Large anti-submarine ship Tallinn. Large anti-submarine ship Tallinn Further history of the BOD Tallinn

During these New Year's days, I really don't want to think about bad things. But people continue to die. Vice Admiral Yu.G. Ustimenko died. I am posting here the addresses of the Chairman of the Union of Military Sailors A.F. Kresik.

1. January 3, 2014 SATAN interrupted the life of Vice Admiral Ustimenko
http://my.mail.ru/community/voen_mor/2908BDFAC2DB1296.html

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BOD "Tallinn"

BOD "Tallinn" (plant No. 2007, from 08/2/1990 - Vladivostok). Shipyard named after 61 Kommunara (Nikolaev): 11.1975; 11.1976; 12.1979

Was part of the Pacific Fleet. From 13 to 17.12.1981, the ship visited the port of Maputo (Mozambique) on a friendly visit, from 16 to 20.02.1984 - the port of Massawa (Ethiopia), from 13 to 17.08.1985 - the port Wonsan (DPRK), and from March 12 to March 16, 1986 - the port of Djibouti. Presumably, in 1995 it was withdrawn from the fleet and transferred to ARVI for disposal.

The Tallinn BOD was included in the lists of the USSR Navy on May 7, 1975 and on November 5, 1975, was laid down at the Shipyard named after 61 Kommunard in Nikolaev, construction number S-2007. The launch took place exactly a year later - on November 5, 1976, and on November 17, 1979, the ship went to sea for state tests. The acceptance certificate was signed on board the ship by the State Commission on December 31, 1979, but the Naval flag was first raised only on February 23, 1980. The Tallinn BOD became the first ship in the series to receive the Rastrub universal missile system. From December 31, 1979, the BOD was included in the 175 BrRK 10 OPEC.

On May 28, 1980, "Tallinn" left Sevastopol, heading to the BS in the Mediterranean Sea. Then the ship proceeded to the capital of Estonia, taking part in the celebration of the USSR Navy Day on July 26. It was supposed to transfer the Tallinn to Vladivostok (Pacific Naval Base) along the Northern Sea Route, but in the end the BOD departed along the usual route. In 1981, the ship successfully completed BS tasks in the Indian Ocean and from December 13 to 17, the Tallinn BOD, together with the Letuchy TFR (under the flag of the commander of the 8th OPEC, Rear Admiral M.N. Khronopulo) made an official visit to the port of Maputo (Mozambique ). The ship made business calls to the ports of Aden, Victoria and Maputo. BOD was in the Seychelles during the failed coup attempt. In 1982, the Tallinn BOD again entered the BS in the Indian Ocean and made a business call to the port of Victoria in the Seychelles. In Victoria, an airborne platoon from the Tallinn ensured the trial of mercenaries captured during the coup attempt. In 1983, the ship was on the BS and visited the ports of Aden and Victoria. The official visit of the BOD "Tallinn" under the flag of the commander of the Navy squadron, Rear Admiral F.N. Gromov, to the port of Massawa (Ethiopia) took place from February 16 to 20, 1984. In October of the same year, the BOD "Tallinn", escorting the TAVKR "Minsk", was in the Da Nang area and participated in Soviet-Vietnamese landing exercises. The detachment of Soviet ships was commanded by Vice Admiral N.Ya. Yasakov.

On March 1, 1985, the ship was reassigned to the 183rd BrPK. In August 1985, a detachment of ships of the squadron consisting of the BOD "Tallinn", the TFR "Purivisty" and "Zealant" under the command of Vice Admiral N.Ya. Yasakov paid an official visit to the North Korean port of Wonsan. The second joint exercise of the Pacific Fleet and the KPA Navy Fleet on the topic “Deploying submarines in conditions of mine and anti-submarine danger and delivering joint strikes against enemy naval groups” was held from October 13 to 16, 1987. This exercise was already led by the commander of the KPA Navy Fleet, Vice Admiral Kwon Sang Ho , and the deputy head of the Pacific Fleet forces was Rear Admiral B.F. Prikhodko. The following participants from the Pacific Fleet took part in the exercise: SSGN pr. 675MK “K-23”, BOD “Tallinn” (KU), SKR pr. 1135 “Gordelivy”, “Zealous”, MTShchpr. 266M “Anchor”, “Tral”, one support vessel, 10 fleet aviation aircraft; from the KPA VF: 4 diesel submarines pr. 613 and 633; 3 MPK, 4 RKA pr. 183, 6 TKA, 3 boat technical control units, a patrol boat and 21 aircraft. During the exercise and at its completion, the Tallinn BOD visited the port of Rajin.

In April 1988, the KPUG, consisting of the BOD “Marshal Voroshilov”, “Tallinn”, the TFR “Zyanyi” and “Gordelivy”, in cooperation with the nuclear submarine “K-436” and anti-aircraft aircraft, carried out the withdrawal of the SSBN “K-479” to the combat duty area. Then a detachment of ships conducted a control search for foreign submarines along the Kuril ridge. On April 21, a foreign nuclear submarine was discovered, with which the KPUG maintained contact for a total of 8 hours 37 minutes (with interruptions), and then the boat was forced out of the strait zone.

From October 25 to October 29, warships consisting of the Tallinn BOD, the Gordelivy, Zealny missile boats and the R-76, R-83, R-229, and R-230 missile boats took part in the third joint exercise with the forces of the North Korean Eastern Fleet under the leadership of the commander of the DPRK Navy, Admiral Kim Il Chol. During the exercise, the ships visited the port of Najin. Since January 1989, the ship has been part of the 201st BrPK. In September 1989, the fourth joint exercise of the forces of the Pacific Fleet and the KPA Military Fleet of the DPRK was held on the topic “Conducting joint military operations to defeat enemy naval groups while protecting sea communications.” The following from the Pacific Fleet were invited to participate in the exercise: Military-industrial complex "Tallinn", EM pr. 956 "Prudent" and "Stoikiy", SKR pr. 1135 "Gordelivy" and "Purysty", RKA pr. 1241 "R-230" and "R- 261", 7 aircraft; from the KPA VF: 3 diesel submarines pr. 633, 1 SKR, 2 PKA, 8 RKA, 12 TKA, four support vessels. The military-industrial complex "Tallinn", the TFR "Gordelivy" and "Poryvisty", the RKA "R-230" and "R-261" called at the port of Najin. This joint exercise with the North Korean Navy was the last.

In 1990, Tallinn was sent to Dalzavod for repairs. After a year and a half of work, the renovation was actually frozen due to lack of money, which was allocated only to provide parking. Since March 1991, the BOD was included in the 48DiPK. In September 1992, the ship received a new name - Vladivostok. And although almost 70 percent of it was repaired, including the gas turbine unit, there were no funds to install them. There was also no time to complete the repairs. The military-industrial complex was put on hold. It was proposed to convert it into a training facility, but again no money was found. Vladivostok was withdrawn from the fleet and sold for scrapping to India in 1994. But at the same time, from August 30, 1994, he even managed to be part of the 44th BrPK.

Board numbers: 547 (1985), 711, 531 (1989), 730.

Notable ship commanders:

captain 2nd rank Yu.G. Ustimenko,

captain 3rd rank V.V. Kobelev,

captain 2nd rank V.P. Vorokov,

captain 2nd rank V.A. Zhuravlev,

captain 2nd rank N. Nagervadze.

Tallinn is a large anti-submarine ship of Project 1134B. Named after the city of Tallinn. He served in the USSR Pacific Fleet. Enlisted in the list of Navy ships on May 7, 1975. On November 5 of the same year, construction of the ship began

at the shipbuilding plant named after 61 communards in Nikolaev (serial number 2007).

Main characteristics:

Displacement 6670 t (standard), 8533 t (full).
Length 161.9 m (according to the vertical line), 173.4 m (maximum).
Width 16.78 m (according to the vertical line), 18.54 m (maximum).
Draft 5.3 m (average), 6.35 m (with protruding parts).
Gas turbine engines (4 afterburners, 2 sustainers).
Power 93,060 l. With.
Speed ​​32 knots (full), 18.06 knots (economic).
Cruising range 6500/7100 miles at 18 knots.
Sailing autonomy is 30 days (based on provisions).
Crew 380 - 425 people (including 47 officers).

Weapons:

Radar weapons, space navigation system "Gateway",
2 artillery fire control radars MR-105,
REP systems: 2×2 140 mm PK-2, 8×10 122 mm PK-10.
Electronic weapons of the all-round GAS "Titan-2T".
Anti-aircraft artillery 2x2 76 mm AK-726 (1600 rounds),
4x1 six-barreled 30mm AK-630 guns.
Missile armament 2×4 PLURK "Rastrub-B",
2×2 launchers for the Shtorm air defense system (80 V-601 missiles),
2x2 "Osa-M" (40 missiles).
Anti-submarine weapons 2x12 213-mm RBU-6000 (144 RGB-60),
2x6 305 mm RBU-1000 (48 RGB-10).
Mine and torpedo armament 2x5 533-mm TA PTA-53-1134B (10 torpedoes 53-65K or SET-65).
Aviation group 1 Ka-25PL helicopter, deck hangar.

November 5, 1976 launched. On November 17, 1979, she went to sea for state trials and entered service on December 31 of the same year.

On February 23, 1980, the Naval flag was raised for the first time. On March 28 of the same year, it was included in the 175 BrRK 10 OPESK of the Red Banner Pacific Fleet.

She became the first of the 1134B series ships to adopt the universal missile system “Rastrob”.

From December 13 to 17, 1981 he visited Maputo (Mozambique), from February 16 to 20, 1984 - to Massawa (Ethiopia), from August 13 to 17, 1985 - to Wonsan (North Korea), from March 12 to 16, 1986 made a business call to Djibouti.

In 1990, it was sent for repairs to Dalzavod, which was actually frozen. Since March 1991, it was included in the 48th division of anti-submarine ships. In September 1992 it received a new name - “Vladivostok”.


BOD "Tallinn" (plant No. 2007, from 08/2/1990 - Vladivostok). Shipyard named after 61 Kommunara (Nikolaev): 11.1975; 11.1976; 12.1979

Was part of the Pacific Fleet. From 13 to 17.12.1981, the ship visited the port of Maputo (Mozambique) on a friendly visit, from 16 to 20.02.1984 - the port of Massawa (Ethiopia), from 13 to 17.08.1985 - the port Wonsan (DPRK), and from March 12 to March 16, 1986 - the port of Djibouti. Presumably, in 1995 it was withdrawn from the fleet and transferred to ARVI for disposal.

The Tallinn BOD was included in the lists of the USSR Navy on May 7, 1975 and on November 5, 1975, was laid down at the Shipyard named after 61 Kommunard in Nikolaev, construction number S-2007. The launch took place exactly a year later - on November 5, 1976, and on November 17, 1979, the ship went to sea for state tests. The acceptance certificate was signed on board the ship by the State Commission on December 31, 1979, but the Naval flag was first raised only on February 23, 1980. The Tallinn BOD became the first ship in the series to receive the Rastrub universal missile system. From December 31, 1979, the BOD was included in the 175 BrRK 10 OPEC.

On May 28, 1980, "Tallinn" left Sevastopol, heading to the BS in the Mediterranean Sea. Then the ship proceeded to the capital of Estonia, taking part in the celebration of the USSR Navy Day on July 26. It was supposed to transfer the Tallinn to Vladivostok (Pacific Naval Base) along the Northern Sea Route, but in the end the BOD departed along the usual route. In 1981, the ship successfully completed BS tasks in the Indian Ocean and from December 13 to 17, the Tallinn BOD, together with the Letuchy TFR (under the flag of the commander of the 8th OPEC, Rear Admiral M.N. Khronopulo) made an official visit to the port of Maputo (Mozambique ). The ship made business calls to the ports of Aden, Victoria and Maputo. BOD was in the Seychelles during the failed coup attempt. In 1982, the Tallinn BOD again entered the BS in the Indian Ocean and made a business call to the port of Victoria in the Seychelles. In Victoria, an airborne platoon from the Tallinn ensured the trial of mercenaries captured during the coup attempt. In 1983, the ship was on the BS and visited the ports of Aden and Victoria. The official visit of the BOD "Tallinn" under the flag of the commander of the Navy squadron, Rear Admiral F.N. Gromov, to the port of Massawa (Ethiopia) took place from February 16 to 20, 1984. In October of the same year, the BOD "Tallinn", escorting the TAVKR "Minsk", was in the Da Nang area and participated in Soviet-Vietnamese landing exercises. The detachment of Soviet ships was commanded by Vice Admiral N.Ya. Yasakov.

On March 1, 1985, the ship was reassigned to the 183rd BrPK. In August 1985, a detachment of ships of the squadron consisting of the BOD "Tallinn", the TFR "Purivisty" and "Zealant" under the command of Vice Admiral N.Ya. Yasakov paid an official visit to the North Korean port of Wonsan. The second joint exercise of the Pacific Fleet and the KPA Navy Fleet on the topic “Deploying submarines in conditions of mine and anti-submarine danger and delivering joint strikes against enemy naval groups” was held from October 13 to 16, 1987. This exercise was already led by the commander of the KPA Navy Fleet, Vice Admiral Kwon Sang Ho , and the deputy head of the Pacific Fleet forces was Rear Admiral B.F. Prikhodko. The following participants from the Pacific Fleet took part in the exercise: SSGN pr. 675MK “K-23”, BOD “Tallinn” (KU), SKR pr. 1135 “Gordelivy”, “Zealous”, MTShchpr. 266M “Anchor”, “Tral”, one support vessel, 10 fleet aviation aircraft; from the KPA VF: 4 diesel submarines pr. 613 and 633; 3 MPK, 4 RKA pr. 183, 6 TKA, 3 boat technical control units, a patrol boat and 21 aircraft. During the exercise and at its completion, the Tallinn BOD visited the port of Rajin.

In April 1988, the KPUG, consisting of the BOD “Marshal Voroshilov”, “Tallinn”, the TFR “Zyanyi” and “Gordelivy”, in cooperation with the nuclear submarine “K-436” and anti-aircraft aircraft, carried out the withdrawal of the SSBN “K-479” to the combat duty area. Then a detachment of ships conducted a control search for foreign submarines along the Kuril ridge. On April 21, a foreign nuclear submarine was discovered, with which the KPUG maintained contact for a total of 8 hours 37 minutes (with interruptions), and then the boat was forced out of the strait zone.

From October 25 to October 29, warships consisting of the Tallinn BOD, the Gordelivy, Zealny missile boats and the R-76, R-83, R-229, and R-230 missile boats took part in the third joint exercise with the forces of the North Korean Eastern Fleet under the leadership of the commander of the DPRK Navy, Admiral Kim Il Chol. During the exercise, the ships visited the port of Najin. Since January 1989, the ship has been part of the 201st BrPK. In September 1989, the fourth joint exercise of the forces of the Pacific Fleet and the KPA Military Fleet of the DPRK was held on the topic “Conducting joint military operations to defeat enemy naval groups while protecting sea communications.” The following from the Pacific Fleet were invited to participate in the exercise: Military-industrial complex "Tallinn", EM pr. 956 "Prudent" and "Stoikiy", SKR pr. 1135 "Gordelivy" and "Purysty", RKA pr. 1241 "R-230" and "R- 261", 7 aircraft; from the KPA VF: 3 diesel submarines pr. 633, 1 SKR, 2 PKA, 8 RKA, 12 TKA, four support vessels. The military-industrial complex "Tallinn", the TFR "Gordelivy" and "Poryvisty", the RKA "R-230" and "R-261" called at the port of Najin. This joint exercise with the North Korean Navy was the last.

In 1990, Tallinn was sent to Dalzavod for repairs. After a year and a half of work, the renovation was actually frozen due to lack of money, which was allocated only to provide parking. Since March 1991, the BOD was included in the 48DiPK. In September 1992, the ship received a new name - Vladivostok. And although almost 70 percent of it was repaired, including the gas turbine unit, there were no funds to install them. There was also no time to complete the repairs. The military-industrial complex was put on hold. It was proposed to convert it into a training facility, but again no money was found. Vladivostok was withdrawn from the fleet and sold for scrapping to India in 1994. But at the same time, from August 30, 1994, he even managed to be part of the 44th BrPK.

Board numbers: 547 (1985), 711, 531 (1989), 730.

Notable ship commanders:

captain 2nd rank Yu.G. Ustimenko,

captain 3rd rank V.V. Kobelev,

captain 2nd rank V.P. Vorokov,

captain 2nd rank V.A. Zhuravlev,

captain 2nd rank N.Nagervadze.P

Interesting article?