Posted on 08/11/2015 1:37:00 AM PDT by sukhoi-30mki
The T-80 is a glaring lesson in why heavily-armored tanks can hide major weaknesses. Once considered a premium tank by the Russian military establishment, T-80s suffered savage losses to lightly armed guerrillas during the First Chechen War. The tanks reputation never recovered.
It wasnt supposed to be this way. The T-80 was the last main battle tank to come out of the Soviet Union. It was the first Soviet tank to mount a gas turbine engine, giving it a top road speed of 70 kilometers per hour and an efficient power-to-weight ratio of 25.8 horsepower per ton.
This made the standard T-80B one of the most nimble tanks to come out of the 1980s.
The Chechen rebels combat prowessand poor Russian tacticswas more responsible for the T-80s losses than the inherent design. Though, it did have one major flaw. But in the end, it was too expensive and guzzled too much fuel. The Russian military grew to favor the more economical T-72 series instead.
The T-80 was an evolution over its predecessor, the T-64. As the most modern tank design of the late 1960s and early 1970s, the T-64 was a departure from the Soviet penchant for simple armored vehicle designs, such as the T-54/55 and T-62.
For instance, the T-64 was the first Soviet tank to replace human loaders with mechanical autoloaders, reducing the crew from four to three. The T-64s second trend-setting innovation was the introduction of composite armor, which layered ceramics and steel together to provide superior resistance compared to only steel.
Further, the T-64 had lightweight, small diameter all-steel road wheels in contrast to the large, rubber rimmed ones on the T-55 and T-62.
The first mass produced variant, the T-64A, mounted the huge 125-millimeter 2A46 Rapira main gun, which was so popular that it came included on all subsequent Russian tanks up to the T-90. Remarkably, the T-64A packed all of this potential into a petite 37-ton packagerelatively light for a tank of this size.
But as marvelous as these innovations were, the T-64 had a sensitive 5TDF engine and unusual suspensionboth prone to breaking down. As a result, the Soviet army deliberately assigned the tanks to units stationed close to its manufacturing plant in Kharkov.
Even worse, rumors circulated that the T-64s new autoloader chomped off the arms of crew members who strayed too close. Its a plausible scenario given the T-64s tiny internal space.
While fixing the T-64As automotive maladies, the Soviets developed an interest in developing a new tank with a gas turbine engine. Gas turbines have high acceleration and an efficient power-to-weight ratio, can start quickly in cold weather without prior warm-upa necessity in Russias frigid wintersand theyre lightweight.
On the downside, gas turbines guzzle fuel and have higher susceptibility to dirt and dust owing to their voracious air intake compared to conventional diesels.

T-80B. Wikimedia photo
The original base model T-80 didnt enter active service until 1976much later than planned. The Soviet tank industry had its hands full working out the T-64As kinks and gearing up for producing the T-72 as a cheaper backup option. At the same time, the Soviets were building more T-55s and T-62s for Arab allies which had lost hundreds of tanks during the 1973 Yom Kippur War.
The early-model T-80s also had their problems. In November 1975, the USSRs then defense minister Andrei Grechko blocked the tanks production because of its wasteful fuel consumption and few firepower advancements over the T-64A. Five more months passed before Grechkos successor, Dmitriy Ustinov, authorized the new tank to go into production.
The original T-80s production line continued for two yearsnot longas it was already outclassed by the T-64B tank, which featured a new fire control system that could fire 9M112 Kobra missiles from its main gun. More serious, the T-80 was nearly three-and-a-half times more expensive than the T-64A.
The T-80B succeeded the baseline model in 1978. As the most advanced premium tank in the East, the Soviets beginning in 1981 assigned most T-80Bs to its highest risk garrisonthe Group of Soviet Forces in Germany.
Its high speed earned it the nickname Tank of the English Channel. In Soviet war game calculations, T-80Bs were able to reach the Atlantic coast within five daysassuming that they didnt run out of fuel.
This new variant borrowed from the T-64. In addition to firing conventional sabot, shaped charge and anti-personnel fragmentation shells, the T-80Bs 125-millimeter 2A46M-1 smoothbore gun could launch the same 9K112 Kobra missiles.
Since this anti-tank guided missile was considerably more expensive than regular tank shells, the tank only carried four missiles compared to 38 shells. The missiles were intended to swat down attack helicopters or ATGM-capable vehicles beyond the range of the T-80Bs conventional gun rounds.
A co-axial 7.62 x 54-millimeter PKT and 12.7 x 108-millimeter NSVT Utes machine gun for the commanders cupola rounded off the tanks anti-personnel weapons.
While the T-80B boasted advanced composite armor, it had even greater protection through its Kontakt-1 explosive reactive armor, or ERA. Arranged in the same horizontal layers as late production T-72A tanks, ERA-equipped T-80Bs were called T-80BVs.
In 1987, the T-80U succeeded the T-80B in production, if not absolute numbers.
Externally, the T-80U mounted Kontakt-5 reactive armor. This was an improvement over Kontakt-1which used an add-on array of explosive filled shingles. Instead, Kontakt-5 was a factory applied set of plates pointing forward to maximize the deflection angle of incoming rounds. Kontakt-1 was only useful against shaped charge warheads, while Kontakt-5 added resistance to kinetic energy sabot rounds as well.
Internally, the T-80U traded the T-80Bs 1A33 fire control system for the more advanced 1A45. The engineers swapped out the Kobra missiles with the laser-guided 9K119 Refleks guided missilea more reliable, longer range and harder hitting weapon. T-80Us crammed in seven more rounds of 125-millimeter shells than the T-80B.
But the T-80U didnt last long in production. Its new GTD-1250 turbine was still too fuel hungry and maintenance heavy. In its place came the diesel powered T-80UD. This represented the last T-80 variant to be produced in the Soviet Union. It was also the first of its kind to see action outside of a training school if action meant blasting tank shells into the Russian parliament to settle the October 1993 constitutional crisis.
The December 1994 separatist war in Chechnya was the first action for the T-80 where the shooting was going both ways and it was an epic disaster.
When rebels in Chechnya declared their countrys independence, Russian president Boris Yeltsin ordered troops to bring the former Soviet republic back to the fold by force. These troops took T-80Bs and BVs with them. The soldiers had never trained with the T-80 before. Ignorant of the new tanks gluttony for fuel, they ran their engines dry while idling.
The Russian advance into the Chechen capital Grozny was a near massacre for the invadersnearly 1,000 soldiers died and 200 vehicles were destroyed from Dec. 31, 1994, to the following New Years Day evening. As the most advanced vehicle in the Russian assault force, the T-80B and T-80BVs suffered horrific losses.
While impervious to direct frontal hits, dozens of these tanks were destroyed in catastrophic explosions, their turrets blowing off after sustaining multiple strikes from the Chechen rebels RPG-7V and RPG-18 rocket launchers.

T-80UD during the 1993 crisis. ITAR-TASS photo
It turned outthe T-80s Korzhina autoloader had a fatal design flaw. The autoloader stored ready propellant in a vertical position, with only the tanks road wheels partially protecting it. RPGs striking the T-80 in the sides above the road wheels were likely to set off the propellant, resulting in the tanks explosive decapitation.
In this respect, the T-72A and Bswhich received the same kind of punishmenthad a marginally higher probability of surviving flanking strikes because their autoloaders stored propellant in a horizontal position below the rims of their road wheels.
A second major fault of the T-80, like previous Russian tanks, was minimal gun elevation and depression. The tanks gun could not fire back at rebels shooting from upper story rooms or basements.
To be fair, T-80 casualties were more likely the fault of ill-prepared crews, inadequate training and disastrous tactics. Such was the haste of Russias rush to war that T-80BVs entered Grozny without the explosive filler in their reactive armor panels, making the armor useless. It was even alleged that some soldiers sold off the explosive inserts to supplement their salaries.
The Soviet army had long forgotten the hard lessons of urban warfare from World War II. During the Cold War, only Spetsnaz commandos and the Berlin garrison had trained for serious city fighting. Expecting little resistance, Russian forces drove into Grozny with infantry buttoned up inside their BMP and BTR transports. Their commanders got lost because they didnt have proper maps.
Since Russian soldiers were reluctant to exit their transports and clear buildings room by room, their Chechen adversarieswho knew the weaknesses of Russian vehicles from Soviet-era conscriptionwere free to turn the tanks and other armored vehicles into crematoriums.
It was easy for the Russian high command to blame the T-80s design for the Chechen disasteras opposed to clumsy operational planning and tactical inadequacies. But ultimately, it was a lack of money which caused the cheaper T-72 to displace the T-80 as the preferred choice for Russias export sales and its post-Chechen wars.
When the Soviet Union collapsed, Russia lost the T-80UD production plant in Kharkov to the newly independent Ukraine. The T-80U factory at Omsk declined into bankruptcy, while the Leningrad LKZ plant no longer made the earlier T-80BV.
For Russia to have three tank typesthe T-72 (A and B), T-80 (BV, U and UD) and T-90 (a rebrand of the T-72BU)made no financial or logistical sense. Each tank had the same 125-millimeter 2A46M gun and similarly performing gun-launched missiles. But they all had different engines, fire control systems and chassis.
In simpler terms, these tanks offered commonality in capabilities but diversity in spare parts, rather than common spare parts and diversity of capabilities. Since the T-80U was far more expensive than the T-72B, it was only logical for a cash-strapped Russia to favor the T-72.
But Moscow continued to experiment with its T-80s, adding active protection systemswhich use millimeter-wave radar to track incoming missiles before launching explosive countermeasures. The resulting T-80UM-1 Bars was revealed in 1997 but did not enter production, probably again because of budget cuts.
Russia did not use the T-80 during the Second Chechen War of 1999-2000, or the brief 2008 conflict with Georgiaas far as we know. T-80s have so far not joined the war in Ukraine.
Dumber than Sanders.
and in combat operations the autoloader further reduced the crews from three to two and if hit in the side of the road wheels eliminated the remaining crew.
The perfect mechanical zampolits.
The T-72 does seem to be performing well in the Donbass. The unarmored version.
Should read UP armored version.
Hey buddy, want to buy a used tank cheap?
Hundreds of rusting tanks abandoned in secret Ukrainian depot unveiled as Russia’s armoured vehicles line its streets
Thank you for this article.
Russian tanks are notorious for problems. Iraq turned them into pillboxes which didn’t help their survival.
No wonder the Russians say “Quantity has a certain quality of its own”.
Very interesting. Thanks for posting. I wonder how I missed the early 90s uprising.
Well, it probably got pushed down below the other “hot” zones: Somalia/Bosnia/the Kurds/the Hutus and Tutsis.
You think you can bully me, but you can’t.
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