Krivak-class frigate

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Project 1135M Pytlivyy 2009 G1.jpg
A Burevestnik-class frigate in Sevastopol Bay, 2009.
Class overview
Name: Krivak class (Project 1135)
Builders:
Operators:
Preceded by: Riga class
Subclasses:
Completed: 40 (32 Burevestnik and Burevestnik M plus 8 Nerey)
Cancelled: 1 (Nerey subclass)
Active: 2[1]
General characteristics
Type: Frigate
Displacement: 3,300 tons standard, 3,575 tons full load
Length: 405.3 ft (123.5 m)
Beam: 46.3 ft (14.1 m)
Draught: 15.1 ft (4.6 m)
Propulsion:
  • 2 shaft; COGAG
  • 2 x M-8k gas-turbines, 40,000 shp (30,000 kW)
  • 2 x M-62 gas-turbines (cruise), 14,950 shp (11,150 kW)
Speed: 32 knots (59 km/h)
Range: 4,995 nmi (9,251 km) at 14 knots (26 km/h)
Complement: 200
Sensors and
processing systems:
  • Radar: 1 MR-755 Fregat-M/Half Plate air/surf search
  • Sonar: Zvezda-2 suite with MGK-345 Bronza/Ox Yoke bow mounted LF, Ox Tail LF VDS
  • Fire control: Purga ASW combat system, 2 Drakon/Eye Bowl SSM targeting, 2 MPZ-301 Baza/Pop Group
Electronic warfare
& decoys:
Start suite with Bell Shroud intercept, Bell Squat jammer, 4 PK-16 decoy RL, 8 PK-10 decoy RL, 2 towed decoys
Armament:
Aircraft carried: Ka-27 on Krivak III only

The Project 1135 Burevestnik (Storm Petrel) class were a series of frigates built for the Soviet Navy. These ships are commonly known by their NATO reporting name of Krivak and are divided into Krivak I, Krivak II (both navy), and Krivak III (coast guard) classes.

These ships were designed as a successor to the Riga class. The design started in the late 1950s and matured as an anti-submarine ship in the 1960s. A total of 40 ships were built, 32 ships for the Soviet Navy (Russian Navy) and 8 modified ships of Nerey (Krivak III) subclass for the KGB Maritime Border Guard. Currently 7 of Nerey subclass are in FSB Coast Guard and one is part of Ukrainian Navy.

The ship's unique features—the bow missile box, the stack and the angled mast, earned it a rap-like nickname among U. S. sailors that comes from their foreign ship silhouette identification training — "Hot dog pack, Smokestack, Guns in Back — Krivak."

How many ships remain in active duty is uncertain. According to some sources Russia has four units in service and the Ukrainian Navy, one.[2][3] Russian press listed three units operational in February 2008, one with the Baltic Fleet and two with the Black Sea Fleet (BSF).[4]

The Indian Navy ordered six frigates of upgraded Krivak III class as the Talwar class. Three ships were delivered in 2003-2004. Three more were delivered in 2011-2012.

On 12 October 2010, it was announced that the Yantar Yard at Kaliningrad on the Baltic Sea had won a contract to construct three new warships for the Russian Navy. The construction of the frigates for the Russian Navy will be carried out in parallel with the construction of the same-type frigates for the Indian Navy.[5][6]

Versions

  • Project 1135, Burevestnik (21 ships): Design process started in 1956 as an anti-surface frigate successor to the Riga-class frigate. The role changed to an anti-submarine ship powered by gas turbines and armed with the SS-N-14 missile. The main building yards were Zhdanov Yard (Leningrad), Yantar Yard (Kaliningrad) and Kamysh Burun Yard, (Kerch, Crimea). NATO referred to these ships as Krivak I class.
  • Project 1135 M, Burevestnik M (11 ships): This group of ships were fitted with single 100 mm guns instead of the twin 76 mm weapons of the Burevestnik design. They also had a redesigned Variable Depth Sonar (VDS) installation. All of these ships were built in Kaliningrad. NATO referred to these ships as Krivak II class.
  • Project 1135.1 Nerei (Nereus) (8 ships): These ships lacked the SS-N-14 missile system, which was replaced by a helicopter and hangar, and only one 100 mm gun at the bow of the ship. All of these ships were built at the Zaliv Works in Kerch. These ships were built for and operated by the KGB Maritime Border Guard. NATO referred to these ships as Krivak III class.
  • Project 1135.2: This was a modernisation of the Burevestnik ships Leningradski Komsomolets (renamed Legkiy in 1992), Letuchiy, Pylkiy and Zharkiy of the Krivak I group. The refit involved replacing the RBU-6000 anti-submarine mortars with SS-N-25 anti-ship missiles, new radar, sonar and ECM equipment. These ships completed their refits in 1990-92, and others were to have been modernised but the programme was cancelled with the collapse of the Soviet Union. NATO referred to these ships after their modernisation as Krivak IV class.
  • Talwar class: this is an advanced derivative built for the Indian Navy from 1999 to 2012. It could have been called Krivak IV.
  • Admiral Grigorovich class (also known as project 11356 (or 1135.6)): This is expected to be completed in similar configuration as the Talwar class. Six ships were ordered for the Black Sea Fleet, with the first one laid down on 18 December 2010; four more have been laid down, with the sixth currently planned.[7] These ships could have been called the Krivak V class.
The Soviet Burevestnik-class frigate Bezzavetny (FFG 811) collides with the US cruiser USS Yorktown in the 1988 incident.

Vessel list

Burevestnik (or Krivak I)

Name Meaning of name Builder Launched Commissioned Notes
Bditelnyy (Watchful) Yantar,
Kaliningrad
31 Dec 1970
Bodryy (Brisk) Yantar,
Kaliningrad
31 Dec 1971
Svirepyy (Fierce) Yantar,
Kaliningrad
1971
Storozhevoy (Vigilant) Yantar,
Kaliningrad
1972 30 Dec 1973 This ship was involved in a mutiny in 1975, which inspired the novel The Hunt for Red October
Silnyy (Strong) Yantar,
Kaliningrad
1972
Razyashchiy (Striking) Yantar,
Kaliningrad
1973 30 Dec 1974 Stricken in Aug 1992
Razumnyy (Clever) Yantar,
Kaliningrad
30 Dec 1974
Druzhnyy (Friendly) Yantar,
Kaliningrad
30 Sept 1975 Currently on the Moscow River in northwest Moscow, intended to become a floating museum but work not started.[8]
Dostoynyy (Virtuous) Kamysch-Burun,
Kerch
1971
Doblestnyy (Valorous) Kamysch-Burun,
Kerch
1973
Deyatelnyy (Active) Kamysch-Burun,
Kerch
1973
Bezzavetnyy (Serene) Kamysch-Burun,
Kerch
1973 Collided with USS Yorktown (CG-48) in February 1988 in what some observers have called "the last incident of the Cold War[9] "
Bezukoriznennyy (Irreproachable) Kamysch-Burun,
Kerch
Dec 1979
Ladnyy (Harmonious) Kamysch-Burun,
Kerch
1980
Porvistyy (Impetuous) Kamysch-Burun,
Kerch
10 Jan 1982 Transferred to Vladivostok 25 Nov 1994 as a training base
Zharkiy (Heated) Zhdanov,
Leningrad
26 June 1976
Zharkiy (Heated) Zhdanov,
Leningrad
26 June 1976
Retivyy (Ardent) Zhdanov,
Leningrad
28 Dec 1976
Leningradskiy Komsomolets Zhdanov,
Leningrad
1976 29 Sept 1977 Renamed Legkiy (Light) in 1992
Letuchiy (Flighty) Zhdanov,
Leningrad
10 Aug 1978
Pylkiy (Fervent) Zhdanov,
Leningrad
28 Dec 1978 Decommissioned 2012
Zadornyy (Passionate) Zhdanov,
Leningrad
5 Sept 1979

Burevestnik M (or Krivak II)

File:Krivak II class frigate, port beam view.jpg
Soviet Burevestnik M-class guided missile frigate Pytlivyy
  • Bessmennyy (Unchanging, 1979)
  • Gordelivy (Proud, 1979)
  • Gromkiy (Loud, 1979)
  • Grozyashchiy (Threatening, 1977)
  • Neukrotimyy (Untamable/Indomitable, 1978) — damaged by pyrotechnic mine during St. Petersburg Navy Day rehearsal July 2005, broken up.
  • Pytlivyy (Keen, 1982), active in Feb 2008
  • Razitelnyy (Striking, 1977)
  • Revnostnyy (Zealous, 1980)
  • Rezkiy (Sharp, 1976)
  • Rezvyy (Frisky, 1975)
  • Ryavnyy (Spirited, 1980)

Nerei

The Krivak-class frigate Hetman Sahaydachniy is the current flagship of the Ukrainian navy.[10]
File:Imeni 70-letiya VCheKa-KGB 1.jpg
Soviet KGB Border Troops Nerei class-frigate Imeni 70-Letiya Pogranichnykh Voisk (renamed Anadyr in Russian Coast Guard service) in 1988. KGB ensign is risen.

All ships were built in Kerch. All ships were intended for the Soviet border guard. Seven ships are operated by the Russian Maritime Border Guard (2008)

  • Menzhinskiy (1984)—named after Vyacheslav Menzhinsky an OGPU chairman in 1930s
  • Dzerzhinskiy (1985)—named after Felix Edmundovich Dzerzhinsky the founder of the KGB
  • Oryol (formerly Imeni XXVII syezda KPSS, 1987)—renamed after the city of Orel
  • Anadyr (formerly Imeni 70-Letiya Pogranichnykh, commemorating 70 years of the USSR Border Troops, 1988) renamed after the Anadyr Peninsula - to Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky (7th independent Maritime Border Guard Brigade); decommissioned 24.4.02
  • Pskov (formerly Imeni LXX Letiya VChk-KGB, 1988)—renamed after the city of Pskov
  • Kedrov (1989) to Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky (7th independent Maritime Border Guard Brigade); decommissioned 24 April 2002
  • Vorovskiy (1990) to Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky (7th independent Maritime Border Guard Brigade)[11]

Operated by the Ukrainian Navy

Project 11356 in Indian Navy (Talwar class)

Three improved Nerei frigates were ordered by the Indian Navy on 17 November 1997. They are known as Talwar-class frigates in Indian naval service. Three more, armed with the Brahmos missile, were ordered on 14 July 2006.[12]

Project 11356M (Admiral Grigorovich class)

Three frigates of the Admiral Grigorovich class were ordered for the Black Sea Fleet to be built by the Yantar Yard in Kaliningrad which is also building the Talwar class for the Indian Navy.

  • Admiral Grigorovich - ordered for BSF - laid down in 18 December 2010, will be delivered in 2013/2014
  • Admiral Essen - ordered for BSF - laid down in 8 July 2011, will be delivered in 2014[13]
  • Admiral Makarov - ordered for BSF - laid down in 29 Feb 2012,[14] will be delivered in 2015
  • Admiral Butakov - ordered for BSF - laid down in 12 Oct 2012, planned to be delivered till 2015
  • Admiral Istomin - planned for BSF - planned to be delivered till 2016
  • Admiral Kornilov - planned for BSF - planned to be delivered till 2016[15]

See also

Notes

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  4. Kommersant Vlast', No.7, 25 February 2008 (Russian)
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  8. EnglishRussia.com - "Friendly" Ship Guarding Moscow
  9. Video of Bezzavetniy ramming Yorktown
  10. Kozhara: Hetman Sahaidachny frigate to join NATO’s anti-piracy operation[dead link], Interfax-Ukraine (17 September 2013)
  11. 11.0 11.1 Michael Holm, Krivak III class, accessed March 2014.
  12. Russia to complete second missile frigate for Indian Navy by March
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References

  • Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Also published as Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  • Pavlov, A. S., Warships of the USSR and Russia 1945-1995 (Chatham Publishing, 1997) ISBN 1-86176-039-6.

External links