Stenka-class patrol boat

Russian Maritime Border Guard Stenka class patrol craft PSKR-721
Class overview
Name: Stenka class (Project 205P)
Operators: see below
Completed: 114
General characteristics
Type: Patrol boat
Displacement: 172 tons standard, 245 tons full load
Length: 37.5 m
Beam: 7.64 m
Draught: 3.8 m
Propulsion: 3× M504 B2 Diesels; 12,500 hp
Speed: 38 knots
Range: 500 nm at 35 knots
Crew: 32 / 34
Sensors and
processing systems:
Radar: Pot drum. Sonar: Bronza Hull mounted high frequency, high frequency dipping sonar
Armament:
  • AK-230 30 mm/65
  • 1× 12.7 mm machine gun
  • 4× 40cm anti submarine torpedo tubes
  • 2 depth charge racks (12 depth charges)

The Stenka-class is the NATO reporting name for a class of patrol boats built for the Soviet Navy and Soviet Allies. The Soviet designation was Project 205P Tarantul (not to be confused with the Tarantul-class corvette). The boats are an anti-submarine patrol boat version of the Osa-class missile boat.

Design

Project 205P Stenka is a variant of the Project 205 Osa missile boat. The Stenka used the hull of the Osa class and had a slightly larger crew. The development office of the "Alma" Shipyard in Leningrad used the standardized components of the Osa missile fast patrol boat, in order to develop an anti submarine boat. The anti ship missile launch containers were replaced by four torpedo tubes but the anti-ship missile related structures and equipment were retained. The living spaces in the Stenka were improved for long patrol endurance by raising the superstructure in order to create more usable space inside, compared to the Project 205 Osa missile boat. They also installed a more powerful air conditioner.[1]

The drive system is three diesel radial engines of the type M504 B2 with a total capacity of 15,000 hp.

Armament

The primary ASW weapon for combating submarines were SET-40 torpedoes. The boats has four 406-mm torpedo tubes installed on the deck in the aft part of the boats, two on the port side and two on starboard side.

Behind the torpedo tubes on the aft deck, in the port and starboard sides, are each one Abrollgestell depth charge launcher. Twelve depth charges, six for each launcher can be carried.

As the boats of the Project 205 Osa class, the Project 205P Stenka boats has two radar-controlled AK-230 30-mm twin guns, one in the bow, the other at the rear.

One of the boats was tested with a 57-mm gun AK-725 on the bow and received a modified project number - 205PE.[2]

Sensors

The 205P project air and surface search radar is a NATO "Pot Drum" MR-102 or a NATO "Peel Cone" "positive" - Radar installed on the mast, with two antennae for the NATO "High Pole B" friend or foe identification system. The NATO "Drum Tilt" type MR-104 radar is mounted on the rear of the superstructure For directing the fire of the two AK-230 guns. The ships have an MG-345 "Bronza" submarine search system fitted, consisting of a submersible Project 133.1 MG-329 "Sheksna" sonar with an MG-11 "Tamir-11" sonar sensor built into the fuselage.

Ships

Soviet Navy

A total of 114 or 117 (sources vary) boats were built between 1967 and 1990. They were operated by the Maritime Border Guard

Ukrainian Sea Guard BG57 Mykolaiv

The Soviet Union classified the boats of their border troops as "border guard ships" (Russian Пограничные сторожевые корабли (ПСКР)) and the five boats in the Navy as gunboats (Russian артиллерийский катер).[3] A similar allocation of boats for submarine patrol are assigned into the border guards, which is rather unusual in NATO countries, and so the Project 205P patrol boat identification is used.

Export

See also

References

Notes

  1. History, Chapter 7: For the protection of the maritime borders. http://www.almaz.spb.ru/index.php?module=history&tema=charter7 (Russian)
  2. Артиллерийский катер „АК-225“ Patrouillenboot, Projekt 205P, Liste der Boote (Russian)
  3. ПСКР проекта 205П Schiffliste von Projekt 205p auf russian-ships.info (Russian)

Bibliography

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/6/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.