Russian corvette Passat explained

Passat is a in the Soviet Navy and later the Russian Navy.

Specifications

See main article: Nanuchka-class corvette.

Small missile ships of the Project 1234 according to NATO classification Nanuchka-class corvette is a series of Soviet small missile ships (MRK) of the 3rd rank built at shipyards of the USSR from 1967 to 1992.[1]

The type consists of three series of subprojects:

By the name of the project code, the ships received the nickname gadflies in the navy. IRAs of Project 1234 were supplied to the Navy of four countries of the world: the USSR, Algeria, Libya and India. Libyan ones were destroyed during the NATO military operation in the summer of 2011; Indian ships of this project were withdrawn from the Indian Navy in 1999-2004.

The ships of the project were actively operated in all four fleets of the Soviet Navy and during the 1970-1980s carried out combat services in the World Ocean. They left a noticeable mark on the history of Soviet shipbuilding and are currently being gradually withdrawn from the combat strength of the Russian fleet. So, if at the beginning of 2001 in the Russian Navy there were 2 ships of project 1234 and 18 ships of Project 1234.1,[2] then by 2006 all ships of project 1234 were withdrawn from the Navy and only 12 ships of the project remained in Project 1234.1 and 1 ship of Project 1234.7.[3] [4]

Construction and career

Passat was laid down on 27 May 1988 at Almaz Shipyard, Leningrad. Launched on 13 June 1990 and commissioned into the Baltic Fleet on 6 December 1990.[5]

In 2006, Passat paid a port visit to Germany. In July 2007, Passat visited the port of Vlissingen, the Netherlands, taking part in the celebrations on the occasion of the 400th anniversary of the Dutch admiral Michael de Reiter. On 28 June 2008, the ship took part in the naval parade at Bruges, Belgium.

In 2013, Passat was under refit. In 2015, repairs were planned to extend the life of the ship.

On 6 September 2017, the ship took part in a live-firing exercise. On 28 July 2019, the ship took part in the Main Naval Parade to mark the Day of the Russian Navy. On 26 July 2020, the ship took part in the Main Naval Parade to mark the Day of the Russian Navy.

Pennant numbers

DatePennant number
1990465
1990570

Notes and References

  1. Book: Kostrichenko. V. V.. Пистолет у виска империализма. Kuzmichev. V. E.. 2.
  2. Book: Yu.V., Apalkov. Корабли ВМФ СССР. Справочник. Галея Принт. 2004. 5-8172-0087-2. 11.
  3. Web site: Атрина. https://web.archive.org/web/20081005212732/http://www.atrinaflot.narod.ru/3_cutters/01_mrk_1234/1_12341.htm. 2008-10-05. live. 2021-09-20. www.webcitation.org.
  4. Web site: 2012-03-13. Сайт «АТРИНА» • Малый ракетный корабль пр.12347; Nanuchka-IV class. 2021-09-20. https://web.archive.org/web/20120313140521/http://www.atrinaflot.narod.ru/3_cutters/01_mrk_1234/1_12347.htm. 13 March 2012.
  5. Web site: Small Missile Ships - Project 1234. 2021-09-20. russianships.info.