Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Pravda-class submarine: Serie IV 3 Squadron submarines. Malyutka-class submarine: Series VI, VI-bis, XII, XV 110 Small submarines for coastal patrols. S-class submarine: Series IX, IX-bis 41 Medium submarines, built using German project (early version of Type IX). K-class submarine: Serie XIV 11 Cruiser submarines with combined arms. TS-class ...
Ivan Bubnov, designer of Akula, in front of the submarine. During the Russo-Japanese War the Imperial Russian Navy used its submarines for patrols within 150 nautical miles of their base at Vladivostok, [1] [2] and the main takeaway from that conflict for Russia's submarine arm was the need to create boats that could operate at longer distances. [3]
Russian submarine B-237; Russian submarine B-871; Russian submarine Bryansk (K-117) Russian submarine BS-64; D. Russian submarine Daniil Moskovsky (B-414)
Russian submarine Sarov; Z. Ukrainian submarine Zaporizhzhia This page was last edited on 10 October 2020, at 22:54 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative ...
Size comparison of common World War II submarines with the Typhoon class Soviet Typhoon-class ballistic missile submarine, with inset of an American football field graphic to convey a sense of the enormous size of the vessel. The Typhoon class was developed under Project 941 as the Soviet Akula class (Акула), meaning shark.
The submarine again launched Kalibr cruise missile during the Grom-2019 strategic nuclear exercise on 17 October 2019. [18] In Autumn 2019, she reportedly participated in the largest post-Cold War Russian submarine drills. The drills, sometimes dubbed as operation, included ten submarines, among them two diesel-electric and eight nuclear.
K-84 Ekaterinburg (Russian: К-84 Екатеринбург) is a Project 667BDRM Delfin-class (NATO reporting name: Delta IV) nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarine. The submarine was laid down on 17 February 1982 at the Russian Northern Machine-Building Enterprise . [1] It was commissioned into the Soviet Navy on 30 December 1985. [1]
Rostov-na-Donu (B-237) (Russian: Б-237 «Ростов-на-Дону») is an improved Kilo–class attack submarine of the Russian Navy, built in 2014. It became part of Russia's Black Sea Fleet . The submarine was heavily damaged in a Ukrainian attack on 13 September 2023.