Difference between revisions of "T-72 (Family)"

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==Vehicles==
 
==Vehicles==
 
 
===Rank VI===
 
===Rank VI===
 +
* [[T-72A]] - Object 176; baseline T-72 series, later upgraded with appliqué armour, known as "Dolly Patton" in NATO.
 +
* {{Specs-Link|germ_kpz_t72m1}} - Soviet exported or Warsaw-Pact licensed variants to East Germany in the mid-1980s
 +
* {{Specs-Link|sw_t_72m1}} - Exported variants to Finland in 1984.
 +
* {{Specs-Link|it_t_72m1}} - Exported variants to Hungary.
  
* [[T-72A]] - Object 176; baseline T-72 series, later upgraded with appliqué armour, known as "Dolly Patton" in NATO.
+
===Rank VII===
 +
* [[T-72AV (TURMS-T)]] - T-72A with Kontakt-1 ERA export to Syria with Italian SELEX Galileo FCS.
 
* [[T-72B]] - Object 184; post-1985 baseline tanks with revised composite armour and FCS, known as "Super-Dolly Patton" in NATO.
 
* [[T-72B]] - Object 184; post-1985 baseline tanks with revised composite armour and FCS, known as "Super-Dolly Patton" in NATO.
* [[T-72AV (TURMS-T)]] - T-72A with Kontakt-1 ERA export to Syria with Italian SELEX Galileo FCS.
 
 
* [[T-72B (1989)]] - T-72B with extended composite coverage on turret and upgraded to Kontakt-5 ERA.
 
* [[T-72B (1989)]] - T-72B with extended composite coverage on turret and upgraded to Kontakt-5 ERA.
* [[T-72M1|T-72M1 (Sweden)]] - Exported variants to Finland in 1984.
+
* [[T-72B3]] - Object 184M-3; the current baseline for the T-72B fleet in Russia in early 2010s with ongoing upgrades throughout the decade.
* ◊[[T-72M1 (Germany)]] - Soviet exported or Warsaw-Pact licensed variants to East Germany in the mid-1980s
 
 
* [[T-72M2 Moderna]] - Planned Slovakian upgrades in 1993 with French FCS, extra firepower and ERA packages.
 
* [[T-72M2 Moderna]] - Planned Slovakian upgrades in 1993 with French FCS, extra firepower and ERA packages.
 +
;T-90 (T-72BU)
 +
* [[T-90A]] - Object 188; Russian army version with welded turret, V-92S2 engine and ESSA thermal viewer.
 +
* T-90S [[Bhishma TWMP]] - Export version of the T-90, Designated Bhisma by India (outfitted with Track Width Mine Ploughs (TWMP))
  
===Rank VII===
+
===Rank VIII===
 
+
* [[T-90M]] - Proryv-3; Heavily upgraded version of the T-90.
* [[T-72B3]] - Object 184M-3; the current baseline for the T-72B fleet in Russia in early 2010s with ongoing upgrades throughout the decade.
 
  
 
==History==
 
==History==

Latest revision as of 05:10, 13 November 2024

Description

The T-72 is a Soviet 2nd generation main battle tank put into service in 1971. It served throughout the Cold War and is one of the most produced modern era MBTs at a total of roughly 30,000 units. It still is in active duty in many armies around the world.

Vehicles

Rank VI

  • T-72A - Object 176; baseline T-72 series, later upgraded with appliqué armour, known as "Dolly Patton" in NATO.
  • ◊T-72M1 - Soviet exported or Warsaw-Pact licensed variants to East Germany in the mid-1980s
  • ▄T-72M1 - Exported variants to Finland in 1984.
  • ◔T-72M1 - Exported variants to Hungary.

Rank VII

  • T-72AV (TURMS-T) - T-72A with Kontakt-1 ERA export to Syria with Italian SELEX Galileo FCS.
  • T-72B - Object 184; post-1985 baseline tanks with revised composite armour and FCS, known as "Super-Dolly Patton" in NATO.
  • T-72B (1989) - T-72B with extended composite coverage on turret and upgraded to Kontakt-5 ERA.
  • T-72B3 - Object 184M-3; the current baseline for the T-72B fleet in Russia in early 2010s with ongoing upgrades throughout the decade.
  • T-72M2 Moderna - Planned Slovakian upgrades in 1993 with French FCS, extra firepower and ERA packages.
T-90 (T-72BU)
  • T-90A - Object 188; Russian army version with welded turret, V-92S2 engine and ESSA thermal viewer.
  • T-90S Bhishma TWMP - Export version of the T-90, Designated Bhisma by India (outfitted with Track Width Mine Ploughs (TWMP))

Rank VIII

  • T-90M - Proryv-3; Heavily upgraded version of the T-90.

History

Describe the history of the creation and combat usage of the vehicle family in more detail than in the introduction. Be sure to reference text and sources by using <ref></ref>, as well as adding them at the end of the article with <references />. This section may also include the family's dev blog entries (if applicable).

Media

Videos

See also