Difference between revisions of "PT-76 (Family)"
Colok76286 (talk | contribs) (Created page) |
m (→Vehicles) |
||
(2 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
==Vehicles== | ==Vehicles== | ||
− | |||
===Rank III=== | ===Rank III=== | ||
* [[PT-76 (China)]] | * [[PT-76 (China)]] | ||
* [[PT-76B]] | * [[PT-76B]] | ||
+ | * [[PT-76 (Sweden)|PT-76B (Finland)]] | ||
+ | ===Rank V=== | ||
+ | * [[PT-76-57]] | ||
− | == | + | == Media == |
− | + | <!-- ''Excellent additions to the article would be video guides, screenshots from the game, and photos.'' --> | |
− | + | ;Videos | |
− | + | {{Youtube-gallery|0uI33fRlznc|'''The Shooting Range #288''' - ''Pages of History'' section at 03:50 discusses the PT-76.}} | |
{{USSR light tanks}} | {{USSR light tanks}} |
Latest revision as of 11:27, 22 September 2023
Contents
Description
The PT-76 (short for Plavayushchiy Tank, lit. "floating tank" in Russian) is a Soviet amphibious light tank developed put into service in 1951. Produced at around 12,000 units, the PT-76 still serves today. The main operators were the USSR, North Korea, Vietnam, Poland, Bulgaria and Egypt.
Vehicles
Rank III
Rank V
Media
- Videos
The Shooting Range #288 - Pages of History section at 03:50 discusses the PT-76.
USSR light tanks | |
---|---|
T-26 | T-26 · T-26 (1st Gv.T.Br.) · T-26-4 · T-26E |
BT | BT-5 · RBT-5 · BT-7 · BT-7 TD · BT-7M · BT-7A (F-32) |
T-50 | T-126 · T-50 |
T-70 | T-70 · T-80 |
PT-76 | PT-76B · PT-76-57 · Object 906 |
BMP | BMP-1 · BMP-2 · BMP-2M · BMP-3 |
BMD | BMD-4 |
2S25 | 2S25 · 2S25M |
Wheeled | BA-11 · BTR-80A |
Other | T-60 · Object 685 · 2S38 |
China | ▂Type 62 |
China light tanks | |
---|---|
Type 63 | Object 211 · Type 63 · ZTS63 |
Type 62 | Type 62 |
WZ551 | ZSL92 · PTL02 · WMA301 |
ZBL08 | ZLT11 |
Type 86 | ZBD86 |
WZ502 | ZBD04A |
ROC | M41D · M64 |
Type 59 | QN506 |
USA | ␗M8 LAC · ␗M3A3 Stuart · ␗M3A3 (1st PTG) · ␗M5A1 · ␗M24 · ␗M18 GMC · ␗M41A3 |
USSR | ␗T-26 · T-26 No.531 · ␗PT-76 |