Udaloy-class destroyer

The Udaloy class, Soviet designation Project 1155 Fregat and Russian designation Project 11551 Fregat-M (Russian: Фрегат, 'Fregat' meaning Frigate), are series of anti-submarine guided-missile destroyers built for the Soviet Navy, seven of which are currently in service with the Russian Navy. Twelve ships were built between 1980 and 1990, while the thirteenth ship built to a modified design, known as Udaloy II class, followed in 1999. They complement the Sovremenny-class destroyers in anti-aircraft and anti-surface warfare operations. The codename Udaloy comes from an archaic Russian adjective удалой, meaning daring or bold.

Admiral Vinogradov underway
Class overview
NameUdaloy class
Builders
Operators
Preceded bySovremenny class
Succeeded byLider class
Built1977–1994
In commission1980–present
Planned15
Completed13 (12 Udaloy I, 1 Udaloy II)
Cancelled2
Active8
Laid up1
Retired5
General characteristics
TypeGuided-missile destroyer
Displacement
  • 6,930 tons standard
  • 7,570 tons full load[1]
Length163 m (535 ft)
Beam19.3 m (63 ft)
Draught6.2 m (20 ft)
Propulsion2-shaft COGAG, 2 × D090 6.7 MW and 2 × DT59 16.7 gas turbines, 120,000 hp (89 MW)
SpeedIn excess of 28 knots (52 km/h; 32 mph)[2]
Range10,500 nmi (19,400 km; 12,100 mi) at 14 kn (26 km/h; 16 mph)
Complement300
Sensors and
processing systems
  • Radar: MR-760MA Fregat-MA/Top Plate 3-D air search radar and MR-320M Topaz-V/Strut Pair air/surface search radar
  • Sonar: Horse Tail LF VDS sonar and Horse Jaw bow mounted LF sonar
  • Fire control: 2 × MR-360 Podkat/Cross Sword SA-N-9 SAM control, 2 × 3P37/Hot Flash SA-N-11 SAM control, Garpun-BAL SSM targeting
Electronic warfare
& decoys
  • Bell Squat jammer
  • Bell Shroud intercept
  • Bell Crown intercept
  • 2 × PK-2 decoy RL
  • 10 × PK-10 decoy RL in later ships
Armament
Aircraft carried2 × Ka-27 series helicopters
Aviation facilitiesHelipad and hangar

History

The Project 1155 dates to the 1970s when it was concluded that it was too costly to build large-displacement, multi-role combatants. The concept of a specialized surface ship was developed by Soviet designers. Two different types of warships were laid down, which were designed by the Severnoye Design Bureau: Project 956 destroyer and Project 1155 large anti-submarine ship. The Udaloy class are generally considered the Soviet equivalent of the American Spruance-class destroyers. There are variations in SAM and air search radar among units of the class. Based on the Krivak class, the emphasis on anti-submarine warfare (ASW) left these ships with limited anti-surface and anti-air capabilities.

In 2015, the Russian Navy initially announced that five out of the eight Project 1155 ships will be refurbished and upgraded as part of the Navy modernization program by 2022. In 2020 it was suggested that a total of eight Project 1155/1155.1 vessels would be upgraded to the same standard, though work on the remaining three units would extend beyond 2022.[3] In addition to overhauling their radio-electronic warfare and life support systems, they will receive modern missile complexes to fire P-800 Oniks and Kalibr cruise missiles.[4] The ships are to have their service life extended by 30 years until sufficient numbers of Admiral Gorshkov-class frigates are commissioned. Upgrades will include replacing the Rastrub-B missiles with 3S24 angling launchers fitted with four containers using the 3M24 anti-ship missile, and two 3S14-1155 universal VLS with 16 cells for Kalibr land attack, anti-ship, and anti-submarine cruise missiles in place of one of the AK-100 guns.[5]

Udaloy II

Following Udaloy's commissioning, designers began developing an upgrade package in 1982 to provide more balanced capabilities with a greater emphasis on anti-shipping. The Project 1155.1 Fregat II Class Large ASW Ship (NATO Codename Udaloy II) is roughly the counterpart of the Improved Spruance class; only one was originally completed.

Similar to Udaloy externally, it was a new configuration replacing the SS-N-14 with P-270 Moskit (NATO reporting designation SS-N-22 "Sunburn") anti-ship missiles, a twin 130 mm gun, UDAV-1 anti-torpedo rockets, and gun/SAM CIWS systems. A standoff ASW capability is retained by firing RPK-2 Vyuga (NATO reporting designation 'SS-N-15 Starfish') missiles from the torpedo tubes.

Powered by a modern gas turbine engine, the Udaloy II is equipped with more capable sonars, an integrated air defense fire control system, and a number of digital electronic systems based on state-of-the-art circuitry. The original MGK-355 Polinom integrated sonar system (with NATO reporting names 'Horse Jaw' and 'Horse Tail' respectively for the hull-mounted and towed portions) on Udaloy-I ships is replaced by its successor, a newly designed Zvezda M-2 sonar system that has a range in excess of 100 kilometres (62 mi) in the 2nd convergence zone.[6] The Zvezda sonar system is considered by its designers to be the equivalent in terms of overall performance of the AN/SQS-53 on US destroyers, though much bulkier and heavier than its American counterpart: the length of the hull-mounted portion is nearly 30 m (98 ft). The torpedo approaching warning function of the Polinom sonar system is retained and further improved by its successor.

Operational history

In 2008, Admiral Chabanenko became the first Russian warship to transit the Panama Canal since World War II.[7]

Vice-Admiral Kulakov deployed to the Mediterranean Sea from its home base in Russia's Northern Fleet in June 2014.[8]

Ships

NameNamesakeLaid downLaunchedCommissionedStatus
Udaloy I class
Udaloy"bold"23 July 19775 February 198031 December 1980Decommissioned in 1997. Scrapped at Murmansk in 2002.
Vice-Admiral KulakovNikolai Kulakov4 November 197716 May 198029 December 1981Modernization completed in 2010. In service with the Northern Fleet.
Marshal VasilyevskyAleksandr Vasilevsky22 April 197929 December 19818 December 1983Decommissioned in 2006 and scrapped.
Admiral ZakharovMikhail Zakharov16 October 19814 November 198230 December 1983Caught fire in 1991. Decommissioned in 2002 and scrapped.
Admiral SpiridonovEmil Spiridonov11 April 198228 April 198430 December 1984Decommissioned in 2001 and scrapped.
Admiral TributsVladimir Filippovich Tributs19 April 198026 March 198330 December 1985Caught fire in 1991, but modernized and returned to service.[9] In service with the Pacific Fleet.[10]
Marshal ShaposhnikovBoris Shaposhnikov25 May 198327 December 198430 December 1985Returned to service on 27 April 2021 after reconfiguration, now referred to as a frigate. In service with the Pacific Fleet.[11][12]
SeveromorskSeveromorsk12 June 198424 December 198530 December 1987In service with the Northern Fleet.
Admiral LevchenkoGordey Levchenko27 January 198221 February 198530 September 1988Active[13] with the Northern Fleet as of 2022[14]
Admiral VinogradovNikolai Vinogradov5 February 19864 June 198730 December 1988Undergoing refit to Marshal Shaposhnikov standard.[15] Set to return to service with the Pacific Fleet.
Admiral KharlamovNikolay Kharlamov8 July 198629 June 198830 December 1989Decommissioned on 1 December 2020.[16]
Admiral PanteleyevYuri Aleksandrovich Panteleyev28 January 19887 February 199019 December 1991In service with the Pacific Fleet.
Udaloy II class
Admiral ChabanenkoAndrei Chabanenko28 February 198916 June 199428 January 1999In overhaul, planned to return to service with the Northern Fleet by 2025.[17][18]
Admiral BasistyNikolai Basistiy1991Scrapped in 1994
Admiral KucherovStepan KucherovScrapped in 1993

Gallery

See also

References

External links