Difference between revisions of "DT (7.62 mm)"
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[[File:Weapon DT (7.62 mm).png|350px|thumb|left|The {{PAGENAME}} on the ZiS-30.]] | [[File:Weapon DT (7.62 mm).png|350px|thumb|left|The {{PAGENAME}} on the ZiS-30.]] | ||
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− | The DT is a Russian | + | The '''7.62 mm DT''' is a Russian machine gun used on a variety of armoured fighting vehicles. A conversion of an infantry light machine gun for ground vehicle mounts, the DT provides a steady firing rate to suppress or harass enemy vehicles and their crew with. |
=== Vehicles equipped with this weapon === | === Vehicles equipped with this weapon === | ||
Line 36: | Line 36: | ||
== General info == | == General info == | ||
− | ''Tell us about the tactical and technical characteristics of the cannon or machine gun.'' | + | <!--''Tell us about the tactical and technical characteristics of the cannon or machine gun.''--> |
+ | A conversion of a 1920s infantry light machine gun, the DT has lots of characteristics of an early machine gun with a rather slow rate of fire. The magazine-fed nature also means that there are frequent down time to reload the machine gun if firing discipline is not maintained. However, this reload time is short again due to the magazine feeding system. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The DT firepower is otherwise nothing special compared to other machine guns of other nations aside from its firing characteristics. | ||
=== Available ammunition === | === Available ammunition === | ||
Line 45: | Line 48: | ||
== Usage in battles == | == Usage in battles == | ||
− | ''Describe the cannon/machine gun in the game - its distinctive features, tactics of usage against notable opponents. Please don't write a "guide" - do not impose a single point of view, but give the reader food for thought.'' | + | <!--''Describe the cannon/machine gun in the game - its distinctive features, tactics of usage against notable opponents. Please don't write a "guide" - do not impose a single point of view, but give the reader food for thought.''--> |
+ | As the primary coaxial weapon for the majority of the Soviet Union's World War II designed/produced armored fighting vehicles, the DT machine gun is a weapon that players will need to familiarize themselves with for a good part of the Soviet tech tree. Unlike most other nation which have belt-fed weapons, the DT is magazine-fed and so cannot carelessly fire away without worrying about the magazine being emptied. Though the reload time is short, it does leave the vehicle more vulnerable to targets that may otherwise be receiving a good hail of machine gun fire at the moment like aircraft or thin-skinned open-top vehicles. | ||
+ | |||
+ | That said, as a coaxial mount, the machine gun does not have great elevation and so should remain as a secondary armament against enemy ground units. | ||
=== Pros and cons === | === Pros and cons === | ||
− | ''Summarise and briefly evaluate the weaponry in terms of its characteristics and combat effectiveness. Mark pros and cons as a list.'' | + | <!--''Summarise and briefly evaluate the weaponry in terms of its characteristics and combat effectiveness. Mark pros and cons as a list.''--> |
'''Pros:''' | '''Pros:''' | ||
− | * | + | * No worse than most other machine gun round performance |
+ | * Reload time between magazines is short | ||
'''Cons:''' | '''Cons:''' | ||
− | * | + | * Slow rate of fire means fire saturation is poor |
+ | * Magazine feeding system means that ammo reserve between reloads is small compared to belt-fed weapons | ||
== History == | == History == |
Revision as of 22:40, 9 April 2021
Contents
Description
The 7.62 mm DT is a Russian machine gun used on a variety of armoured fighting vehicles. A conversion of an infantry light machine gun for ground vehicle mounts, the DT provides a steady firing rate to suppress or harass enemy vehicles and their crew with.
Vehicles equipped with this weapon
Vehicles equipped with this weapon | |
---|---|
Light tanks | |
BT-5 | BT-5 · RBT-5 |
BT-7 | BT-7 · BT-7 TD · BT-7A (F-32) · BT-7M |
T-26 | T-26 · T-26 (1st Gv.T.Br.) · ␗T-26 · T-26 No.531 · T-26-4 · T-26E |
Other | BA-11 · T-50 · T-60 · T-70 · T-80 · T-126 |
Medium tanks | |
T-28 | T-28 · T-28E · T-28 (1938) |
T-34 | T-34 (Prototype) · T-34 (1941) · T-34-57 · T-34 (1st Gv.T.Br.) · T-34 (1940) · T-34 (1942) · ␗T-34 (1943) · ▀T 34 747 (r) · T-34E · T-34E STZ |
T-34-57 | T-34-57 (1943) |
T-34-85 | T-34-85 (D-5T) · ␗Т-34-85 (S-53) · T-34-85 · T-34-85 No.215 · T-34-85E · Т-34-85 Gai |
T-34-100 | T-34-100 |
T-44 | T-44 · T-44-100 · T-44-122 |
Heavy tanks | |
IS-2 | IS-2 · ␗IS-2 · IS-2 No.402 · IS-2 (1944) · IS-2 "Revenge" · ␗IS-2 (1944) |
KV-1 | KV-1 (L-11) · KV-1 (ZiS-5) · KV-1E · KV-1S · ▀KV-IB |
KV-2 | KV-2 (1940) · KV-2 (ZiS-6) · ▀KW II 754 (r) |
Matilda | ▂MK-II "Matilda" |
Other | IS-1 · IS-3 · IS-6 · KV-85 · KV-122 · KV-220 · T-35 |
Tank destroyers | ZiS-30 |
General info
A conversion of a 1920s infantry light machine gun, the DT has lots of characteristics of an early machine gun with a rather slow rate of fire. The magazine-fed nature also means that there are frequent down time to reload the machine gun if firing discipline is not maintained. However, this reload time is short again due to the magazine feeding system.
The DT firepower is otherwise nothing special compared to other machine guns of other nations aside from its firing characteristics.
Available ammunition
Describe the shells that are available for the weapon and their features and purpose. If it concerns autocannons or machine guns, write about different ammo belts and what is inside (which types of shells).
Comparison with analogues
Give a comparative description of cannons/machine guns that have firepower equal to this weapon.
Usage in battles
As the primary coaxial weapon for the majority of the Soviet Union's World War II designed/produced armored fighting vehicles, the DT machine gun is a weapon that players will need to familiarize themselves with for a good part of the Soviet tech tree. Unlike most other nation which have belt-fed weapons, the DT is magazine-fed and so cannot carelessly fire away without worrying about the magazine being emptied. Though the reload time is short, it does leave the vehicle more vulnerable to targets that may otherwise be receiving a good hail of machine gun fire at the moment like aircraft or thin-skinned open-top vehicles.
That said, as a coaxial mount, the machine gun does not have great elevation and so should remain as a secondary armament against enemy ground units.
Pros and cons
Pros:
- No worse than most other machine gun round performance
- Reload time between magazines is short
Cons:
- Slow rate of fire means fire saturation is poor
- Magazine feeding system means that ammo reserve between reloads is small compared to belt-fed weapons
History
After World War I, the new Soviet government and its military sought to learn from their experience in World War I. The light machine guns were a particular type of weapons that were looked into, inspired by the Russian experience using the British Lewis machine gun. The Soviet military tasked Vasily Alekseyevich Degtyaryov with the job of designing a new light machine gun for the Red Army. The weapon Degtyaryov designed was a very simple design chambering the 7.62x54R mm cartridge, with six working parts needed for the machine gun's function. The weapon was also loaded by a pan-shaped magazine in a manner similar to the Lewis machine gun, a trait that Soviet soldiers would nickname the weapon as proigryvatel ("phonograph" or "record player").[1] Degtyaryov's weapon was adopted as the Red Army's newest light machine gun in 1927 as the DP machine gun.[2] The DP gun is sometimes referenced as the DP-27 or DP-28 (1928 being the DP's general service distribution date).
The DP machine gun would serve as the Red Army's infantry light machine gun from 1927 to throughout World War II, though the initial models had issues with bipod structural strength and the lack of a manual safety (only a grip safety was present).[2] Until World War II, the only considered modification of the DP machine gun, based on fighting experience against the Japanese and their Type 11 machine guns in 1938-1939, was transforming the feed mechanism from using the large pan-shaped magazine to a slimmer hopper-type system that is fed by ammunition clips. However this design was dropped due to awkward handling and unsatisfactory reliability.[3] Following experience from World War II battles, the DP machine gun underwent a modernization between 1943-1944 as the DPM, which introduced a pistol grip, redesigned stock, a safe/fire selector, the repositioning of the recoil spring to the rear, and a stronger bipod.[4]
The DP was also be used as vehicle mounts under the variations DA for aircraft mounts, and DT and the modernized DTM for tank mounts. These variants were notable for their removed barrel shroud for a heavy barrel, different stock design (the DT would have a collapsible stock), and a redesigned magazine that was smaller in width, but taller in height to reduce the weapon's width for mounting within a constrained vehicle space.[2][5]
After World War II, the Soviet decide to replace the cumbersome pan-magazine on the DP with a belt-fed system. The DP machine gun was modified once again in 1946 with an add-on module that converts a DP to be able to take an ammunition belt from the SG-43/SGM machine gun.[6] This modification was adopted as the RP-46 (Rotnyj Pulemet (Company Machine Gun), 1946). The machine gun would remain in use in the Soviet military until supplemented by the universal PK machine gun.[2]
The DP and its variations sees wide-spread use in Soviet-aligned countries such as North Korea and China.[2][7]
Media
An excellent addition to the article would be a video guide, as well as screenshots from the game and photos.
See also
Links to the articles on the War Thunder Wiki that you think will be useful for the reader, for example:
- reference to the article about the variant of the cannon/machine gun;
- references to approximate analogues by other nations and research trees.
External links
- References
- Bibliography
- McCollum, Ian, "DP-28 vs DPM." Forgotten Weapons, 27 Apr. 2011, Website. Accessed 29 Mar. 2021.
- McCollum, Ian, "DTM Manual." Forgotten Weapons, 24 Jan. 2011, Website. Accessed 29 Mar. 2021.
- McCollum, Ian, "Kubynov hopper-fed DP28." Forgotten Weapons, 16 Mar. 2011, Website. Accessed 29 Mar. 2021.
- McCollum, Ian, "RP46 LMG." Forgotten Weapons, 10 Jan. 2011, Website. Accessed 29 Mar. 2021.
- McCollum, Ian, "RP46 Variations: Russian, North Korean, and US Reproduction." Forgotten Weapons, 04 Jul. 2018, Website. Accessed 29 Mar. 2021.
- Popenker, Maxim, "Degtyarov DP DPM RP-46." Modern Firearms, Website. Accessed 29 Mar. 2021.
- War Is Boring "The DP Machine Gun Looks Funny, But Spilled a Lot of Blood." Medium, A Medium Corporation, 23 Feb. 2016, Website. Accessed 29 Mar. 2021.
Tank machine guns | |
---|---|
USA | |
7.62 mm | M37 · M60D · M73 · M240 · M1919A4 · Mk.52 |
12.7 mm | FN M3P · M2HB · M80 · M85 |
Germany | |
5.56 mm | MG4 |
7.62 mm | C6 · MG3A1 |
7.92 mm | MG13 Dreyse · MG34 · MG37(t) · MG42 |
12.7 mm | S.MG.50 |
USSR | |
7.62 mm | DT · PKMB · PKT · PKTM · RP-46 · SGMT |
12.7 mm | DK · DShK · 6P49 · NSVT |
14.5 mm | KPVT |
Britain | |
7.62 mm | Browning MG4 · L3A1 · L8A1 · L8A2 · L37A1 · L37A2 · L94A1 |
7.7 mm | Vickers |
7.92 mm | BESA |
12.7 mm | L21A1 |
Japan | |
6.5 mm | Type 91 |
7.62 mm | Type 74 |
7.7 mm | Type 97 |
12.7 mm | Type 60 (B) |
China | |
5.8 mm | QJT |
7.62 mm | Type 55 · Type 59 · Type 86 |
12.7 mm | QJC88A · Type 54 |
14.5 mm | QJG02 |
Italy | |
7.62 mm | Beretta MG42/59 · FN MAG 60-40 |
8 mm | 34/40M · Breda Mod. 38 |
13.2 mm | Breda Model 31 |
France | |
7.5 mm | AAT-52 · MAC 31 |
7.62 mm | A-A-F1N |
8 mm | Hotchkiss Mle 1914 |
Sweden | |
6.5 mm | ksp m/14-29 |
7.62 mm | ksp 39 C · ksp 58 · ksp 94 |
8 mm | ksp m/36 · ksp m/39B |
12.7 mm | ksp 88 |