2B1 Oka Explained

2B1 Oka
Type:Self-propelled artillery
Origin:Soviet Union
Is Ranged:Yes
Is Explosive:Yes
Is Artillery:Yes
Is Vehicle:Yes
Is Missile:Yes
Variants:See Variants
Weight:55.3t
Height:3m (10feet)
Primary Armament:420mm L/47.5
Engine:V12-5 diesel
Engine Power:520kW

2B1 Oka, (Russian: "2Б1 Ока" - "Oka River"), is a Soviet 420 mm self-propelled heavy artillery. 2B1 is its GRAU designation.

Development

An experimental model was ready in 1957. Its chassis (Object 273), was designed and built by the Kirov Plant. Its 20m (70feet) barrel allowed it to fire 750kg (1,650lb) rounds up to 45km (28miles). Due to its complexity of loading it had a relatively low rate of fire—one round every five minutes. Field tests showed various drawbacks of the entire design (the recoil was too strong for many components: it damaged drive sprockets, ripped the gear-box away from its mountings, etc.) and the sheer length rendered it incredibly difficult to transport.[1]

Its development continued until 1960, when the idea of such overpowered guns (along with the 2A3), was abandoned in favor of tactical ballistic missiles, such as the 2K6 Luna.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: ezoic . ezoic . 2022-06-06 . 2B1 Oka: The Self-Propelled Gun with a Fatal Flaw . 2024-02-03 . Tank Historia . en-US.