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The lead submarine Khabarovsk, was slated to be floated in June 2020.However, the launch was delayed. [1] This class of submarines is based on the Borei-class submarine's hull (other sources refers to the Project 949A class - to be verified), but is significantly smaller as it does not have the ballistic missile section.
The submarine was laid down on July 24, 1992 at the Severodvinsk Shipyard as pennant number 664 of the Oscar II class cruise missile submarines. In April 1993, submarine 664 received the name Belgorod after the Russian city with that name and the tactical designation K-139.
Khabarovsk-class submarine; Russian submarine Kursk (K-141) L. Laika-class submarine This page was last edited on 22 March 2024, at 22:21 (UTC). Text is ...
The motherships for the Poseidon underwater drones are planned to be the 09852 "Belgorod" project submarines, like the "Belgorod", and the 09851 "Khabarovsk" project submarines. [40] According to publications by the Russian state news agency TASS, the submarines can carry up to six Poseidon vehicles at once. [21] These were test launched in ...
8 November – The Akula II-class submarine K-152 Nerpa ' s freon fire extinguishing system was accidentally activated, killing 20 and injuring at least 22 people. The incident occurred while the submarine was conducting sea trials off the Russian Pacific coast. [28]
Yury Dolgorukiy is a Borei-class submarine, one of the two nuclear submarine classes (the other being the Yasen-class attack submarine) the Russian Navy has ordered. Before 2012 there were only about ten nuclear submarine patrols a year, each lasting three months at most and usually a lot less. [27]
The two ships speculated to carry the Poseidon are the Project 09852 modified Oscar-class submarine Belgorod and the Project 09851 Khabarovsk submarines. [24] [30] [42] [43] Oscar-class submarines could carry six Poseidon torpedoes at the same time for a total yield of up to 12-600 megatons. [44] [45]
Despite being a replacement for many types of SSBNs, Borei-class submarines are much smaller than those of the Typhoon class in both displacement [8] and crew (24 000 tons submerged opposed to 48 000 tons and 107 personnel as opposed to 160 for the Typhoons). In terms of class, they are more accurately a follow-on for the Delta IV-class SSBNs.