Landsverk L-62 Anti

Landsverk L-62 Anti
Finnish Landsverk Anti II (10 ItPsv 40) on parade
TypeAnti-aircraft tank (primary)
Tank destroyer (secondary)
Place of origin Sweden
Service history
In service1941[1]–1945[2]: 40M Nimród
1942–1966: Anti II
Used by Hungary (Anti I, as 40M Nimród)
Finland (Anti II)
WarsWorld War II
Continuation War
Production history
DesignerAB Landsverk
Designed~1933: Anti I
~1941: Anti II
ManufacturerAB Landsverk
Produced1936
No. builtAnti I: × 1
Anti II: × 6
40M Nimród: × 135
VariantsThe Landsverk L-62 Anti II is a specific variant of the Landsverk Anti I.
Specifications
Mass10,740 kg (23,680 lb)
Length5.32 m (17 ft 5 in) (chassis)
Width2.30 m (7 ft 7 in)
Height2.30 m (7 ft 7 in)
Crew5 (40M Nimród: 6):

Armor6–20 mm (0.24–0.79 in)
Main
armament
Bofors 40 mm Automatic Gun L/60
4 × 160 cartridges
Secondary
armament
Sidearms of the crew
EngineL8V / 36 T Scania type 1664 7,755cc
160 hp (120 kW)
Power/weight14,8 hp/t
Fuel capacity250 L (66 US gal) of light bentol
Maximum speed40 km/h (25 mph)

Landsverk L-62 Anti,[a] later simply Landsverk Anti, was a Swedish self-propelled anti-aircraft gun, developed by AB Landsverk during the 1930s for export. A production license was bought by Hungary in 1940, as the modified 40M Nimród, and six vehicles of the improved Anti II variant was exported to Finland in 1942.

Construction

The chassis was based on the Landsverk L-60 tank but was lengthened and reworked with one extra roadwheel per side. The turret was circular and open for a better view against planes. The gun was a Bofors 40 mm Automatic Gun L/60.

The initial design, later dubbed Anti I, was sold to Hungary for license production as the 40M Nimród. The Hungarians improved the design by reworking the turret. Forward protection was increased and the rear turret was extended backwards to make room for a second loader.

Landsverk would in turn introduce a new design with improved protection, dubbed the Anti II, which went on to be bought by Finland in 1941, delivered in 1942.

Finland

In Finnish service the vehicle got the designation 10-tonnin ilmatorjuntapanssarivaunu mallia Anti (10 It.psv./Anti), lit.'10 ton anti-air tank model Anti', later redesignated as 10-tonnin ilmatorjuntapanssarivaunu 40 mm (10 itpsv 40), lit.'10 ton anti-air tank 40 mm'. Six vehicles were bought unarmed from Landsverk, instead being fitted with 40 ItK/38 license-produced guns by Valtion Kivääritehdas (VTT), the Finnish state rifle factory.[3][4]

During the battles in the summer of 1944, the Finnish tanks downed eleven Soviet aircraft and thus prevented attacks against the tank brigade.[5] All vehicles survived the war and were used until 1966.[6] Several are part of museum exhibitions in modern times.

Variants

Main variants
  • L-62 Anti I – initial variant, one prototype built
  • L-62 Anti II – improved variant, 6 built for Finland
  • 40M Nimród – license produced modification for Hungary
Projects

Footnotes

  1. ^ The name Anti was introduced after the L-62 name, eventually superseding it.

References

  1. ^ Biró, Ádám (July 1994). "A 40 mm-es 36/40 M. Nimród önjáró páncélvadász és légvédelmi gépágyú II" [The 40 mm 36/40 M. Nimród self-propelled tank destroyer and anti-aircraft automatic cannon, Part II]. Haditechnika (in Hungarian). Budapest, Hungary: MH Haditechnikai Intézet: 54–59. ISSN 0230-6891.
  2. ^ "Bd. 38: 2. ungarische Panzer-Division" (26 January 1945) [Archival file]. RH 10 OKH / Generalinspekteur der Panzertruppen, ID: RH 10/177, p. 3. Bundesarchiv. Retrieved 26 Feb 2026. – via Bundesarchiv Invenio.
  3. ^ "Antiaircraft guns part 2:". jaegerplatoon.net. Retrieved 2026-01-12.
  4. ^ "Ilmatorjuntamuseo, tykit". Anti-aircraft Museum, Tuusula, Finland. Archived from the original on 2010-10-22. Retrieved 2009-08-20.
  5. ^ Richard P. Hallion (2012). "The Winter War". Published 9/1/2012. Retrieved 3/20/2025.
  6. ^ "Landsverk Anti II (40 ItPsv 41)" (in Finnish). Archived from the original on 2018-08-03. Retrieved 2018-08-02.