New Russian Attack Sub to Join Navy on Dec. 30 RIA Novosti, PUBLISHED 28.12.2013 Russia’s first Project 885M Yasen-class attack submarine, the Severodvinsk, will be handed over to the navy on December 30, a defense industry source told RIA Novosti on Thursday. The submarine, designated as Graney-class by NATO, has been under construction at the Sevmash shipyard in northern Russia since 1993. “The acceptance act for the first Yasen will be signed at Sevmash on December 30,” the source said. Media reports previously said the navy’s main command refused to commission the nuclear-powered Severodvinsk over unspecified technical problems. However, Sevmash said in October that the submarine had completed four rounds of additional sea trials since May and that all such trials were a success. The Severodvinsk is one of eight Yasen-class attack boats ordered by the Russian navy. The second and third subs of the series, the Kazan and the Novosibirsk, are being built under the updated Project 885M Yasen-M design. The Severodvinsk has a submerged displacement of 13,800 tons, length of 119 meters, speed of 31 knots, and can dive to 600 meters. It has a crew of 90 including 32 officers. The submarine has been designed to launch cruise missiles with conventional or nuclear warheads to a range of up to 3,000 miles (5,000 kilometers), as well as effectively engage other submarines, surface warships and land-based targets. Its main armament consists of 24 Oniks (SS-N-26) and Kalibr (SS-N-27) cruise missiles, self-guided torpedoes and mines. Topics: Russia, Nuclear ships Other news: Rosatom Boosts Foreign Orders Portfolio to $74 Bln Rosatom signed in Helsinki an expected deal with Finnish nuclear consortium Fennovoima on the construction of a 1,200-megawatt Hanhikivi-1 nuclear reactor in Pyhajoki, northwest Finland. First Chapter of US-Russian Megatons-to-Megawatts Deal Closes Russia started delivery of the last batch of low-enriched uranium to the United States under a long-standing program to convert Soviet-made nuclear weapons into fuel. Russia Starts Building Largest-Ever Nuclear Icebreaker The yet-unnamed ship, to be powered by two nuclear reactors, will be 14 meters (46 feet) longer and four meters (13 feet) wider than the current largest, the 50 Let Pobedy (50 Years of Victory). |
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