K-447 "Kislovodsk" (serial number - 311 ) - Project 667B Murena nuclear missile submarine strategic cruiser ( Eng. Delta-I in NATO terminology).
| K-447 "Kislovodsk" | |
|---|---|
| Ship history | |
| Flag state | |
| Launching | December 31, 1971 |
| Withdrawn from the fleet | 2003 |
| Current status | Disposed of |
| Main characteristics | |
| Type of ship | SSBN |
| Project designation | 667B Murena |
| Project developer | Ruby |
| Codification of NATO | Delta-i |
| Speed (surface) | 17.5 knots |
| Speed (underwater) | 25 knots |
| Working depth | 320 m |
| Immersion depth | 400 m |
| Autonomy of swimming | 70 ... 80 days |
| Crew | 120 people |
| Dimensions | |
| Surface displacement | 8 900 t |
| Underwater displacement | 11 000 t |
| The length is the greatest (on design basis) | 139 m |
| The width of the body naib. | 11.7 m |
| Average draft (on design basis) | 8.4 m |
| Power point | |
| |
| Armament | |
| Torpedo mine weapons | 4 nose gears of caliber 533 Ammunition (torpedoes): 16 |
| Missile weapons | 12 PU BRPL R-29 |
K-447 Kislovodsk was part of the 31st Red Banner Division of the 12th Northern Fleet Submarine Squadron . Port of registry - Sayda Bay. Commander - Captain I Rank Vladimir Voznyuk.
History
February 5, 1971 was officially included in the lists of ships of the Navy of the USSR, March 18 of the same year, the ship was laid on the Sevmash as a cruising submarine.
The signing of the acceptance certificate took place on September 30, 1973 [1] .
July 25, 1977 was reclassified to missile submarine cruiser.
In 1981, K-447, together with K-467 , fired from the Arctic region with preliminary ice breaking through the hull. For the successful completion of the mission, the crew of the submarine was awarded the pennant of the Ministry of Defense of the USSR “ For Courage and Military Valor ”, to Rear Admiral E. A. Baltin , commander of the 41st Submarine Division, and Captain 1st Rank Captain L. R. Kuversky, by Decree of the Presidium USSR Armed Forces of October 9, 1981 awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union . After this trip, the submarine underwent its first average repair at the Zvyozdochka enterprise. Repair was completed at the end of 1982 [1] .
The second average repair was carried out from 1989 to December 1992 [1] .
In October 1996, it successfully launched a rocket launch [1] .
In 2000, the K-447 command received the unofficial name Kislovodsk [2] .
In 2003, the feature film " 72 Meters " was shot on K-447.
In the same year, the last of the Project 667B Murena boats was withdrawn from the Russian Navy and disposed of at Zvyozdochka in Severodvinsk [1] .
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 Anatoly Popov. Nuclear submarine born in March . Asterisk (March 19, 2009). Date of treatment February 21, 2010. Archived February 27, 2012.
- ↑ K-447, historical background. Russian Submarine.
Links
- K-447, project 667B Murena, serial number 311. Historical background on the Russky Subplav website.
- The last parking lot is Kislovodsk. Anatoly Popov. Ship side. September 22, 2003