Ukrainian frigate Sevastopol

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ukrainian frigate Sevastopol laid up in the Northern Bay of Sevastopol, 9 September 2005
History
Soviet UnionRussia
NameRazitelnyy
Ordered5 June 1974
BuilderYantar Shipyard (Kaliningrad)
Laid down11 February 1975
Launched1 July 1976
Commissioned31 December 1976
FateTransferred to Ukraine on 1 August 1997
Ukraine
NameSevastopol
Acquired1 August 1997
Decommissioned30 November 2004
Renamed1997
ReclassifiedNaval target training for Turkey
IdentificationU132
FateTowed to Istanbul on 6 July 2006
General characteristics
Class and typeBurevestnik-class frigate
Displacement3,200 tons
Length405.3 ft (123.5 m)
Beam46.3 ft (14.1 m)
Draft15.1 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)
Speed32 knots (59 km/h; 37 mph)
Range4,995 nmi (9,251 km; 5,748 mi) at 14 knots (26 km/h; 16 mph)
Complement200
Sensors and
processing systems
  • Radar: 1 MR-755 Fregat-M/Half Plate air/surface 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

The Ukrainian frigate Sevastopol was a former Soviet frigate (guard ship) Razitelnyy of the Burevestnik-class (NATO codename: Krivak II) ship built for the Soviet Navy in the late 1970s.

Service history[edit]

Ukrainian service[edit]

In summer of 1997 during the division of the Black Sea fleet she was transferred to the Ukrainian Navy, receiving the name of Sevastopol.

Fate[edit]

Sevastopol was decommissioned in 2004 and was sold to Turkey in 2005 as a naval target training.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

External links[edit]