IS-8
IS8 (Stock)
3531000 價格 |
1700 血量 |
49.96 / 50.91 公斤重量 |
- 車長
120/80/60 前/側/後,毫米車身裝甲 |
201/148/50 前/側/後,毫米砲塔裝甲 |
700 匹馬力引擎功率 |
50 公里/小時最高時速 |
28 度/秒迴轉速度 |
390 標準砲彈殺傷力 |
175 毫米標準砲彈穿透力 |
11.8 完全裝填的時間 |
26 度/秒砲塔迴轉速度 |
380 公尺可視範圍 |
440 公尺訊號範圍 |
The IS-8 is a departure from its "parent", the IS-3, as instead of being a hands-on assault tank, the IS-8 is a "softer" but faster heavy tank, comparable to the IS. It drives more like a "super medium" than a heavy. The front armor is slightly increased in thickness compared to IS-3, but it is far less effective in the front due to the worsened angles and increased height of the tank, and the side and rear armor are decreased. The turret is very hard to penetrate and the center of the front hull is capable of bouncing shots from the direct front, but shots from other tier 9s will often go straight through. The top gun, however, has enough penetration to easily take on other tier 9 and 10 heavy tanks, and does a lot of damage with a quicker reload than the IS-3's BL-9 gun. Using the IS-8's speed to avoid damage and pick on other heavies makes this tank an extremely formidable opponent.
Compatible Equipment
Compatible Consumables
Player Opinion
Pros and Cons
Pros:
- Very good speed for a heavy tank, can keep up with medium tanks
- Turns fast for a heavy tank
- Powerful 122mm gun with more damage and faster reload than the earlier guns. With rammer, vent, 100% crews with BIA, it's only 11 secs for the top gun. With food, it's 10 secs
- Sloped armor has a chance to ricochet shots
- Spaced armor on the sides
Cons:
- Turret armor is weak on both sides and rear
- Can't reach the top speed on flat ground
- Frequent module damage
- Large lower glacis is easily penetrated
- Less HP than other tier 9 heavy tanks
Performance
- Take care to avoid taking fire from other tier 9 and 10 tanks, as even mediums can easily penetrate and damage the IS-8. Use speed to move in quickly around corners or other tanks to hit targets and back away quickly.
- The angling of the front hull bounces shots best from a direct line from the enemy's gun or with a very slight angle, and is only very reliable against tanks lower than tier 8.
- The IS-8 has very little gun depression, so avoiding mounting hills first is a good idea because the soft underside of the tank is very exposed when going over before the gun is low enough to shoot targets. A good strategy is to go up them sideways to get the gun up at more of a level angle.
Early Research
The 122mm BL-9 gun and the R-113 radio carry over from the IS-3 so immediately load those. The 122mm M62-T2 gun is the most important upgrade, but it is necessary to upgrade the suspension to the T-10M suspension before the gun can be mounted. Afterwards, research the V-12-6 engine to give the IS-8 its mobility, and then the T-10M turret.
Historical Info
The biggest differences from its direct ancestor, the IS-3, were a longer hull, seven pairs of road wheels instead of six, a larger turret mounting a new gun with fume extractor, an improved diesel engine, and increased armor. General performance was similar, although the T-10 could carry more ammunition. T-10s (like the IS tanks they replaced) were deployed in independent tank regiments belonging to armies, and independent tank battalions belonging to divisions. These independent tank units could be attached to mechanized units, to support infantry operations and perform breakthroughs.
Demise of Soviet Heavy Tanks
The mobile nature of armored warfare in World War II had demonstrated the drawbacks of the slow heavy tanks. In the final push towards Berlin, mechanized divisions had become widely split up as heavy tanks lagged behind the mobile T-34s. The Soviets continued to produce heavy tanks for a few years as part of the Cold War arms race (compare the heavier U.S. M103 and British Conqueror), but the more flexible T-54 and T-62 medium tanks already had armor and armament comparable to the T-10's. In the 1960s, the Soviets embraced the main battle tank (MBT) concept, by replacing heavy tanks with mobile medium tanks. In the late 1960s, the independent tank battalions with heavy tanks were re-equipped with the higher-technology T-64s, and later, the very fast T-80, while regular tank and mechanized units fielded the more basic T-55s and T-72s. T-10 production was stopped in 1966, and heavy tank projects were cancelled, such as the auto-loaded, 130 mm-armed Object 770. Antitank guided missiles (ATGMs) started to be deployed widely during this period, and would become an effective replacement for the heavy tanks' long-range firepower. The Soviets made use of them first on BMP-1 infantry fighting vehicles, and later on the T-64 and other MBTs. Eventually, light, sophisticated reactive armour was used to give the MBTs a further edge in protection without slowing them down. According to Bryan Perret, "the engagements of the Six-Day War, especially that at Rafah, merely emphasised what the Soviet Army already knew, namely that the heavy tank had had its day".
Production History
The T-10 served with the Soviet Union but was not known to have been provided to Warsaw Pact nations, though Soviet heavy tank regiments stationed in those countries may have been equipped with them. T-10Ms were "in the unhappy position" of simultaneous production by two factories (Kirov as Object 272 and Chelyabinsk as Object 734) "with incompatible parts".[2] Not until 1962 was Kirov's version standardized upon.[3]
The T-10 is known to have been exported to Egypt and Syria.[4] It was used in combat during the Yom Kippur War, where it normally provided long-range fire support to the T-55/T-62 tanks, with little success.[5] Heavy tanks were withdrawn from Soviet front-line service by 1967, and completely removed from service in 1993. Many of the tank chassis were converted to missile vehicles.
It is estimated that some 6,000 Soviet heavy tanks were built after the end of WWII, including IS-2s, IS-3s, and T-10s.
Models
- T-10 - (1952)
- T-10A - (1956) modification, adding a single-plane gun stabilizer.
- T-10B - (1957) adding a 2-plane gun stabilizer.
- T-10M - (1957) improved version with longer M-62-T2 L/43 gun with five-baffle muzzle brake, 2-plane gun stabilizer, machine guns replaced with 14.5 mm KPVT (a better ballistic match for the new main gun), infrared night vision equipment, NBC protection. Overall length is 10.29 m.
- 1963 - T-10Ms are equipped with OPVT deep-wading snorkel.
- 1967 - T-10Ms are supplied with APDS and HEAT ammunition.
Historical Gallery
Sources and External Links
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