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Petrozavodsk (submarine)

The Petrozavodsk B-388 (before June 3, 1992, K-388 ) was a Soviet and Russian nuclear submarine of the Project 671RTMK Shchuka , named after the city of Petrozavodsk .

B-388 Petrozavodsk
K-388
Victor III class SSN.svg
Ship history
Flag state USSR , Russia
Home portZaoersk
LaunchingJune 3, 1988
Current statusin recycling
Main characteristics
Ship typeFee
Project designation671RTMK Schuka
Chief DesignerG.N. Chernyshov
NATO codification"Victor-III"
Speed ​​(surface)11.6 knots
Speed ​​(underwater)31 knots
Working depth400 m
Extreme depth of immersion600 m
Autonomy swimming80 days
Crew96 people
Dimensions
Displacement above the water6 990 t
Underwater displacement7 250 t
Length is greatest
(on KVL )
107.1 m
Case width naib.10.8 m
Average draft
(on KVL)
7.8 m
Armament
Torpedo
mine weapons

2 × 650 mm, 8 torpedoes of type 65-76
4 × 533 mm 16 ammunition:

  • torpedoes type 53-65K, SET-65,
  • up to 36 min "Golets"
  • simulators MG-74 "Corundum".
Missile weaponsM-5 submarines, 81P rocket-torpedoes instead of a part of torpedoes

Construction History

The cruising nuclear submarine K-388 was credited to the lists of ships of the Soviet Navy on March 7, 1986 . On May 8, 1987, the ship was laid at the Admiralty Plant in Leningrad , and it was launched on June 3, 1988 . In June 1988, the boat went to Severodvinsk to pass the acceptance tests and on November 30, 1988, was put into operation. March 1, 1989 incorporated into the Northern Fleet .

Service history

December 15, 1988 raised the naval flag, December 25, arrived at the place of stationing in the Bolshaya Lopatkina Bay, became part of the 33rd submarine division. In 1991 she completed the tasks of combat service (603 crew, commander V. N. Ivanov). At the end of 1991, the crew was declared the best in the Northern Fleet. The ship repeatedly won the prize of the commander in chief of the Navy.

On June 3, 1992, it was assigned to the ABPL subclass and renamed to B-388 .

In 1998, an agreement on sponsorship and cooperation with the administration of the city of Snezhnogorsk (Murmansk region) was signed, the ship was named Snezhnorsk. On February 22, 2005, the boat was named Petrozavodsk.

As of 2012, the B-388 Petrozavodsk was part of the 11th submarine division of the Northern Fleet based on Zaozersk . In 2013, allegedly withdrawn from service, put to sludge, was still listed as part of 11 DPL.

In December 2015, a tender for the disposal of the B-388 Petrozavodsk was announced. Disposal must be made before the end of 2017. [1] [2]

Commanders

  • N. N. Generals (1986–1993)
  • A. A. Pashinin (1993–1998)
  • Soroka S.V. (1998–1999)
  • Behavior LM (1999-2000)
  • Nepryakhin O. N. (2000–2005)
  • Yerin V.I. (2005—2006)
  • Amelchenko A.S. (2006–2012)
  • Zholob G. N. (2012 — n / a)

Literature

  • Kuzin, V.P., Nikolsky, V.I. “The Navy of the USSR, 1945–1991”, IMO, St. Petersburg, 1996

Notes

  1. ↑ К-388, B-388 Petrozavodsk
  2. ↑ A tender was announced for the disposal of a nuclear submarine of the 671RTM project in the Murmansk region

Links

  • deepstorm.ru // K-388, B-388 Petrozavodsk
  • The crew of the atomic submarine Petrozavodsk first visited the capital of Karelia.
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Petrozavodsk (the underwater_lap) :) & idid = 79705404


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