Soviet submarine K-77
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Career | |
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Ordered: | 1950s |
Laid down: | 31 January 1963 |
Launched: | 11 March 1965 |
Commissioned: | 31 October 1965 |
Decommissioned: | 1991 and 1994 |
Fate: | restaurant, movie set, museum Sank in 2007 |
Stricken: | 1994 |
General characteristics | |
Displacement: | 3174 tons surfaced; 4137 tons submerged |
Length: | (281 feet 9 inches) |
Beam: | (31 feet 2 inches) |
Draft: | 7 m (23 ft) |
Propulsion: | two 4,000 shp (3000 kW) D-43 and one 1,750 shp (1305 kW) 2D-42 diesel engines, two 3,000 shp (2200 kW) PG-141 main and two 500 shp (370 kW) PG-140 creep electrical motors, two screws |
Speed: | 16.8 knots (31.1 km/h) surfaced, 18 knots (33 km/h) submerged (trial) |
Endurance: | 800 hours submerged, stores for 90 days |
Range: | 9,000 nautical miles (17,000 km) at 8 knots (15 km/h) surfaced, 18,000 nmi (33,000 km) at 7 knots (13 km/h) knots with additional fuel, 810 nmi (1,500 km) at 2.74 knots (5.07 km/h) submerged |
Depth: | 235 m (775 ft) test, 365 meters (1200 ft) design |
Complement: | 12 officers, 16 petty officers, 54 men |
Armament: | Four SS-N-3 Shaddock (P-5 or P-6), or SS-N-12 Sandbox (P-500 4K-80 Basalt) nuclear cruise missiles, six 533 mm (21-inch) bow torpedo tubes with 18 torpedoes, four 400 mm (16-inch) stern torpedo tubes with four torpedoes |
Motto: |
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 launched on 11 March 1965, and commissioned on 31 October 1965 into the Northern Fleet.
K-77 was built later in the Juliett class, so her hull was conventional steel and her battery was of the conventional lead-acid type, rather than the austenitic steel and silver-zinc batteries used in the first Julietts. K-77 was also used as the set for the motion picture K-19: The Widowmaker, starring Harrison Ford and Liam Neeson.
Contents |
[edit] Career
The details of K-77’s career remain largely unknown. Juliett-class submarines were used to follow United States Navy aircraft carrier battle groups in the North Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea. Circumstantial evidence indicates that K-77 often patrolled the Mediterranean, off the coast of West Africa, and at least once in the Caribbean Sea near the United States Virgin Islands. Papers found aboard her during inspection in Helsinki suggest that she had shadowed Norwegian Kobben-class submarines.
At some point in her career, K-77 (the K standing for крейсерская, kreyserskaya — "cruiser") was redesignated B-77 (the B standing for большая, bolshaya — "large"). In 1987, K-77 was withdrawn from the blue-water Northern Fleet and transferred to the Baltic Fleet. The redesignation and transfer could easily be related.
[edit] Retirement
The Soviet Navy began withdrawing the Julietts from active service beginning in 1988. K-77 was decommissioned sometime after 1991, and by the end of 1994, all Julietts had been retired.
[edit] Post-decommissioning
[edit] Finland
At the end of the Cold War, Finnish businessman Jari Komulainen, who was married to the only daughter of President of Finland Mauno Koivisto, used his influence as Finland's "first son-in-law" to convince the Russian government to lease him a Project 641 "Foxtrot", probably the ex-Soviet submarine B-39. Komulainen opened it to the public in Helsinki in the spring of 1993 as a tourist attraction. He then purchased two Juliett-class submarines, one Juliett replaced the Foxtrot in 1994, becoming a bar and restaurant as well as a tourist attraction. Komulainen believed that his restaurant had been "K-81," based on a metal plate discovered inside the boat. However, it later transpired that that plate and others bearing different numbers were provided for the crew to display on the submarine's sail during surface running to confuse NATO reconnaissance aircraft.
As a restaurant, K-77 was modestly successful but was not lucrative enough to satisfy Komulainen. In 1998, he leased his submarine to a Canadian promoter, who towed it to Tampa Bay, Florida. However, the intended mooring location in the harbor was too shallow and the investors were forced to move the proposed tourist attraction to a more remote site. Soon, the promoter filed for bankruptcy, and K-77 reverted to Komulainen.
[edit] eBay
Komulainen did not want to repeat the nerve-wracking trans-Atlantic tow, and instead tried at least twice to auction the submarine on eBay -- auctions #222791130, ending on 20 December 1999, and #270148521, ending on 7 March 2000. In each case, bidding was to start at US$1 million. No bids were received.
[edit] Widowmaker
The eBay auction, however, caught the attention of Intermedia Film Equities, Limited, who chartered K-77 for US$200,000 and towed her to Halifax, Nova Scotia, to become the set for the motion picture K-19: The Widowmaker, starring Harrison Ford and Liam Neeson.
[edit] Museum
In 2002, after the movie wrapped, the submarine was purchased by the USS Saratoga Museum Foundation, towed to Collier Point Park in Providence, Rhode Island, and opened to the public in August 2002.
It was the Museum Foundation that determined that the submarine was K-77, based on the records they found aboard, which included maintenance reports, equipment exchanges, radio messages, duty rosters, log entries and torpedo firing exercises.
[edit] Sinking
The submarine sank on April 18, 2007 after a storm. There are plans to raise it off the river bottom.[1]
For the Museum's theory on why the sub sank, see "WHAT HAPPENED?" The recovering of the museum is being taken as a training exercise for army and navy divers.[1]
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Ships of the K-19: Widowmaker Movie - Photos from Mac's Navy Links
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