![]() ![]() While I do not own the T-34/76 v1 model, I can safely say that the switch to the seven-stud-wide chassis results in more accurate proportions for the model as a whole. To start, it should be noted that this is the first T-34 vehicle variant available using the new seven (7)-stud-wide hull, as opposed to the previous six (6)-stud-wide original T-34/76 version 1 model which is currently out of production. I will discuss the design and features of the model roughly from the bottom up. I purchased the T-34/85 to serve as a counterpart to my Tiger I and also the Panzer IV Ausf. This is the second vehicle set that I have purchased from Buildarmy, the first being the Tiger I model. However the production for the T-34-85 alone reached 22,559. In the entire war, production figures for all Panther types reached no more than 6,557, and for all Tiger types (including the Tiger I and Tiger II) 2,027. By May 1944, its production had reached 1,200 tanks per month. While T34/85 could not match the armour or weapons of the heavier Panther and Tiger tanks, its improved firepower made it much more effective than earlier models, and overall it was more cost-effective than the heaviest German tanks. The only major change to the hull was a widening of the turret ring diameter to accommodate the new turret. The main change to the structure of T-34/76 was the replacement of the turret with a new, larger one, which was cast and had an elongated shape to accommodate not only the new 85mm gun, but also a third crew member. ![]() The State Defense Committee met on August 25, 1943, following the battle of Kursk, and decided to upgrade the T-34 with a new gun: the titular 85mm cannon (initially the D-5T design in 1943 and replaced by the ZiS-S-53 in 1944), which was a dramatic improvement over the 76mm F-34 used by the T-34/76. However, as the war progressed, the T-34/76 began to lose its dominance on the battlefield due to the release of the German Tiger and Panther tanks on the Eastern Front, which noticeably outmatched the T-34/76 in terms of armor protection and, more importantly, armament. It began with the debut of the T-34/76 in the fall of 1941. The Soviet T-34 was the most-produced tank of WWII, with a total of some 84,000 units produced across both major versions during the war. ![]()
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