
Fuel tanks and a part of stowed ammunition were located in the “nose” of the vehicle. In this project, the crew compartment was situated in the turret,w while the engine was apparently in the back in lying position. Gavalov, who previously worked on other light tank designs including the T-70.
The LTG, also known as the "Gavalov" tank, was a Soviet light tank design dating to 1944.
Otherwise, the gun is a priority to research
If the 85 mm D-5T-85BMU was researched previously from the T-34-85, mount immediately, as it will give extra penetration and alpha damage. The tracks are necessary to mount any other modules, or even most equipment. The Radio R-113 Carries over from the MT-25 (If researched). For this reason it is HIGHLY recommended to at least have Coated Optics. The most likely explosion rate is when the tank is exposing either side towards enemy fire and the view range will force you to get closer to the enemy, as it will increase the risk of a trip to the garage. Active scouting with this tank is not advised, as it has a weak ammo rack (As mentioned above) and poor view range. Keep in mind that firing will reveal your position, and the armor the tank has at Tier VII will not be very effective, unless its small arms fire (Eg. The low profile will also allow side hugging taller tanks (But the turret size would be problematic). This tank, unlike other light tanks, has a very low profile, which in turn, gives the tank a good camouflage value added with Camo net and Binoculars, will make it into a well equipped passive scout. Somewhat sluggish when using stock engine. Awful view range, the worst of any tier 7 light tank (360), albeit it has very high camouflage values. Fast turret traverse speed, combined with decent gun handling makes it very good at snapshots and hit-and-run. Good mobility, very strong HE shell which shreds poorly armored vehicles. Good turret armor for its tier and class.