The Tatra T813 was a truck produced in Czechoslovakia by the Tatra company. It was produced from 1967 to 1982.[1] The basic representative of this series was a military version of the 8×8 Kolos (Colossus), which was able to pull trailers up to a total weight of 100 tons. Tatra also produced a civilian version in either 6×6 or 4×4. After fifteen years of production, 11,751 vehicles were built in all modifications. Many units were exported to the USSR, East Germany, Romania and India.
T 813 | |
Production: | 1967-1982 |
Manufacturer: | Tatra |
Predecessor: | Tatra T141 |
Successor: | Tatra T815 |
Class: | Heavy Truck |
Body Style: | COE |
Engine: | V12 Diesel |
Length: | 88001NaN1 (T813 KOLOS) |
Width: | 25001NaN1 |
Height: | 27801NaN1 (T813 KOLOS) |
Weight: | 140000NaN0 (T813 KOLOS) |
T 930-xx E | |
Aka: | T 930 E |
Manufacturer: | Tatra |
Type: | V12 diesel |
Bore: | 1201NaN1 |
Stroke: | 1301NaN1 |
Displacement: | 17,640 cc |
Weight: | 10350NaN0 |
Block: | Cast Iron |
Head: | Aluminium alloy |
Valvetrain: | OHV |
Fuelsystem: | Direct injection |
Fueltype: | multifuel |
Coolingsystem: | Air-cooled |
Power: | 198.60NaN0 @ 2000 rpm |
Torque: | 990Nm @ 1300 rpm |
Compression: | 16.5:1 |
Fuelcon: | 44L/100 km |
The prototype, made of Tatra 138 parts, was built in 1960. It had permanent 4×4 all-wheel-drive. After trials, the designers decided to develop and expand the concept to an 8×8 all-wheel-drive all-terrain vehicle. The basis of the design became the modular chassis of the Tatra 813. In 1983, it was succeeded by the Tatra T815.
A tubular backbone construction was chosen for the T813. The advantages of the central load carrying backbone tube are the high torsional and bending stiffness protecting the truck's body from forces caused by the payload, plus it houses all important parts of the drivetrain and allows the modular construction so designers and customers can choose between two-, three-, and four-axle versions and wheelbase combinations. The T-813 design uses a cab-over-engine configuration, wide-profile super-single tires, and central tire inflation/deflation system.
The naturally aspirated V12 engine T-930 was created by adding four cylinders to the existing T-928 75° V8 engine of the Tatra T138 series. The crankshaft uses six individual journals bolted together with front and rear pins running on the main roller bearings on the axial friction thrust washers. The military version was multi-fuel capable, running on any mixture of diesel fuel, petrol/gasoline, and kerosene aviation fuel.
T-813 uses a full-length backbone tube with modular independent-swinging half-axles available as either 4×4, 6×6, or 8×8. 4×4 models had a front axle suspension system with adjustable torsion bars, 6×6 and 8×8 models front and rear axles had longitudinal semi-elliptic leaf springs. 4×4 rear axle has air suspension. Permanent all-wheel-drive, front twin steer (6×6, 8×8) drive via homo-kinetic drive shafts, lockable differentials, inter-axle differentials with locks, and planetary hub reductions are standard for all models. Both the 6×6 and 8×8 versions use twin-steering front-axles and the 6×6 a single rear-axle.
The main gearbox is behind the cabin and connected to the engine clutch housing via a short cardan shaft (this design enables a 'flat-floor' cabin.) The main gearbox bolts to an auxiliary gearbox, to a transfer case, then to a backbone tube, and forms the main part of the chassis structure. A rear power take off and a winch drive were optional. Main and auxiliary gears are synchronized except first and reverse gear. The new feature was a unique 2-speed planetary overdrive system bolted between the front and rear axles.The overdrive could only be selected manually while the vehicle is stationary. The auxiliary gearbox has a neutral position so the winch and a power take-off use the main gearbox gearing for variable speed operation. From the backbone tube, torque flows to the wheels via Tatra gear differentials with differential locks, offset half-shafts, and planetary hub-reductions.
Triple-circuit air "S" cam drum brakes acting on all wheels drums via slack adjuster, brake cylinders are remotely vented. First brake circuit acts on front wheels, the second on rear wheels, and the third controls trailer service brakes. Remote-mounted brake valve operates via hydraulic master-/slave-cylinder principle on the Hauler 6×6 or via mechanical linkage on 8×8 models.
Brake Function | Implementation | |
---|---|---|
Primary brakes | Dual circuit drum brakes "S" cam type | |
Parking brake | Mechanical via output-shaft and drum at the back of the gearbox | |
Supplementary brake |
Cabin is all steel construction of COE design. It does not tilt; access to the engine is via removable engine cowlings inside the cabin. The cab is available in two-seater two-door version and "crew cab" seven-seater four-door. The military specs cabs include a roof hatch or two in the case of the crew-cab. All cabs use a self-contained diesel heater, and can be used to warm the engine before starting. Another military feature is CTI central tire inflation system controlled from the cab for each wheel independently, plus the cab-controlled ability to pressurize gearbox and differential housings prior to fording. The 8×8 models have the ability to cross trenches 1.4 meters wide and vertical obstacles 0.6 meters high. Fording depth (static including the wave) is 1.4 meters (KOLOS 8×8). The vehicle top speed is in the neighborhood of about 92 km/h (NT & NTH), 80 km/h (KOLOS), 70 km/h (hauler), 60 km/h (S1) at about 2000 engine rpm.
Tare - 14,000 kg (KOLOS 8×8), 21,050 kg (Hauler 6×6), 11,200 kg (Chassis 8×8), 15,000 kg (S1 8×8), 7,000 kg (NT & NTH 4×4) |
GVM - 22,200 kg(KOLOS 8×8), 22,000 kg (Hauler 6×6), 36,000 kg (Chassis 8×8), 36,000 kg (S1 8×8), |
Max Trailer Mass - 65,000 kg (KOLOS 8×8), 100,000 kg (Hauler 6×6), 32,000 kg (NT & NTH 4×4 |
GCM - 79,000 kg (KOLOS 8×8), 121,050 kg (Hauler 6×6), 39,000 kg (NT & NTH 4×4) |
Production of Tatra T813 began in 1967 and was superseded by Tatra T815 in 1982. Models were available in the 4×4, 6×6, and 8×8 drive configurations for civilian and military use.
The T813 became popular after the fall of the Iron Curtain in the West as an extreme off-road truck, participating at the various truck trials across Europe.