T-26

E803858

The T-26 was a Soviet light infantry tank of the interwar and early World War II period, produced in large numbers and widely used in early Soviet armored forces.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
T-26 canonical 1

Statements (49)

Predicate Object
instanceOf light tank
armorThickness 15 mm maximum (typical later variants)
basedOn Vickers 6-Ton NERFINISHED
category World War II light tank
interwar armored fighting vehicle
combatWeight about 9 tons
countryOfOrigin Soviet Union
crew 3
designer Soviet design bureaus NERFINISHED
enginePower 90 hp
engineType 4-cylinder gasoline engine
enteredService early 1930s
manufacturer Factory No. 174 (K.E. Voroshilov) Leningrad NERFINISHED
Stalingrad Tractor Plant NERFINISHED
maximumSpeed about 30 km/h on road
notableFeature multiple variants including twin-turret and single-turret versions
produced in very large numbers for its time
notableLimitation low speed and reliability issues in harsh conditions
thin armor by World War II standards
numberBuilt over 10000 units
operatorType military forces
primaryArmament 45 mm 20K tank gun
producedInPeriod World War II NERFINISHED
interwar period
productionEnd 1941
productionStart 1931
role infantry support tank
secondaryArmament 7.62 mm DT machine gun
serviceEnd mid-1940s in front-line Soviet service
successor T-34 (as main Soviet medium tank replacing older types) NERFINISHED
T-50 light tank NERFINISHED
suspension bogie suspension
usedAs training vehicle in later war years
usedBy China NERFINISHED
Finland NERFINISHED
Mongolia NERFINISHED
North Korea NERFINISHED
Soviet Union NERFINISHED
Spanish Republic NERFINISHED
Turkey NERFINISHED
usedInConflict Battle of Khalkhin Gol NERFINISHED
Soviet invasion of Poland (1939) NERFINISHED
Soviet–Finnish conflicts NERFINISHED
Soviet–German War NERFINISHED
Soviet–Japanese border conflicts NERFINISHED
Spanish Civil War NERFINISHED
Winter War NERFINISHED
World War II
variantOf Vickers 6-Ton-derived design NERFINISHED

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.