Soviet submarine K-33

Soviet submarine K-33

The K-33 was a Soviet nuclear powered "Project 658" class submarine (NATO reporting name: "Hotel II"). She belonged to the Soviet Northern Fleet and carried the identification number 921.

The K-33 was built at Factory No. 902 in Severodvinsk, Soviet Union, as a Hotel I class submarine, launched on 6 August 1960 and was commissioned on July 5, 1961. She was decommissioned in 1990. The K-33 was involved in two incidents.

In 1964 the K-33 was repaired and modernized into "658M"-standard ("Hotel" II), i.e. installing a new missile complex giving her capability to fire missiles while submerged.

Kattegat incident

On April 12, 1963 the K-33 collided with the Finnish merchant vessel M/S "Finnclipper" in Kattegat.

The M/S "Finnclipper", which was owned by Enso Gutzeit was on its way to the United States with a load of 6,000 tons of paper. When they reached Kattegat, there was a mist. The crew heard engine noise on their port side at 11.05 am and a submarine emerged. The "Finnclipper" steered heavily to starboard to try to avoid a collision, but to no avail.

The "Finnclipper" immediately stopped and returned to the submarine to see if it needed help. Two Russian officers on board told the Finnish captain that the side had received large structural damage and that the side had been pressed in and had become deformed. The Soviet officers did not reveal their nationality, but told that it was a Warsaw Pact submarine. The Finns could however read the number 921 clearly on the side of the submarine.

The K-33 had been on its way to a patrol in the North Atlantic. The Finnish vessel managed to cross the Atlantic ocean although she had sprung a leak. The K-33 limped to Murmansk although she was severely damaged. The captain of the Finnish vessel, Runar Lindholm, gave a maritime declaration when arriving in New York, but the report was labeled secret for over 44 years. The Soviets claimed that it was not a nuclear submarine, although she had been clearly identified. It has been speculated that the incident was held secret due to the Soviet-Finnish YYA-treaty, where the Soviets would have forbid the Finns to report this in the news media or even to research the incident.

On April 4, 2007, the Finnish captain and maritime author Jaakko Varimaa, who at the time was Second Mate on the Finnish vessel, published his book "Sukellusvene sumussa" ("Submarine in the mist") revealing the accident.

Arctic incident

In 1965, the K-33 was involved in a radiation emergency in the Arctic, involving dehermeticity of fuel elements. [ [http://www2.polito.it/didattica/climatechange/Rapporto_Sommergibili.pdf Sommergibili Nucleari: Problemi di sicurezza e impatto ambientale] ]

Technical specifications

*Dimensions
**Length: 114 m
**Width: 9.2 m
**Height:
**Draft: 7.31 meters
**Displacement: 4,080 m3 surfaced, 5,000 m3 submerged
*Operational details
**Power Plant: two VM-A pressurized water reactors, 190 MW each
**Propulsion: two steam turbines, 17,500 hp each
**Speed: 18 knots surfaced, 26 knots submerged
**Range:
**Complement: 104 men
**Maximum depth: 240 meters design, 300 meters maximum
**Crash dive:
**Endurance: 50 days
*Armaments
**four 533mm (21-inch) torpedo tubes forward, four 400mm (16-inch) torpedo tubes aft
**D-4 launch system with three R-21 missiles

ources

*cite book
last = Varimaa
first = Jaakko
authorlink =
title = Sukellusvene sumussa
publisher = Revontuli
series =
year = 2007
doi =
isbn = 978-952-5170-67-2

* [http://www.iltasanomat.fi/uutiset/kotimaa/uutinen.asp?id=1346925 Ilta-Sanomat 4 April 2007]

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Soviet submarine K-19 — This article is about the Soviet submarine K 19. For the 2002 film dramatization of events involving the submarine, see K 19: The Widowmaker. For other uses, see K 19 (disambiguation). Not to be confused with Soviet submarine K 219. Career (USSR) …   Wikipedia

  • Soviet submarine K-77 — K 77 was a project 651 (also known by its NATO reporting name of Juliett class ) cruise missile submarine of the Soviet Navy. Her keel was laid down in the Krasnoye Sormovo shipyard in Gorky on 31 January 1963. She was launchedon 11 March 1965,… …   Wikipedia

  • Soviet submarine L-3 — The World War II Soviet submarine L 3 belonged to the L class or Leninets class of minelayer submarines. It had been named Frunzenets before it was decided that submarines should stop having names and carry numbers instead.Under Captain 3rd Rank… …   Wikipedia

  • Soviet submarine S-363 — was a Whiskey class submarine of the Baltic Fleet, which became famous under the designation U 137 when it ran aground 10 km from Karlskrona, one of the larger naval bases of the Swedish fleet, on the East coast of Sweden on October 27 1981. U137 …   Wikipedia

  • Soviet submarine S-350 — was a Romeo class submarine.On January 11, 1962, the Soviet Foxtrot class submarine B 37 exploded as the result of a fire which detonated all torpedo warheads in the submarine. The S 350, which was moored next to B 37, was heavily damaged. Eleven …   Wikipedia

  • Soviet submarine K-278 Komsomolets — K 278, 1 Jan 1986 Career …   Wikipedia

  • Soviet submarine K-431 — The Soviet submarine K 431 (originally the Soviet submarine K 31) was a Soviet nuclear powered submarine that had a reactor accident on August 10, 1985.[1] An explosion occurred during refueling of the submarine at Chazhma Bay, Vladivostok.[2]… …   Wikipedia

  • Soviet submarine K-324 — A Victor III submarine similar to the K 324 Career (Soviet Union) …   Wikipedia

  • Soviet submarine K-314 — Career (Soviet Union) Name: K 314 Laid down …   Wikipedia

  • Soviet submarine K-279 — K 279 was the first Project 667B Murena (also known by the NATO reporting name Delta I ) ballistic missile submarine of the Soviet Navy. Development of Project 667B began in 1965. Her keel was laid down in 1971 by Sevmash at the Severodvinsk… …   Wikipedia

  • Soviet submarine K-320 — Many sources refer to this submarine as Soviet submarine K 329 or K 429 The nuclear powered Charlie I Soviet submarine K 320 had a reactor accident prior to commissioning while under construction. The event occurred on January 18, 1970 [… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”