Soviet submarine K-324
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The K-324 was a Soviet Union Victor III Class submarine that was decommissioned in 1981 after a collision. It was assigned to the Northern Fleet, stationed out of St. Peterburg / Leningrad.
Contents |
[edit] Construction and Launch
The Admiralty yard in St. Petersburg, the main producer of Northern Fleet submarines, produced the K-324 in 1979. It was the 7th vessel of the Komsomolsk line.
[edit] Collision
In 1981, the K-324 collided with an unidentified American submarine of the Los Angeles class in the Peter the Great Bay, not far from Vladivostok. The submarine was heavily damaged, to all reports. The United States government denied any of their submarines were in the area, and no US submarine reported any damage during that time period, but the Soviets reported none of their submarines were in the Bay aside from K-324.
[edit] Deactivation
Shortly after the collision, the K-324 was listed as decomissioned. In 1985 it was activated again and updated with anechoic tiling and a new screw-blade propeller based on sound-quieting designs, but by 1987 was listed as decommissioned again.
[edit] External Links
[1] - Listing of Soviet Submarines
Victor-class submarine |
Project 671, 671 V, 671 K — Yersh — Victor-I |
Northern Fleet |
K-38 | B-369 (ex-K-69) | K-147 | K-53 | K-306 | K-323 | K-370 | K-438 | K-367 | K-314 | K-398 | K-454 | K-462 | K-469 | K-481 |
Project 671 RT — Victor-II |
Northern Fleet |
K-387 | K-371 | K-476 | K-513 | K-517 | K-488 | K-495 | |
Project 671 RTM — Shuka — Victor-III |
Northern Fleet |
K-138 | K-292 | K-324 | K-388 | K-327 | K-218 | K-254 | K-298 | K-502 | K-244 | K-255 | K-299 | K-358 | K-114 | K-448 | K-524 |
Pacific Fleet |
K-242 | K-247 | K-251 | K-264 | K-305 | K-355 | K-360 | K-412 | K-492 | K-507 |
|