This contest has given me a chance to preview my long-term AU project that I have on back-burner.
Bereznik was the creation of the 1960s TV21 comic created around the Gerry Anderson ‘Supermarination’ television series (notably Fireball XL5, Stingray, Thunderbirds and Captain Scarlet). TV21 created a unified universe for these series and introduced a rogue Eastern European superpower, Bereznik, more or less replacing the real USSR as the bad guys. In the TV21 backstory Bereznik was created following the 2026 European Nuclear War. My idea was to transplant Bereznik into the 20th century, having it created out of the carnage of the First World War and expanding after the Second. Geographically it combines Lithuania, Belarus, western Ukraine, Poland and Eastern Germany. I leave a more detailed backstory until I formally start the AU.
The T-77 main battle tank was the product of Matthias GMBH and it was the T-77 that cemented Matthias as the main tank design company within Bereznik. The requirements for a replacement for the Minsk Tractor T-65 were drawn up as early as 1968 but not until 1971 did serious design work begin. Germany was beginning work on the Leopard 2 and the USSR was introducing the T-72, both of these modern tanks required a powerful but mobile design. The design made use of new composite armour, developed partly from a research programme begun in 1969 and partly from espionage of German developments. The selected armament was a 120mm Skoda K25 smoothbore gun with autoloader. The first test rigs were driven in 1972 and by 1975 work was underway on the prototypes which began testing in 1976.
T-77A Berenova
Specifications
Weight: 44 tonnes
Length: 6.78m (hull), 9.18m (inc. gun),
Width: 3.75m (inc. skirts)
Height: 2.44m (commander's cupola)
Crew: 3
Armour: composite (classified)
Main Armament:
1x 120mm Skoda K25 smoothbore gun with 36 rounds in autoloader carousel and 12 rounds stored in the hull
Secondary Armament:
1x 7.62mm MG-6T coaxial machine gun (4,000 rounds)
1x 12.7mm MG-9AT anti-aircraft heavy machine gun (1,800 rounds)
Powerplant: 775hp Berez-FIAT BF12V15T 12-cylinder turbocharged liquid cooled diesel engine
Transmission: 7-gear manual gearbox
Suspension: torsion bar spring mounted support roller drive with hydraulic dampers
Ground clearance: 45cm (normal)
Operational Range: 460km
Speed: 60km/h (road), 40km/h (cross-country)
T-77A0: assigned the name Berenova in honour of the famous Bereznik general of World War Two. Production pre-series, 25 tanks built 1976-77, had prototype fire-control system and elements of older T-65M fire-control, briefly issued to service units but most used for training.
T-77A1: main production series, 895 built 1977-80, all had the intended heavier armoured side skirts and definitive TG-5 fire-control system with laser rangefinder and passive IR. Also sold to Hungary and Romania.
T-77AK1: command tank, for Battalion commanders, 200 built. Also sold to Hungary and Romania.
T-77AK2: command tank, for Company commanders, 370 built. Also sold to Hungary and Romania.
T-77B Berenova
Specifications
Weight: 45.75 tonnes
Length: 6.78m (hull), 9.18m (inc. gun),
Width: 3.84m (inc. skirts)
Height: 2.44m (commander's cupola)
Crew: 3
Armour: composite (classified)
Main Armament:
1x 120mm Skoda K25 smoothbore gun with 36 rounds in autoloader carousel and 12 rounds stored in the hull
Secondary Armament:
1x 7.62mm MG-6T coaxial machine gun (4,000 rounds)
1x 12.7mm MG-9AT anti-aircraft heavy machine gun (1,800 rounds)
Powerplant: 1,000hp Berez-FIAT BF12V15BT 12-cylinder turbocharged liquid cooled diesel engine
Transmission: 7-gear manual gearbox
Suspension: torsion bar spring mounted support roller drive with hydraulic dampers
Ground clearance: 45cm (normal)
Operational Range: 460km
Speed: 60km/h (road), 38km/h (cross-country)
T-77B1: designed as a ‘breakthrough’ tanks to destroy Soviet tank attacks and launch powerful counter offensives. The main change was improved composite armour with more extensive use of ceramics and modified side skirts made of the same material, in tests the tank proved invulnerable to Soviet 125mm anti-tank rounds. A more powerful diesel engine was fitted but speed fell slightly. 655 built 1981-84, the tank was not exported even to Allies Hungary and Romania.
T-77BK1: command tank, for Battalion commanders, 50 built.
T-77BK2: command tank, for Company commanders, 90 built.
T-77T Berenova
Specifications
Weight: 45.25 tonnes
Length: 6.7m (hull), 9.09m (inc. gun),
Width: 3.84m (inc. skirts)
Height: 2.44m (commander's cupola)
Crew: 3
Armour: composite (classified)
Main Armament:
1x 120mm Skoda K25 smoothbore gun with 36 rounds in autoloader carousel and 12 rounds stored in the hull
Secondary Armament:
1x 7.62mm MG-6T coaxial machine gun (4,000 rounds)
1x 12.7mm MG-9AT anti-aircraft heavy machine gun (1,800 rounds)
Powerplant: 1,000shp Tumansky TU-GT9 gas turbine
Transmission: 8-gear automatic gearbox
Suspension: torsion bar spring mounted support roller drive with hydraulic dampers
Ground clearance: 45cm (normal)
Operational Range: 270km
Speed: 70km/h (road), 46km/h (cross-country)
T-77T1: Matthias began studying gas turbine-powered tanks in 1973 but not until 1978 did a suitable engine exist, developed by the Tumansky company. Two test chassis were first driven in 1979 but problems with developing a suitable transmission delayed trials with six modified T-77Bs until 1986-87. The T-77T was designed to overcome some of the mobility issues of the heavy T-77B but range suffered due to the high fuel consumption. Engine reliability was also poor. Some tanks received ERA blocks during the 1990s. Only 100 were built 1987-89 and issued to just two divisions, the tank was not exported.
T-77TK1: command tank, for Battalion commanders, 20 built.
T-77TK2: command tank, for Company commanders, 45 built.
T-77M Berenova
Specifications
Weight: 46 tonnes
Length: 6.7m (hull), 9.09m (inc. gun),
Width: 3.84m (inc. skirts)
Height: 2.44m (commander's cupola)
Crew: 3
Armour: composite (classified) (plus T-77M2 has ERA blocks)
Main Armament:
1x 120mm Skoda K25M2 smoothbore gun with 50 rounds in autoloader carousel
Secondary Armament:
1x 7.62mm MG-6T coaxial machine gun (4,000 rounds)
1x 12.7mm MG-9ATM anti-aircraft heavy machine gun (1,800 rounds) (remote-controlled)
Powerplant: 1,250shp Tumansky TU-GT11M gas turbine
Transmission: 8-gear automatic gearbox
Suspension: torsion bar spring mounted support roller drive with hydraulic dampers
Ground clearance: 45cm (normal)
Operational Range: 315km
Speed: 70km/h (road), 46km/h (cross-country)
T-77M1: the T-77T showed promise despite its setbacks and while Matthias was working on the new T-94, they proposed an improved T-77 as a stopgap with improved armour, now with depleted uranium rods inside, which required a slightly reshaped turret. An improved gas turbine was fitted, a modern TG-7A fire-control system and an improved main gun with a higher capacity autoloader, removing the need to stow extra rounds in the front hull. 380 were built 1990-93 and some were sold to Romania. Many were updated to more or less T-77M2 standard by 2000.
T-77M2: an improved variant with the addition of ERA blocks and a new thermal imager for the commander, 200 were built 1994-96.
T-77MK1: a command tank variant based on the T-77M, 120 built 1990-94, also sold to Romania.
T-77E
T-77E: export production series, based on the T-77A0 and retaining the rubber skirts and a slightly downgraded TG-5E fire-control system and lacking composite armour, built from 1978 and sold to Egypt, Finland, Iraq, Turkey, Ukraine.
T-77EA: downgraded model to fulfil the need for a cheaper tank, replaced the 120mm gun with a 105mm Skoda K17 gun as fitted to the T-65 but modified for use with the K25s autoloader, Skoda developing this pairing for the T-78 reconnaissance tank project and Matthias adding it to the T-77E. Built from 1980, sold to Brazil, Chile, Libya, Nigeria and Taiwan.
T-77EK: command tank variant of the T-77E (there was no command tank option for the T-77AE), sold to Egypt, Turkey and Ukraine.
T-77EM: the export version of the T-77A1 and essentially the same vehicle, built from 1981, sold to Iraq, Serbia and Ukraine.
GFT-77
Specifications
Weight: 46 tonnes
Length: 6.78m
Width: 3.75m (inc. skirts)
Height: 3.89m (to top of radar)
Crew: 3
Armour: steel
Main Armament:
2x 30mm Skoda vZ.70A automatic cannon smoothbore gun with 320 AA and 40 AT rounds
Powerplant: 775hp Berez-FIAT BF12V15T 12-cylinder turbocharged liquid cooled diesel engine
Transmission: 7-gear manual gearbox
Suspension: torsion bar spring mounted support roller drive with hydraulic dampers
Ground clearance: 45cm (normal)
Operational Range: 460km
Speed: 60km/h (road), 38km/h (cross-country)
GFT-77A1: developed by Alkett to meet a 1977 requirement for a modern self-propelled air-defence vehicle. Alkett developed a new turret to fit the a modified Matthias T-77A chassis, 180 built 1980-84, not exported.
GFT-77A2: almost identical but using the more heavily armoured skirts of the T-77A1, 65 built 1982-84, not exported.
SEF-77
Specifications
Weight: 44.5 tonnes
Length: 6.78m (hull)
Width: 3.75m (inc. skirts)
Crew: 3
Armour: steel
Armament (SEF-7A):
1x 152mm KataniaRM GH-4A demolition howitzer with 30 rounds
1x 7.62mm MG-6T coaxial machine gun (2,000 rounds)
1x 12.7mm MG-9AT anti-aircraft heavy machine gun (1,500 rounds)
Powerplant: 775hp Berez-FIAT BF12V15T 12-cylinder turbocharged liquid cooled diesel engine
Transmission: 7-gear manual gearbox
Suspension: torsion bar spring mounted support roller drive with hydraulic dampers
Ground clearance: 45cm (normal)
Operational Range: 460km
Speed: 60km/h (road), 38km/h (cross-country)
SEF-77A: developed by Alkett to meet a 1975 requirement for a new combat engineering vehicle. Alkett developed a new turret to fit the a modified Matthias T-77A chassis, this variant was for combat demolition, 100 built 1980-85, not exported.
SEF-77B: the combat engineer variant as a recovery vehicle for T-77 units with a crane and winches, 200 built 1982-85, not exported.