29K (artillery)

Last updated
29K
29K.jpg
Type Self-propelled anti-aircraft weapon
Place of originFlag of the Soviet Union.svg  Soviet Union
Service history
In service1936–1941
Used byFlag of the Soviet Union.svg  Soviet Union
Wars Second World War
Production history
DesignerDesign Bureau (KB) Plant No. 8  [ ru ]
Designed1935
Manufacturer Yaroslavl Motor Plant
Produced1935–1937
No. built40 (according to other sources: 61 units)
Specifications
Mass10.55 t
Length7630 mm
Width2470 mm
Crew5

Elevation −30° to +85° (other sources state −3° to 82°)
Traverse 360°

Main
armament
76 mm air defense gun M1931, 48 rounds
Engine Herkules YXC
93.5 hp
Operational
range
270 km
Maximum speed 40 km/h

The 29K was a self-propelled anti-aircraft weapon used by the Soviet Union, consisting of a 76 mm air defense gun M1931 mounted on a YaG-10 truck. [1]

Contents

History

In 1934, the Design Bureau (KB) Plant No. 8  [ ru ], named after Mikhail Kalinin, received an order to install 76 mm air defense gun M1931 on the chassis of the three-axle YaG-10 truck. Production completed by the Yaroslavl Automobile Plant, due to their experience with creating the SU-8  [ ru ]. In August–September 1936, tests were carried out at the NIAP test site. The first vehicles entered service with Moscow Military District. ZSU 29-K [2] took part in the parade on Red Square in Moscow. The first display of motorized anti-aircraft guns took place at a military parade in Moscow on 1 May 1934. [3] Overall, sixty-one YaG-10 trucks were converted into 29K models. Modifications to the trucks included a reinforced undercarriage, rotating pedestal for the gun, and side boards replaced with semi-circular shields. [4]

Specifications

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References

  1. "[Development] 29-K: Reach the Sky".
  2. "Roman Skomorokhov, Armament Stories: Anti-Aircraft Gun 3-K". Archived from the original on 2019-03-30. Retrieved 2022-07-05.
  3. E. D. Kochnev , Cars of the Red Army 1918-1945. Yauza: Eksmo, 2009, p. 311.
  4. "YaG-10, 29-K 76mm Anti-Aircraft SPG". www.globalsecurity.org. Retrieved 2022-07-04.

Further reading