"Trevozhny" - Russian and Soviet destroyer of the "Solid" type .
"Anxious" | |
---|---|
Destroyer "Anxious" | |
Service | |
Russian Empire → the USSR | |
Ship class and type | Destroyer |
Home port | Vladivostok |
Organization | Siberian military flotilla → Japanese Imperial Navy → Marine forces of the Far East |
Manufacturer | Creighton & Co., St. Petersburg (bookmark) Admiral plant, Vladivostok, Ulysses Bay (assembly) |
Launched | May 1906 |
Commissioned | July 4, 1907 |
Removed from the fleet | 1925 |
Status | Disassembled on metal |
Main characteristics | |
Displacement | 311 t |
Length | 58.4 m |
Width | 5.6 m |
Draft | 2.3 m |
Engines | 2 vertical triple-expansion steam engines , 4 Yarrow boilers |
Power | 3880 l. with. (2.9 MW ) |
Mover | 2 screws |
Travel speed | 23 knots (42.6 km / h ) |
Navigation range | 600 / 950-1100 miles (23/12 knots) |
Crew | 4/60 people |
Armament | |
Artillery | 1 × 75 mm / 50, 3 × 47 mm / 35 Hotchkiss Since 1912: 2 × 75 mm / 50, 2 × 7.62-mm machine gun |
Mine-torpedo armament | 2 × 457 mm TA |
Content
Construction
Laid on Okhta shipyard firm "V. Creighton & Co in 1904, transported to Vladivostok in a disassembled state. After assembly, launched in May 1906. Admitted to the treasury June 21, 1907. The Siberian military flotilla was commissioned on July 4 of the same year.
Service
October 30, 1907 on the destroyer there was an armed uprising of sailors, suppressed by troops loyal to the government.
It underwent a major overhaul of the hull and mechanisms in 1912-1913 at the Mechanical Plant of the Vladivostok Port.
December 12, 1917 became part of the Red Siberian Flotilla. June 30, 1918 was captured by the Japanese invaders. In October 1920, during the evacuation of parts of the Volunteer Army, it was completely disabled and flooded. In 1922, raised and May 31, 1923 scrapped. November 21, 1925 excluded from the lists of courts RKKF .
Commanders
- Kazimir Adolfovich Porebsky (commander of the destroyer in construction)
Literature
- N. N. Afonin, S. A. Balakin. Sokol-class destroyers
- Taras A. Ships of the Russian Imperial Navy 1892-1917 - Harvest, 2000. - ISBN 9854338886 .