KIROV CLASS BATTLECRUISER


The '''Kirov'' class battlecruisers' are some of the largest and most powerful surface warships of the Russian Navy. Originally built for the Soviet Navy, in Russia they are usually known by the designation ''Project 1144 'Orlan''' (meaning Sea eagle). They are among the largest warships in the world, second only to aircraft carriers, and are similar in size to a World War I battleship.
Because of this, the ships are sometimes known as battlecruisers in the West; although the ''Kirov'' (lead vessel and class namesake) actually lacks heavy armor as is tradition for a battlecruiser. The class does, however, have significant protection over its most sensitive areas like magazines, even if it doesn't constitute a true armor. Soviet and Russian naval analysts always referred to it as a "large missile cruiser." It is more appropriate to consider ''Kirov'' an oversized guided missile cruiser, analogous to the U.S. Navy ''Alaska''-class battlecruiser, which had the displacement and armament of a battlecruiser but otherwise was closer to a heavy cruiser in mission and construction. The appearance of the ''Kirov'' class was a significant factor in the U.S. Navy recommissioning the ''Iowa'' class.
The ''Kirov'' hull design was used for the nuclear-powered command ship ''SSV-33''.

Contents
Armament
Deployment
Description
Units
External links
See also

Armament


The ''Kirov/Admiral Ushakov'', the Lead ship of the class.

This class has an impressive armament of missiles and guns as well as electronics. Its largest radar antenna is mounted on its foremast, and called "Top Pair" by NATO. The ''Kirov'' class's main weapons are 20 × SS-N-19 Shipwreck missiles mounted on deck, designed to engage large surface targets, and air defense is provided for with 12 × S-300F launchers with 96 missiles and 2 × Osa-MA with 40 missiles. The ships had some differences in sensor and weapons suites; the lead ship ''Kirov'' came with SS-N-14 ASW missiles; on subsesquent ships they were replaced with 4 × 9K331 Tor SAM systems. ''Kirov'' and ''Frunze'' had eight 30 mm AK-630 close-in weapon systems, which were supplanted with the Kashstan air-defence missile/gun system on later ships.
Other weapons are the automatic 130 mm AK-130 gun system (except on ''Kirov'' which had two single 100 mm guns instead), 10 × torpedo/missile tubes (capable of firing SS-N-15 missiles on later ships, Udav-1 with 40 anti-submarine rockets and the 2 × RBU-1000 six-tube launchers.

Deployment


The lead ship, ''Kirov'' (renamed ''Admiral Ushakov'' in 1992 after the dissolution of the Soviet Union) was laid down in June of 1973 at Leningrad's Baltiysky Naval Shipyard, launched on December 26 1977 and commissioned on December 30 1980. When she appeared for the first time in 1981, NATO observers called her BALCOM I (Baltic Combatant I).
''Kirov'' suffered a reactor accident in 1990 while serving in the Mediterranean Sea. Repairs were never carried out, due to lack of funds and the changing political situation in the Soviet Union. She may have been cannibalized as a spare parts cache for the other ships in her class.
''Frunze'', the second vessel in the class, was completed in 1984. She was assigned to the Pacific Fleet. In 1991, she was renamed ''Admiral Lazarev''. The ship became inactive in 1994 and was decommissioned four years later.
''Kalinin'' was the third ship to enter service, in 1988. She was also assigned to the Northern Fleet. Renamed to ''Admiral Nakhimov'', the ship was mothballed in 1999 and reactivated in 2005.
Construction of the fourth ship, ''Yuri Andropov'' encountered many delays; her construction was started in 1986 but was not completed until 1996, when she was christened ''Pyotr Velikiy'' (Peter the Great). The ship currently serves as the flagship of the Russian Northern Fleet.
On March 23 2004, the Russian Northern Fleet Chief Commander, Admiral Vladimir Kuroedov said that ''Pyotr Velikiy'''s reactor was in an extremely bad condition and could explode "at any moment." This statement was later withdrawn and may have been the result of internal politics within the Russian Navy, as Admiral Igor Kasatonov (the uncle of ''Pyotr Velikiy'' commander Vladimir Kasatanov) was testifying in the court hearings on the loss of the K-159 and the ''Kursk'' disaster.
The ship was sent to port for a month, and the crew lost one-third of their pay. Examinations found no problems with the ship's reactor.
The fifth ship, to be known as ''Dzerzhinsky'', also ran into delays. Her name was changed to ''October Revolution'', and then ''Kuznetsov'',{Globalsecurity.org} and later scrapped while incomplete.

Description


Radars:

★ Voskhod MR-800 (Top Pair) 3D search radar on foremast

★ Fregat MR-710 (Top Steer) 3D search radar on main mast

★ 2 × Palm Frond navigation radar on foremast
Sonar

★ Horse Jaw LF hull sonar

★ Horse Tail VDS (Variable Depth Sonar)
Fire control:

★ 2 × Top Dome for SA-N-6 fire control (the forward Top Dome is replaced with Tomb Stone in ''Pyotr Velikiy'')

★ 4 × Bass Tilt for AK-360 CIWS System fire control (not in ''Nakhimov'' or ''Pyotr Velikiy'')

★ 2 × Eye Bowl for SA-N-4 fire control (Also for SS-N-14 in ''Ushakov'')

★ 2 × Hot Flash/Hot Spot for SA-N-11 Grisom (CADS-N-1 units only)

★ 1 × Kite Screech for AK-100 or AK-130

★ 2 × Cross Sword for SA-N-9 (Gauntlet-equipped units only)

Units



''Kirov''/''Admiral Ushakov'' - Status unknown, believed decommissioned in 2001

''Frunze''/''Admiral Lazarev'' - Decommissioned in 1997

''Kalinin''/''Admiral Nakhimov'' - Undergoing repairs at Sevmash since 1999. Completed ahead of schedule in 2005, returned to active service in the Northern fleet.

''Yuri Andropov''/''Pyotr Velikiy'' - Active

★ ''Dzerzhinsky'' - Cancelled

External links



Globalsecurity.org page on ''Kirov'' class

''Kirov'' class photos from Mark Meredith

article in Russian from Encyclopedia of ships

article in Russian from the Military Reform Support Fund

article in Russian discussing the ships' armament

article in English from FAS
See also


''Kirov'' class cruiser for World War II-era ships

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