SU-152G
| SU-152G | |
|---|---|
The SU-152G on display at the Kubinka Tank Museum | |
| Type | self-propelled howitzer |
| Place of origin | USSR |
| Production history | |
| Designer | Lev Gorlitsky |
| Designed | 1948-1950 |
| Produced | 1948 |
| No. built | 1 |
| Specifications | |
| Mass | 23.8 t |
| Length | 6.46 metres (21 ft 2 in) |
| Width | 3.1 metres (10 ft 2 in) |
| Height | 2.62 metres (8 ft 7 in) |
| Crew | 5 |
Main armament | 152mm D-50/D-1 |
| Engine | V-105 294 kW, 394hp |
| Ground clearance | 400 mm |
Operational range | 290 km on-road |
The SU-152G (Russian: СУ-152Г, GABTU index "Object 108") was a Soviet experimental 152-mm self-propelled howitzer or Russian: Samokhodnaya Ustanovka, and was designed by OKB-3 of the heavy machine construction division of Uralmash. The main designer of the SU-152G was Lev Gorlitsky. The SU-152G was intended to suppress and destroy enemy firing positions, engage enemy armored vehicles, as well as conducting area denial and counter-battery tasks.