![]() TK-20 mislabeled as TK-18 in below capture. TK-17 Arkhangelsk (1987) and TK-20 Severstal (1989) Both in reserve since 2006. TK-208 Dmitry Donskoy (1981-2023) served with Northern Fleet, upgraded. Most of these would later be located at Severodvinsk. Four Typhoon class SSBNs, all located at Zapadnaya Litsa in 2003. Typhoon class SSBN 1985 NARA: 330-CFD-DN-SN-86-00733 US Government, released 2012 by the National Reconnaissance Office / Public domain Same view as above, almost 37 years later, with the last active Typhoon, Dmitry Donskoy TK-208. Typhoon Class / Project 941 Akula SSBN (3 in reserve, 3 scrapped) World’s largest submarines LOA 574′ / 175 m TDISP 48,000 tons submerged. Podmoskovye BS-64 / Project 09787 Special Mission Submarine modified Delta IV Class (1986, modified 2016 – lengthened) new LOA 571′ / 174 m – science vessel with the ability to berth deep submergence submarines like the Losharik (see bottom of listing for this submersible). The cataloguing info on this, according to a helpful commenter, is wrong, and this in fact documents an older Delta II class. Credit: Mil.ru / CC BYĭelta III and IV Classes / Project 667BDR Kalmar and Project 667BDRM Delfin SSBN LOA 520′ / 158.5 m TDISP 18,200 tons submerged (21, approx.7 or less active, 2 converted to other roles) 16 MIRV-equipped SLBM tubes/boat Delta IV class submarine 1994 NARA: 330-CFD-DN-SC-96-00524ĭelta III class based at Northern Fleet 1997. Yuriy Dolgorukiy K-535 (2013) Borei Class K-535 Yuriy Dolgorukiy, at time of commissioning in 2013. ![]() Launched from SEVMASH shipyards, Severodvinsk in July 2020. ![]() ![]() Knyaz Vladimir K-549 (2019) – Borei II, sea trials View of boat fitting out shows all 8 missile tubes on starboard side open. The fourth boat, Knyaz Vladimir K-549, and later boats are Borei II class /Project 955A variant with a more streamlined missile compartment, different rudder fins, and a sail that does not project forwards at the top. Russian Navy / Soviet Navy Submarines 25 submarine classes documented with 61 captures.īallistic Missile Nuclear-powered Submarines (SSBN)Ĭheck out our 2022 comparative overview post on World ballistic missile boats.īorei Class / Project 955 SSBN LOA 557′ / 169.8 m TDISP 24,000 tons submerged (5 active, 5 building, 2 more planned) 16 MIRV-equipped SLBM tubes/boat. Sevmash Shipyards, Severodvinsk, with screening panels, showing a Typhoon Class SSBN, likely TK-208 Dmitriy Donskoy, undergoing work. ![]()
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