Hull and turret The SU-152G uses an open turret mounted on the hull. The hull was welded from
rolled homogeneous armor (RHA) and is divided into 3 compartments: the power compartment which houses the transmissions and the engine, the driving compartment, and the combat compartment. The engine and the transmissions were housed in the front right part of the vehicle. To its left were the driving mechanisms with chassis controls. In the middle of the vehicle was the combat compartment, which was equipped with armored shielding. The ammo rack is located to the rear, analogous to that of the SU-100P. The gun was located on the turret above the hull. The turret had a traverse range of 71.5 degrees to either the left or the right, and the maximum elevation range was from -5 to +40 degrees. The entire vehicle needed a crew of 5 to operate. The armor was made to withstand gunfire and shrapnel damage. The armor for the hull was , while the turret had armor.
Armament . The barrel was connected to the breech, and a muzzle brake was fitted to the barrel. A vertical, wedged gate was installed in the breech, along with a semi-automatic, free-floating ejector. To ease the loading process, a mechanical loader was placed as well. The gunner's seat has a ZIS-3 panoramic sight for high-elevation indirect firing, and an OP1-7 direct-firing sight for observation of shell impact. The ammo rack of the SU-152G holds 42 shells. The main shell employed by the D-50/D-1 was the 53-OF-530 High Explosive Fragmentation shell fitted with an RGM, RGM-2 or a D-1 fuse. When fired with full propellant charge, the shells had a muzzle velocity of 508 meters per second with a maximum range of 12.39 km. The 53-OF-530 has a steel casing and 5.83 kg of TNT as payload. When equipped with a contact fuze, it was capable of a 2100-square-meter area denial against enemy infantry in a standing profile, and was able to create a crater up to 1.2 m deep and up to 3.5 m in diameter. For greater effect against infantry the 53-O-530A fragmentation round was used with an RGM-2 or D-1-U fuse, or the 53-OF-530R High Explosive Fragmentation shell and the 3OF9, armed with AR-26 and AR-30 radio-fuzes for air-bursting capabilities, respectively. For anti-tank fire the SU-152G was capable of using 53-BP-540 HEAT shells, with a penetration capability of up to 250 mm of Rolled Homogeneous Armor. Naval High-Explosive, Semi-Armor-Piercing A3-PB-35 shells were also available, with the capability of penetrating 68 mm of RHA at a range of 2 km. The range of choice also included special-purpose shells, which include illumination rounds, smoke shells, concrete-piercing shells and
chemical shells. 4Zh5 and 54-Zh-536M propellant charges were used to fire
HEAT and naval shells. The 54-Zh-536 propellant charge was used for the rest, intended for D-1 and M-10 howitzers, the 54-Zh-534 propellant, on the other hand, was dedicated to firing from
152 mm howitzer model M1909/30s, and their use was recommended to be avoided since their use could lead to chamber expansion and consequentially, difficult shell exits.
Table of ammunition Communications The SU-152G was equipped with a 10-RT radio station for communications, while internal communications between the crew was accomplished by the TPU-47-3 intercom.
Engine and transmission A V-105 (V-54-105)
V12 four-stroke diesel engine was mounted on the SU-152G, capable of outputs of up to 400
horsepower. It is modified from a V-54 engine while making the following adjustments: • The spring corrector of the NK-10 pump was removed; • The outlet nozzles, intake manifold, fan drive and the water pump cover was modified; • The "Kimaf-STZ"
oil filter was installed on a separate bracket; • A G-74 3 kW generator was installed; • The motor resource was increased; • The radiator grille was changed for better cooling efficiency. The SU-152G utilizes planetary transmission, with six shifts for going forward and two for reversing. The maximum speed at shift 6 was found to be at 63 km/h.
Chassis The chassis of the SU-152G was based on that of the SU-100P self-propelled anti-tank gun, and consisted of 6 pairs of rubberized support and three pairs of supporting rollers. On the rear part of the vehicle the guide wheels were installed, while the driving sprockets were mounted on the front. The tracks consisted of small links with rubber-metal forged hinges. Each track measured 412 by 133 millimeters. The SU-152G used individual torsion for suspension. Hydraulic shock absorbers were installed on the first and the sixth pair of rollers. == Comparison to similar vehicles ==