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ZSU-57-2

ZSU-57-2 (Ob'yekt 500)
ZSU-57-2 Hun 2010 02.jpg
Type Self-propelled anti-aircraft gun
Place of origin Soviet Union
Service history
In service 1955 – early 1970s (USSR)
1957 - present (other countries)
Used by See Operators
Wars See Service history and Combat history
Production history
Designer Design Bureaus of Omsk Works No. 174 and Research Institute No. 58 in Kaliningrad, Moscow Oblast
Designed 1947–1954
Manufacturer Omsk Works No. 174
Produced 1948 - 1955 (prototypes)
1957 – 1960 (serial production)
No. built More than 2,023 (USSR)
250 (North Korea, old turrets on new hulls)
 ? (PRC, Type 80)
Specifications
Weight 28.1 tonnes
Length 8.46 m with gun in forward position (6.22 m hull only)
Width 3.27 m
Height 2.71 m
2.75 m (with a tarpaulin top)
Crew 6 (commander, driver, gunner, sight adjuster, and two loaders)

Armor 8–15 mm
Main
armament
2 x 57 mm L/76.6 S-60 anti-aircraft (57 mm S-68A variant) (300 rounds)
Engine V-54, 4-stroke, airless (mechanical)-injection, water-cooled 38.88 liter V12 diesel
520 hp (388 kW) at 2,000 rpm
Power/weight 18.5 hp/tonne (13.81 kW/tonne)
Suspension individual torsion bar with hydraulic shock absorbers on the first and last road wheels
Ground clearance 425 mm
Fuel capacity 830 l (including two externally mounted fuel tanks, 95 l each)
Operational
range
420 km (road)
320 km (off-road)
Speed 50 km/h (31 mph) (road)
30 km/h (off-road)

The ZSU-57-2 (Ob'yekt 500) is a Soviet self-propelled anti-aircraft gun (SPAAG), armed with two 57 mm . 'ZSU' stands for Zenitnaya Samokhodnaya Ustanovka (Russian: Зенитная Самоходная Установка), meaning "anti-aircraft self-propelled mount", '57' stands for the bore of the armament in millimetres and '2' stands for the number of gun barrels. It was the first Soviet mass-produced tracked SPAAG. In the USSR it had the unofficial nickname "Sparka", meaning "pair", referring to the twin with which the vehicle is armed.

During World War II, ground-attack aircraft emerged as a significant threat to mechanized units on the move. Conventional towed anti-aircraft artillery (AAA) was an inadequate response under such conditions owing to the time needed to bring anti-aircraft machine guns into action. This experience made it clear that an anti-aircraft tracked vehicle, armed with small-bore or heavy machine guns, was needed. Vehicles such as the German Wirbelwind and specialized variants of the US M3 Half-track had been used to good effect in the final battles of World War II, both by the US and nations which had received the M3 through Lend-Lease.

In 1942, Soviet engineers developed the T-60-3. The vehicle, based on the T-60 light tank chassis, was armed with two 12.7 mm DShK heavy machine guns; but the prototype did not go into production because of flaws in the design. The SU-72 SPAAG and several other experimental vehicles based on the T-60 or T-70 light tank chassis and armed with 37 mm autocannon were also tested in 1942–1943. The ZSU-37 was based on the chassis of the SU-76M self-propelled gun (SPG) and armed with a 37 mm 61K anti-aircraft autocannon in an open-top rotating armoured turret. The vehicle entered production in February 1945 and was in small-scale production until 1948.


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