Soviet submarine K-171
K-171 was a Project 667B Murena (Delta I by NATO) Nuclear ballistic missile submarine of the Soviet Navy. The submarine was launched and commissioned in 1976.[1] The submarine transferred from the Soviet Northern Fleet later that year to the Pacific.[2]
| History | |
|---|---|
| Name: | K-171 |
| Builder: | Sevmash, Severodvinsk |
| Launched: | 1976 |
| Commissioned: | 1976 |
| Decommissioned: | 2003 |
| Fate: | Broken up |
| General characteristics | |
| Class and type: | Delta-class submarine |
| Displacement: |
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| Length: | 139 m (456 ft 0 in) |
| Beam: | 12 m (39 ft 4 in) |
| Draft: | 9 m (29 ft 6 in) |
| Propulsion: | |
| Speed: |
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| Endurance: | 80 days |
| Test depth: |
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| Complement: | 120 officers and men |
| Armament: |
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| Service record | |
| Part of: | Soviet Pacific Fleet |
Reactor incident
On December 28, 1978, while in the Pacific Ocean, K-171 had a reactor failure. Radiation exposure resulted in the deaths of three crew members on board.[3]
Retirement
Like most Soviet Delta I and Delta II-class submarines that were in service after the Cold War, the submarine was scrapped to comply with new treaties. It was decommissioned from the Russian Navy in 2003.[4]
References
- "667B DELTA I Federation of American Scientists".
- "Project 667 B (Murena) - Delta-I Class". spb.org.ru. Retrieved 2019-11-27.
- "K-171 submarine reactor accident, 1978". www.johnstonsarchive.net. Retrieved 2019-11-27.
- "Nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines - Project 667B". russianships.info. Retrieved 2019-11-27.
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