Whispering Death
Active member
Charge 7 brought this up in the other thread and it got me interested. I don't know anything about these pre-1941 soviet designs. Would someone care to educate me?
Outwardly, the T-35 was visually stunning with its huge dimensions, however its internal space was very cramped. When I visited Kubinka I was unable to get inside the T-35 (I'm 192 cm). The separate combat compartments were not connected with each other. Visibility from the vehicle was very bad, especially from the driver's position (he could see straight ahead and left only). However, the greatest problem was egress from a knocked out tank because the crew could escape only from roof hatches, and the crew from the main turret had to expose themselves at a 4-metre height under enemy fire.
The driver was in an even worse situation: his hatch could not been opened until the machine-gun turret rotated out of the way. If this turret was jammed, the driver couldn't escape at all. Escape from the rear turrets was also difficult due to the rounded antenna on the main turret. The tank crew could become "prisoners" of their own tank.
Armyjaeger said:We have to consider that the whole industry was just taking its first steps. T-35 had so many weapons that the commander could rarely coordinate all of them effectively. This design as ridiculous as it is doesn't surprise me that they actually started producing the tank itself, the whole idea is from the early 1930's so what do you expect
If memory serves me correctly the Allied forces too had this type of tank with two turrets, one mounting a low velocity large caliber gun and the other had an anti tank gun.