Thursday, 30 April 2026

More 28mm WW2 Red Army Recruits

 Tonight I have (probably too many) images of the M30 field gun and the T70 tank with 45mm gun turret. These are once again the excellent RKX 3d resin prints from Pot Belly Miniatures in Wellington.


The 122mm M1938 (M30) Gun Howitzer

The 122 mm howitzer M1938 (M-30) (GRAU index: 52-G-463) is a Soviet 121.92 mm (4.8 inch) howitzer. The weapon was developed by the design bureau of Motovilikha Plants, headed by F. F. Petrov, in the late 1930s, and was in production from 1939 to 1955. The M-30 saw action in World War II, mainly as a divisional artillery piece of the Red Army (RKKA). Captured guns were also employed later in the conflict by the German Wehrmacht and the Finnish Army. Post World War II, the M-30 saw combat in numerous conflicts of the mid- to late twentieth century in service of other countries' armies, notably in the Middle East.





By 1 June 1941, 1,667 M-30s were in service, comprising only a fraction of the RKKA divisional howitzers. As the war progressed, their share grew rapidly due to mass production and because many older guns were lost in combat in 1941–42.

M-30 howitzers were primarily employed for indirect fire against enemy personnel. They were also used against field fortifications, for clearing minefields and for breaching barbed wire. Their HE-fragmentation shells presented a danger to armoured vehicles. Fragments created by the explosion could penetrate up to 20 mm of armour, – enough against thinly armoured vehicles. The shells could also damage chassis, sights or other elements of heavier armoured vehicles.

For self-defense against enemy tanks a HEAT shell was developed in 1943. Before 1943, crews were required to rely on the high-explosive action of their regular ammunition, with some degree of success. According to a German report from 1943, even a Tiger was once heavily damaged by SU-122 assault guns firing high-explosive shells





Some images of the five crewmen.







In 1944, the Artillery Regiment of a typical Russian Rifle Division was armed with 36 122mm Howitzers, along with 72 76.2mm ZiS-3 field guns





The T70 light tank



The T-70 is a light tank used by the Red Army during World War II, replacing both the T-60 scout tank for reconnaissance and the T-50 light infantry tank for infantry support. The T-80 light tank was a more advanced version of the T-70 with a two-man turret—it was produced only in very small numbers when light tank production was abandoned.




The T-70 was armed with a 45-mm L/46 gun Model 38 with forty-five rounds carried, and a coaxial 7.62-mm DT machine gun. The tank was operated by a driver and a commander who loaded and fired the gun. Armour thickness on the turret front was 50 mm, turret sides and rear: 35 mm, upper glacis : 35 mm,hull sides : 15 mm, roof and bottom: 10 mm.



The one-man turret of the Soviet light tanks made co-ordinating a tank platoon nearly impossible, because the commanders were kept busy acquiring targets, loading and firing the main gun and machine gun and commanding their drivers. The infantry tank role was already considered obsolete.[citation needed] The SU-76 self-propelled gun was better suited for infantry support, its 76.2 mm gun capable of firing a larger high explosive shell. Industrial resources could be redirected from light tanks to building SU-76s. To compensate, the T-80 light tank was designed, a more robust version of the T-70 with a two-man turret.

There was enough lend-lease equipment available to fulfil the reconnaissance role of the light tanks, and armoured cars were better suited for light scouting and liaison. All light tank production was cancelled in October 1943, after only about 120 T-80s were built. No further light tanks would be built during the war. In November 1943 Red Army tank units were reorganized: light tanks were replaced by the T-34 and the new T-34-85 variant, which started production the following month. Light tanks continued to be used in self-propelled artillery and some other unit



Lots of info on both weapons, courtesy of our old friend, Wikipedia! I am off to Julians after work tomorrow for another run through of our GNW rules, so an AAR will follow over the weekend I expect. 

30 comments:

  1. Great work Keith. Keeping the Soviet horde growing 😁

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    1. Thanks Ben.....more to come, and some more figures on the way from the UK soon hopefully!

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  2. Quite a build-up of your Soviet forces. I expect a vicious counterattack to drive the Germans back any day now.

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    1. Yes, I am certainly in my "Soviet " period at the moment Jon! There are some GNW cavalry in progress too....

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  3. That little tank is fun and fast. Looks good too.

    I love a well done artillery scenario. Yours is great with spent shells and all sorts of interesting visuals.

    Thoroughly enjoyed this post Keith.

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    1. Thanks Dai. I can't take much credit for the vignette aspects of the gun and crew...RKX helpfully supply the boxes of shells etc...all I did was paint them up!

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  4. When you look at those small tanks such as the T-70 it makes you wonder how anyone managed to get inside. Like those German Fallschirmjager gliders which always seem improbably thin. Great work on the latest batch of Soviets Keith.

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    1. Thanks Lawrence! Yes, I had not realized it only had a two man crew, a pretty hectic job, commanding one of those!

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  5. More soviets- sounds great for a future offensive!

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    1. Haha - yes, soon be time to chase the Fascists back to Berlin Michal!

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  6. Great work and super additions to your Red army, the gun crew have a real sense of movement about them, nice figures. Must admit I do like the little light tank, lovely little model, I too was surprised it only had two of a crew but I guess that's all it could hold!

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    1. Thanks Donnie - yes, the RKX sculpting is very nice, in my opinion.

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  7. Lovely additions there Keith and the artillery crew are really nicely animated, which you don't often see:).

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    1. Thanks Steve, I agree, they are very nice figures

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  8. Very nicely done T-70. The 3D prints of the figures are a great advert for this new and improving technology. My son is having a little dabble with filament printing, good for buildings and sructures.

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    1. Than ks Norm, I have not been unhappy wit a 3d print eyt - even the four rather rough and ready Opel Blitz trucks I got - cos they were cheap as chips, so I could forgive them not being perfect - and they are only trucks, after all!
      I envy you your son - I wish someone I knew would take up 3d printing!

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  9. Splendid work on those figures, Keith.

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    1. Thanks Richard I am glad you like them

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  10. Gun looks very nice Keith, but you had me at T70.

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    1. Thanks JBM - I really should get a few T26 too, for the early war period.....

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  11. Very nice Keith, love the T-70 tank

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    1. Thanks Neil. I am not sure how effective it will be against German armour but it looks good!

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  12. Nicely done Keith. You must be gathering up a significant force now.

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    1. Thanks Mark....yes, too much probably, but it's what is ticking my box at the moment!

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  13. More and more Soviets. Nice work Keith!

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    1. Thanks John - yes, how many is too many I wonder.....? It will be fun finding out!

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  14. Those crewmen look brilliant Keith, you have excelled yourself with them. That is some gun too and who doesn't warm to those wonderful, early war tanks? Must be time for a (belated) May Day parade?!
    Best wishes, James
    p.s. Your backdrop grabbed my eye with these. It seems to be so uniform that I assume it is part of your 'light box'/set up to photograph figs and 'kit'? Or did you add it later with the graphics program?

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    1. Thanks James. The backdrop is something useful (for a change!) that I created on AI. I have several and should do some more!
      I am planning a Victory Day parade next Saturday, actually!

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  15. Great looking soviet armour and artillery!
    Best Iain

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