T-34 tanks headed to the front.
The Soviet "Big 7"
Below is a list of tanks and other armoured fighting vehicles of the Russian empire , Soviet Union , the Russian Federation , and Ukraine .
Imperial Russia, World War I[ edit ]
The Tsar Tank
Earth Battleship (project)
Gulkevich's armored tractor
F. Blinov armored tractor
Walter armored vehicle
Self-propelled guns [ edit ]
Drizhenko self-propelled gun
Turtle (Navrotsky Self-propelled gun)
After World War I to early World War II (1918-1940)[ edit ]
PB-4 Amphibious Armoured Car in Patriot Park
FAI
FAI-2
Broneavtomobil -series armored cars:
BAD-1
BAD-2
BDT
BKhM-1000/800
D-8 Armored Car
D-9
D-12
D-13
D-18/37
DSh
DTR
FVV
GAZ-TK
KS-18
PB-4
PB-7
Matval
T-17 tankette.
Amphibious light tanks [ edit ]
Freedom Fighter Lenin (Russkiy Reno ) monument in Nizhny Novgorod
Tank Grotte
A-32
The Т-35 heavy tank followed the interwar trend for tanks with multiple turrets
Sirkena heavy tank
T-35
T-39
SMK (Experimental)
T-100 tank (Experimental)
KV-0 (Prototype for KV-1)
T-30
TP-1
TA-3
Sirkena tank project
Danchenko tank project
Object 0-50
Object 103
T-100-Z
VL (project)
TG-V
TG-VI
Tank destroyers and SPGs [ edit ]
SU-14 in trials, 1934
Flame-throwing tanks [ edit ]
KhT-26
World War II (1941-1945)[ edit ]
The list does not include all vehicles, as there were many more experimental, or otherwise rare vehicles.
BA-64
LB-23
LB-62
LB-NATI
T-40
T-50
T-60
T-70
T-80 (prototype light tank)
T-111
T-116
T-126 (SP) - up-armored version of T-50
T-127
LTP
MT-25 (proposal tank)
LTTB (1 prototype)
Tank destroyers and assault guns [ edit ]
SU-100Y
Self-propelled guns [ edit ]
Self-propelled anti-air [ edit ]
This includes modified captured tanks.
T-III (T-3) - captured Panzer III
T-IV (T-4) - captured Panzer IV
T-V (T-5) - captured Panther tank
SU-76i - captured Panzer III modified to mount an 76mm S-1 gun on a tank destroyer configuration.
SU-85i - captured Panzer III modified to mount an 85mm D-5S-85A gun on a tank destroyer configuration.
After World War II (Soviet era, continued)[ edit ]
Armored fighting vehicles [ edit ]
BMP-1
BMP-2
BMP-3
BMD-1
BMD-2
BMD-3
BMO-1
BTR-series AFVs:
BRDM-1
BRDM-2
Object 19
Object 659
Object 680
Object 681
Object 688
Object 768
Object 769
Object 911
Object 914
Object 955
Object 1015
Object 1200
GAZ-50
K-75
K-78
GT-L
GT-LB
GT-MU
MT-LB
MT-LBu
T-100 light tank
PT-76
Object 685
Object 788
Object 906
Object 911B
Object 934
R-39 (Object 101)
Medium and main battle tanks [ edit ]
Tank destroyers and assault guns [ edit ]
Self-propelled guns [ edit ]
Self-propelled anti-air [ edit ]
Tanks and AFVs with ATGMs [ edit ]
IT-1
Object 170
Object 282
Object 286
Object 431
Object 287
Object 747
Object 757
Object 772
Object 775
Object 778
Object 780
Object 906B
Object 920
2P27 Shmel'
2P32 Falanga
9P19 Glaz
9P110 Obod
9P122
9P124
9P133
9P137 Fleyta
9P148 Konkurs
9P149 Shturm-S
Flame-throwing tanks [ edit ]
Other vehicles and AFVs [ edit ]
SPU-117 (Object 117)
Object 288
Progvev-T
Post-Soviet vehicles [ edit ]
Armored fighting vehicles [ edit ]
2S25 Sprut-SD
Medium and main battle tanks [ edit ]
T-90A
Self-propelled guns [ edit ]
2S19 Msta-S
Bishop, Chris (1998). The Encyclopedia of Weapons of WWII . London, UK: Orbis Publishing and Aerospace Publishing. ISBN 0-7607-1022-8 .
Milsom, John (1971). Russian Tanks, 1900–1970: The Complete Illustrated History of Soviet Armoured Theory and Design , Harrisburg Penn.: Stackpole Books. ISBN 0-8117-1493-4 .
Zaloga, Steven J. , James Grandsen (1984). Soviet Tanks and Combat Vehicles of World War Two , London: Arms and Armour Press. ISBN 0-85368-606-8 .