-31.
  35. ^"Ukrainian Military News Digest for oct. 9-15, 2017 | Ukrainian military portal".2021-04-18. Archived fromthe originalon 2021-04-18.Retrieved2023-05-31.
  36. ^"KMDB – Vehicles Based on the MT-T Prime Mover Chassis".morozov.ua. Archived fromthe originalon 13 September 2012.Retrieved25 October2014.
  37. ^Armoured Ukraine: results, potential prospects… Results for the 15 years of "independence"Archived2007-11-27 at Wikiwix [2006 article] Tank capacity – Steel and Fire: modern and future tanks (Article is in Russian) Accessed 8th of April 2014
  38. ^Isby, David C. (1988).Ten million bayonets: inside the armies of the Soviet Union.London: Arms and Armour Press. p. 13.ISBN978-0-85368-774-0.
  39. ^abcZaloga 2015,pp. 42–43.
  40. ^abcZaloga 2015,pp. 43–44.
  41. ^Reddy, L.R. (2002).Inside Afghanistan: End of the Taliban Era?.APH. p. 57.ISBN9788176483193.Archivedfrom the original on 4 September 2014.Retrieved25 October2014.
  42. ^Stratulat, Alexandru; Cooper, Tom (29 September 2003)."War in Moldova, 1992".Air Combat Information Group. Archived fromthe originalon 25 November 2005.Retrieved25 October2014.
  43. ^abcdefgRoblin, Sebastian (13 October 2022)."How a tank the Soviets tried to keep secret became an icon of Ukraine's resistance against Russia".Business Insider.New York City. Archived fromthe originalon 27 December 2022.Retrieved1 January2023.
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