Ivan Rogov class landing ship
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The Ivan Rogov in 1982. |
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Soviet Union/Russian Federation | |
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Builders: | Yantar Baltic Shipbuilding plant, Kaliningrad |
Operators: | Russian Federation Navy |
Commissioned: | 1978 |
Ships in Class | |
Ships in class: | 3 |
Ships in active service: | 1 |
Ships out of service: | 2 |
Preserved ships: | 2 |
General Characteristics | |
Class type: | Large Landing Ship |
Displacement: | 11,580 tons standard, 14,060 tons full load |
Length: | 157 m |
Beam: | 23.8 m |
Draught: | 6.7 m |
Propulsion and power: | 2 shafts, 2 gas turbines, 2 x 18,000hp |
Speed: | 19 knots |
Range: | 7,500 nm at 14 kt |
Capacity: | 2,500 tons of cargo |
Complement: | 239 |
Armament: | Osa-M surface-to-air missile system(1 x 2 launchers, 20 missiles)
76 mm AK-726 multipurpose gun(1 x 2 with 1000 rounds) 30 mm AK-630 air defence gun(4 x 6-barreled mounts with 16,000 cartridges) Grad-m 122 mm rocket launcher(1 with 320 rockets) |
Aircraft complement: | 4 x Ka-27 'Helix' or Ka-29 |
The Ivan Rogov, or Project 1174 class "large landing ships" are a class of amphibious transports used by the Russian Navy. Originally a class of three ships built during the cold war, only one, the Mitrofan Moskalenko, is still in service.
In the 1970's, under the impulsion of Admiral Gorshkov, the Soviet Navy greatly expanded its amphibious warfare capability. The construction of the Ivan Rogov class ships was part of this effort.
They were designed with a bow ramp for beach-landings, and a flooded well to launch amphibious transports or assault boats. This means they can serve either as LSTs or as LPDs.
This ship can carry 2,500 tons of cargo, and the typical load would consist of one battalion of 520 marines and 25 tanks. If no landing craft are carried then the extra space in the docking bay allows for the transport of 53 tanks or 80 armoured personnel carriers.
Three ships were built:
Name | Launched | Commissioned | Stricken |
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Ivan Rogov | 1976 | 1978 | 1996 |
Aleksandr Nikolayev | 1980 | 1982 | 1997 |
Mitrofan Moskalenko | 1989 | 1990 | Still in service |