SU-18
Revision as of 20:35, 28 February 2012 | Revision as of 20:36, 28 February 2012 | |||
Line 52: | Line 52: | |||
[[File:Su18a.jpg|160px|Front right]] | [[File:Su18a.jpg|160px|Front right]] | |||
[[File:SU18b.jpg|160px|Front left]] | [[File:SU18b.jpg|160px|Front left]] | |||
? | [[File:Su18c.jpg|160px| | + | [[File:Su18c.jpg|160px|Rear right]] | |
[[File:Su18d.jpg|160px|T95_001]] | [[File:Su18d.jpg|160px|T95_001]] | |||
}} | }} |
Revision as of 20:36, 28 February 2012
SU-18
USSR | SPG | Tier II |
The SU-18 is a Soviet tier 2 self propelled gun. If you enjoyed the MS-1 you just got out of, then you'll feel right at home in the SU-18; it has the same hull and engine, right down to the distinctive put-put-put sound. The SU-18 is slow and has a fairly short range. Armed with a 76mm gun similar to that T57, it has good accuracy and rate of fire. As the smallest and cheapest among the tier 2 self propelled guns, it is a good platform to try your hand at artillery combat. Just remember that in a straight-up fight you are actually worse off than you were in your MS-1 - you have no turret to aim with, so stay well hidden as far back as you can manage while still getting your shells to the enemy.
- The SU-18 leads to the SU-26.
Modules
Historical Info
The SU-18 is a Variant of the T-18/MC-1.
In November of 1929 ANII K. M. Ivanov, commissioned by the UMM RKKA, produced a self-propelled gun based on the T-18, as well as the ammunition carrier for it. The prototype was a captured French Renault FT-17BS. The SU-18 kept the same design as the French vehicle, but replaced the tower with one that resembles a truncated pyramid. The SU-18 used the 76.2-mm regimental gun model 1927 with a slotted muzzle brake to reduce rollback. It had an ammunition capacity of 4-6 rounds and no machine guns. Other prototypes were created using a high-power 37-mm PC-2 gun and a 45-mm model 1930 tank gun, which was planned to be installed on T-24 tanks.
Light Tanks | MS-1 • BT-2 • Tetrarch • T-26 • T-60 • BT-7 • BT-SV • LTP • M3 Light • T-127 • T-46 • T-70 • A-20 • T-50 • T-80 • Valentine II • T-50-2 • MT-25 |
Medium Tanks | A-32 • T-28 • Matilda IV • T-34 • T-34-85 • A-43 • KV-13 • T-43 • A-44 • T-44 • Object 416 • T-54 • Object 430 II • Object 283 • T-62A • Object 140 • Object 430 |
Heavy Tanks | Churchill III • KV • KV-1 • KV-220 • KV-220 Beta-Test • KV-1S • KV-2 • T-150 • IS • KV-3 • IS-3 • IS-6 • KV-4 • KV-5 • IS-8 • ST-I • IS-4 • IS-7 |
Tank Destroyers | AT-1 • SU-76 • SU-85B • SU-85 • SU-85I • SU-100 • SU-100Y • SU-100M1 • SU-122-44 • SU-152 • ISU-152 • SU-101 • Object 704 • SU-122-54 • Object 263 • Object 268 |
Self-Propelled Guns | SU-18 • SU-26 • SU-5 • SU-122A • SU-8 • S-51 • SU-14-1 • SU-14-2 • 212A • Object 261
|
USA | II T1 HMC • III T18 HMC • III M7 Priest • IV T82 HMC • IV M37 • V M41 HMC • VI M44 • VII M12 • VIII M40/M43 • IX M53/M55 • X T92 HMC |
UK | II Loyd Gun Carriage • III Sexton II • III Sexton I • IV Birch Gun • V Bishop • VI FV304 • VII Crusader 5.5-in. SP • VIII FV207 • IX FV3805 • X Conqueror Gun Carriage |
Germany | II G.Pz. Mk. VI (e) • III Sturmpanzer I Bison • III Wespe • IV Pz.Sfl. IVb • IV Sturmpanzer II • V Grille • VI Hummel • VII G.W. Panther • VIII G.W. Tiger (P) • IX G.W. Tiger • X G.W. E 100 |
France | II Renault FT 75 BS • III Lorraine 39L AM • IV AMX 105 AM mle. 47 • V AMX 13 105 AM mle. 50 • V 105 leFH18B2 • VI AMX 13 F3 AM • VII Lorraine 155 mle. 50 • VIII Lorraine 155 mle. 51 • IX Bat.-Châtillon 155 55 • X Bat.-Châtillon 155 58 |
USSR | II SU-18 • III SU-26 • IV SU-5 • V SU-122A • VI SU-8 • VII S-51 • VII SU-14-1 • VIII SU-14-2 • IX 212A • X Object 261 |
China | |
Japan | |
Czechoslovakia | |
Sweden |