The T95 tank was created using a traditional design with a driver in the front, the fighting compartment in the center, and the engine compartment in the rear. The tank had a four-man crew, consisting of a commander, a gunner, a loader, and a driver. The driver's work area is in the forward compartment. The hatch is located in the glacis above the driver's head. With the hatch sealed the driver operates the tank using three
periscopic visual devices, the middle of which is equipped with a
night-vision infrared camera from the
T161. Ammunition stores are located on either side of the driver’s chair.
Hull and turret The majority of the hull is welded, but the front is a single massive casting. The upper part of the forward armor, or glacis, has a thickness of 95 mm and is at an angle of 65 degrees from vertical. The thickness of the roof and floor of the hull around the driver's compartment is 51 and 19 mm respectively; the thicknesses of said areas are 25 and 13 mm, respectively, around the fighting and engine compartments. The thickness of the main side plates vary from 102 mm in front down to 32 mm around the engine. The cast turret has a ring diameter of , the same as the
M48. The frontal turret armor is 178 mm, and the sides are 78 mm. The shape of the turret is elongated compared to the M48. The gunner's seat is situated to the right of the main gun in the front of the turret. The commander's seat is also in the turret, with a built-in
12.7 mm M2 machine gun, with an
M28 periscopic sight for aiming. For 360-degree vision, five armored viewports are installed in the turret. Primary shells are stored in the lower section of the turret, beneath the ring.
Armament The T95 and the T95E1 are equipped with
T208 90 mm
smooth-bore guns. The T95's equipment is on a
fixed mount and is stabilized in two axes. The T95E1 equipment was installed on a
recoil mount, but lacks stabilization systems. All T95 models were equipped with
T320 armor-piercing rounds, which have tungsten cores, diameters of 40 mm, and muzzle velocities of 1,520 meters per second. These rounds can successfully penetrate a 127 mm armor plate when fired at a 60-degree angle from . A standard T95 was equipped with 50 rounds. The T95E2 retained the armament of its predecessor, the
M48A2. With a 90 mm gun, it could fire a 74 mm anti-armor shell at 915 meters per second for a range of 2,000 yards. It was equipped with 64 rounds. The T95E3 was armed with a
T140 105 mm
rifled gun. With a muzzle velocity of 1079 m/s, the armor piecing capability at 2,000 yards was 122 mm at a 60-degree firing angle. Standard equipment was 64 rounds. The T95E4 was planned to have a
T210 105 mm smoothbore gun. In order to accommodate the extra length of the rounds (112 cm), the gun was moved forward, preventing stabilization. The muzzle velocity of the round was 1,740 m/s, with an armor penetration of 152 mm at 60 degrees at 2,000 yards. Standard equipment was 40 rounds. With the appearance of the
T123 120 mm rifled gun, it was decided that it should be installed on two of the four planned T95E4s. This variant was designated
T95E6. The T123 gun had a muzzle velocity of 1,070 m/s and armor-piercing capability of 122 mm at 60 degrees, at a range of 2,000 yards.
Fire-control system The T95E2 and the T95E3 were equipped with
fire-control systems, identical to the one used in the
M48A2, with
stereoscopic rangefinders and mechanical ballistics computers. The T95 also had an FCS which had an
OPTAR optic rangefinder, as well as an electronic ballistics computer. It also featured a periscopic sight from the
T44 and a
T50 ballistic computer. The T95E1 used a simplified targeting system – a rangefinder and a ballistics computer were omitted.
Powerplant Under the original proposal, T95 and T96 tanks had to be equipped with
X-shaped 750 hp 12-cylinder
diesel engines. However, because this engine was only in the early stages of development, it was decided to temporarily equip the tanks with
four-stroke,
eight-cylinder AOI-1195 gasoline engines. The engine was placed transversely and was connected with the XTG-410 four-speed
transmission. Three fuel tanks, with a total capacity of 780 liters, were installed in the engine compartment. Despite higher fuel economy compared to the M48A2 engine, gasoline engines provided insufficient torque. At the same time, the development of the
X-shaped diesel engine failed, so, starting in mid-1958, other options were considered. As an interim measure, it was decided to use a modified version of the civilian 12-cylinder,
two-stroke, water-cooled,
V-type, 570 hp
GM 12V71T diesel engine. A contract was signed with the
Continental Motors Company in the development of the AVDS-1100
air-cooled diesel engine, and with
Caterpillar to develop the LVDS-1100 water-cooled diesel engine. Both engines are quad-V-shaped, with an estimated 550 hp. However, tank testing with the three new power plants began after the retirement of the T95 program.
Chassis The suspension consists of five sets of double road wheels with torsion bar springs. The system is a "flat track" and does not have return rollers. The forward and rearmost road wheels are equipped with hydraulic shock absorbers. On some of the tanks lightweight openwork road wheels were used. Caterpillar treads were used, with rubber bushed pins. The width of the tracks were 533 mm or 610 mm. The number of tracks in a tread was 80 and the length of the bearing surface was 4.2 m. ==Retirement==