Ugra-class submarine tender
The Ugra class was the NATO reporting name for a group of seven submarine tenders built for the Soviet Navy in the late 1960s. The Soviet designation was Project 1886. One further ship was built for the Indian Navy to a modified design. The ships were intended to provide afloat support for Soviet submarines, including supplies, water, torpedoes, fuel, and battery charging; minimal repair facilities, and were often employed as flagships/command ships for submarine squadrons. A subclass, the Borodino class, of two ships were constructed for use as training ships and lacked missiles and the ability to support submarines. Instead, the Borodino class had classrooms and training facilities.
Design and description
The Ugra class were submarine tenders of the Soviet Navy designed to support eight to twelve submarines at sea, providing them with supplies, fresh water, fuel, torpedoes and repair services. They were improved versions of the preceding. The class, named Project 1886 by the Soviets, designated the type of ship as meaning "Floating Base". The Ugra class had extensive command and control facilities for fleet/task force commanders and were often used as flagships.Submarine tenders of the Ugra class measured long overall with a beam of and a draught of. They had a standard displacement of and displaced at full load. On most of the vessels, the superstructure stretched aft to the funnel, which was larger than that found on the Don class and the Ugra class also had a shorter funnel. Along the hull, the ships had mooring points every and baggage ports for loading and unloading coastal craft and submarines. All of the ships had one 10-tonne capable crane and two 5-ton capable cranes. Within the ships were workshops capable of providing repair services.
The vessels were powered by a diesel-electric system composed of four Kolomna 2D 42 diesel engines and two electric motors turning two shafts, creating. This gave the submarine tenders a maximum speed of and a range of at. They had a complement of 450 officers and ratings.
The Ugra class were armed with two quad launchers for sixteen 9K32 Strela-2 surface-to-air missiles and four twin-mounted /80 anti-aircraft guns. The ships mounted two "Muff Cob" fire control radars, one "Strut Curve" air/surface search radar and between one and three "Don-2 navigational radar. They were also equipped with four "Watch Dog" electronic warfare/jamming radar, two "Square Head" and one "High Pole B" identification friend or foe antenna. Two ships, Ivan Kucherenko and Volga, were equipped with lattice masts for "Vee Cone" HF communications antenna. All of the ships had a small helicopter pad aft but only Ivan Kolyshkin had a hangar installed capable of supporting a Kamov Ka-25 "Hormone-C" helicopter.