TechRussian T-62 tanks: vintage hardware or battlefield liabilities?

Russian T‑62 tanks: vintage hardware or battlefield liabilities?

The Russians are attacking Ukrainians with a mix of relatively modern equipment and antiques that belong in museums. In the latter category are T-62 tanks, useless armoured coffins today.

A Russian T-62 tank destroyed by a Ukrainian FPV drone.
A Russian T-62 tank destroyed by a Ukrainian FPV drone.
Images source: © X (formerly Twitter) | Ukrainian Front
Przemysław Juraszek

20 May 2024 10:23

In the Donetsk region, Ukrainians destroyed another T-62 tank with the help of an FPV drone. The Russians were allegedly using them purely as improvised self-propelled artillery as a substitute for howitzers like the 2S1 Gvozdika.

The truth turned out to be different, and it’s clear that the Russians are using these antiques in regular assaults or trying to convert them into improvised heavy armoured personnel carriers resembling mobile barns or sandcrawlers from Star Wars.

In such use, they are merely mobile four-person coffins vulnerable to destruction by virtually any modern handheld anti-tank weapon or drones with primary single-head PG-7VL grenades capable of penetrating about 51 centimetres of armour steel if no electronic warfare systems are in the area.

T-62 tanks - armoured coffins from another era

The T-62 tank is a design from the 1960s that modernised the T-54/55 family of tanks. The significant design change was using a 115mm smoothbore cannon and reinforced armour using additional steel plates.

Such protection provides resistance at most to automatic cannon fire, e.g., 30mm calibre, but any weapon using a cumulative warhead capable of penetrating several inches of armour steel will easily pierce the T-62’s armour.

The situation slightly improves with the T-62M/MW variants resulting from modernisation efforts from the 1980s. These versions have additional composite armour modules mounted on the turret and hull and can use Kontakt-1 reactive armour blocks.

This package raises the protection level in some areas to that offered by the first versions of the T-72 tanks. Other changes include strengthening the engine power to 830 hp and using an improved fire control system with a laser rangefinder for launching 9K116-2 Sheksna anti-tank guided missiles.

However, this does not change the fact that it’s a simple system incapable of effective combat in poor weather conditions or at night due to its lack of modern thermal and night vision sights. In this case, the T-62 tanks are much less helpful than Leopard 1A5 tanks, which, although barely armoured, have excellent fire control systems that allow accurate night firing over long distances.

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