Ivan Rogov-class landing ship

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Amphibious Ivan Rogov class.jpg
The Ivan Rogov in 1982.
Class overview
Builders: Yantar Baltic Shipbuilding plant, Kaliningrad
Operators:
In commission: 1978
Completed: 3
Active: 0
Retired: 3
Preserved: 2
General characteristics
Type: Dock landing ship / Large Landing Ship
Displacement: 11,580 tons standard, 14,060 tons full load
Length: 157 m (515 ft)
Beam: 23.8 m (78 ft)
Draught: 6.7 m (22 ft)
Propulsion: 2 shafts, 2 gas turbines, 2 × 18,000 hp
Speed: 19 knots (35 km/h)
Range: 7,500 nm at 14 knots (26 km/h)
Capacity: 2,500 tons of cargo
Complement: 239
Armament:
  • Osa-M surface-to-air missile system(1 × 2 launchers, 20 missiles)
  • 76 mm AK-726 multipurpose gun(1 × 2 with 1000 rounds)
  • 30 mm AK-630 air defence gun(4 × 6-barreled mounts with 16,000 cartridges)
  • Grad-m 122 mm rocket launcher(1 with 320 rockets)
Aircraft carried: 4 × Kamov Ka-27 or Ka-29

The Project 1174 (Nosorog) class landing ship (NATO reporting name: Ivan Rogov) is a class of Soviet/Russian dock landing ships (Soviet classification: Large landing ship, Russian: БДК, большой десантный корабль). They were built as part of the expansion of the Soviet Navy's amphibious warfare capabilities in the 1970s.

Project 1174 has both bow ramp and well deck; it may operate as either a LST or as a LPD. A typical load is one battalion of 520 marines and 25 tanks. Up to 53 tanks or 80 armoured personnel carriers may be carried if the well deck is used for ground vehicle parking. 2,500 tons of cargo may be carried.

Ships

Name Launched Commissioned Stricken
Ivan Rogov 1976 1978 1996
Aleksandr Nikolayev 1980 1982 1997
Mitrofan Moskalenko 1989 1990 2012

Mitrofan Moskalenko was decommissioned after the Russian Ministry of Defence determined modernization would be as costly as buying a new ship.[1][2]

The Ivan Rogov, c. 1985.

Electronics and sensors

  • E-Band Surveillance Radar
  • Two I-Band Navigation Radars
  • G-Band Fire Control Radar (for 76mm Gun)
  • H/I-Band Fire Control Radar (for 30mm Guns)
  • F/H/I-Band Fire Control Radar (for Osa-M Missile System)
  • 17 channel radio suite
  • Optronic Fire Control System
  • Electronic Warfare System with Electronic Support Measures (ESM)

External links

See also

References

  1. http://rusnavy.com/news/navy/index.php?ELEMENT_ID=15886
  2. http://rusnavy.com/news/navy/index.php?ELEMENT_ID=15866


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