Kiev-class aircraft carrier | |
---|---|
Novorossiysk in 1986 | |
Class overview | |
Builders: | Chernomorsky Shipyard 444 |
Operators: |
Soviet Navy Russian Navy Indian Navy |
Preceded by: | Moskva class helicopter carrier |
Subclasses: | Baku Class, INS Vikramaditya |
In service: | 28 December 1975 - 1995 |
Completed: | 4 |
Active: | INS Vikramaditya |
Preserved: |
Kiev (China) Minsk (China) |
General characteristics | |
Type: | Aviation Cruiser |
Displacement: | 42,000-45,000 metric tons full load |
Length: | 273 m (896 ft) |
Beam: |
53 m (174 ft) o/a 31 m (102 ft) w/l |
Draught: | 10 m (33 ft) |
Propulsion: | 8 turbopressurized boilers, 4 steam turbines (200,000 shp), four shafts |
Speed: | 32 knots (59 km/h) |
Complement: | 1,200 to 1,600 |
Armament: |
See article for variations 80 to 200 surface-to-air missiles 2 dual-purpose guns 8 close-in weapons systems 10 torpedo tubes |
Aircraft carried: |
Up to 30, including: 12 × Yak-38 aircraft 16 x helicopters |
Aviation facilities: | Abbreviated angled aft flight deck |
The Kiev class carriers (also known as Project 1143 or as the Krechyet (Gyrfalcon) class) were the first class of fixed-wing aircraft carriers built in the Soviet Union.
First laid down in 1970 the Kiev class was partially based on a design for a full-deck carrier proposed in Project Orel. Originally the Soviet Navy wanted a supercarrier similar to the American Kitty Hawk class. However, the smaller Kiev class design was chosen because it was considered to be more cost effective.
Unlike American or British carriers, the Kiev class is a combination of a cruiser and a carrier. In the Soviet Navy this class of ships was specifically designated as a heavy aviation cruiser rather than just an aircraft carrier. Although the ships were designed with an island superstructure to starboard, with a 2/3 length angled flight deck, the foredeck was taken up with the heavy missile armament. The intended mission of the Kiev class was support for strategic missile submarines, other surface ships and naval aviation; it was capable of engaging in anti-aircraft, anti-submarine and surface warfare.
A total of four Kiev class carriers were built and commissioned, serving in the Soviet and then Russian Navy. The first three were decommissioned, of which, one was scrapped and two were sold as recreational pieces to China. The fourth ship, Admiral Gorshkov, was sold to the Indian Navy in 2004, and is currently being modernized.
General characteristics[]
- Designer: Nevskoye Planning and Design Bureau
- Builder: Nikolayev South (formerly Chernomorsky Shipyard 444)
- Power Plant: 8 turbopressurized boilers, 4 steam turbines (200,000 shp), four shafts
- Length: 273 meters overall (283 m for Vikramaditya)
- Flight Deck Width: 53 meters
- Beam: 32.6 meters
- Displacement: 43,000-45,500 metric tons full load
- Speed: 32 knots (59 km/h)
- Aircraft: 26-30
- Crew: 1,200-1,600 (including air wing)
- Armament:
- Kiev and Minsk:
- 4 × twin P-500 Bazalt SSM launchers (8 missiles)
- 2 × twin M-11 Shtorm SAM launchers (72 missiles)
- 2 × twin 9K33 Osa launchers (40 missiles)
- 2 × twin 76.2 mm AA guns
- 8 × AK-630 30 mm CIWS
- 10 × 21" torpedo tubes
- 1 × twin SUW-N-1 FRAS Anti-Submarine Rocket launcher
- Novorossiysk:
- 4 × twin P-500 Bazalt SSM launchers (8 missiles)
- 2 × twin M-11 Shtorm SAM launchers (72 missiles)
- 2 × twin 76.2 mm AA guns
- 8 × AK-630 30 mm CIWS
- 1 × twin SUW-N-1 FRAS Anti-Submarine Rocket launcher
- Baku:
- 6 × twin P-500 Bazalt SSM launchers (12 missiles)
- 24 × 8-cell 9K330 Tor vertical SAM launchers (192 missiles)
- 2 × 100 mm guns
- 8 × AK-630 30 mm CIWS
- 10 × 21" torpedo tubes
- 2 × RBU-6000 anti-submarine rocket launchers
- Kiev and Minsk:
- Date Deployed: 1975 (Kiev)
Ships[]
- Kiev (1975–1993) Sold to China
- Minsk (1978–1993) Sold to Korea → China
- Novorossiysk (1982–1993) Sold to Korea (scrapped)
- Baku (1987–1991), Admiral Gorshkov (1991-1995), now Vikramaditya (Entering Indian service in 2013)
See also[]
- List of aircraft carriers of Russia and the Soviet Union
- List of aircraft carriers
- Flight deck cruiser
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kiev class aircraft carriers. |
- Article on the Kiev Class in Russian
- Article in English from FAS
- History of the Kiev (in Russian)
- Project 1143 Kiev (in Russian)
- Kiev Class Aircraft Carriers
- MaritimeQuest Kiev Class Overview
- History of soviet aircraft carrier development
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The original article can be found at Kiev-class aircraft carrier and the edit history here.