Built by the Baltic shipyard in Saint Petersburg, the construction on the missile cruiser actually began in Soviet-era 1980s. Commissioned in 1995, the missile cruiser was designed to send aircraft carriers to the bottom, defending large surface targets and the rest of the squadron against potential air and submarine attacks.
The ship is unusual in a number of ways. It has a propulsion system that insures unlimited cruising endurance. This system, which is based on a combination of nuclear power and steam turbines, provides a full speed of 31 knots (31 nautical miles per hour or 36 m/ph or 58 km/h). Equipped with Granit anti-ship cruise missiles (20 missile launchers), it is capable of destroying targets as far away as 500 kilometers (more than 300 miles).
If the lead missile is intercepted in ripple-fire mode, one of the other missiles automatically replaces it. Peter the Great is also equipped with the ability to defend itself against a full range of precision weapons, including anti-ship, anti-radar missiles, air bombs, aircraft and small ships. Its missile range can engage up to six targets simultaneously and it has enough arms on board to sink two or three air carriers together with any warships accompanying them!
Time will tell, but one thing is certain. The squadron of Peter the Great is no laughing matter.
M Dee Dubroff
Russian Innovations
InventorSpot.com
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It might be old but...
Submitted on September 29th, 2008 by AnonymousSounds formidable, if rather last decade. However, against non-state-of-the-art targets it would do a heck of a lot of damage, and wipe out a lot of non-military stuff rather quickly.
I suspect there are a couple of US subs trailing it at fairly close range, keping an eye on it just in case it needs sinking.
Some small part of me hopes they are using two sonars to find the fake noise the US subs put out, so it can keep an eye on them in return.
Hi there
Submitted on September 30th, 2008 by M Dee DubroffYou raise an interesting point and I am sure you are right about US subs trailing.
I
Thanks fro your comments.
Yours in Words,
M Dee Dubroff
Russian Innovations
"This system, which is based
Submitted on October 2nd, 2008 by Anonymous"This system, which is based on a combination of nuclear power and steam turbines..."
Not really that special. All nuclear powered vessels use steam turbines, that's how the plant operates. And as far as U.S. submarines putting out fake noise, I've never heard of that. The whole point is to be invisible. The newer subs are even quieter.
I would bet that subs are keeping an eye on things though, and if not they should be.
sub system
Submitted on October 4th, 2008 by M Dee DubroffThanks for your comment.
I appreciate it.
Yours in Words,
M Dee Dubroff
Russian Innovations
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