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Project 1153 Orel

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Project 1153 Orel (Russian: Орёл pr: "Or'yol", Eagle) was a late 1970s plan to give the Soviet Navy a true blue water aviation capability. The aircraft carrier would have about 72,000 tons displacement, with a nuclear power plant and a steam catapults for aircraft launch, similar to the earlier Kitty Hawk-class supercarriers of the U.S. Navy. Unlike them and the preceding Soviet aircraft cruisers, it was also designed with a large offensive capability; the ship mounts including 20 vertical launch tubes for anti-ship cruise missiles.[1] The Soviets classified it as a "large cruiser with aircraft armament".[2]

Class overview
NameOrel Class
BuildersChernomorsky Shipyard 444
Operators Soviet Navy
Planned2
Cancelled2
History
Soviet Union
NameOrel (Russian: Орёл)
Ordered1976
Commissioned1985 (Planned)
FateWork for the ship ceased in 1978 while still on the draft design
General characteristics
TypeAircraft carrier
Displacement72.000 Tons
PropulsionNuclear Reactor
Speed29 knots (54 km/h)
RangeUnlimited
Armament
Aircraft carried

Etymology

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The project was codenamed Eagle (Орёл), just like the two earlier helicopter and aircraft cruiser projects, and several projects of other classes of ships, were named after birds of prey. However the carriers themselves were named after Soviet cities, while only frigates were named after birds (see Russian ship naming conventions); the actual projected name of the ships is not known.

History

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The Project 1153 (itself based on an early-1970s Project 1160, confusingly also named Orel, even 10,000 tonnes heavier) was cancelled in October 1978 as being too expensive, and a smaller Project 1143.5, more V/STOL-aircraft-oriented, was developed instead: in its initial stage, a version of 65,000 tons and 52 aircraft was proposed, but the actual Kuznetsov-class aircraft carriers are even smaller, about 55,000 tons.[2] While the Project Orel never saw fruition, in the 1980s it influenced the also abortive Ulyanovsk program.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "russiafile.com". russiafile.com. Retrieved 2014-04-23.
  2. ^ a b Balakin, S., Zablotskiy, V. Sovyetskiye avianoscy. Avianesushchiye kreysera admirala Gorshkova. Moscow, 2007. ISBN 978-5-699-20954-5 (in Russian). P.153-154

Further reading

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