Skoryy-class destroyer


The Skoryy class were the first destroyers built for the Soviet Navy after World War II. Seventy ships were built between 1949 and 1953. The Soviet designation was Project 30bis.

Design

The ships were derived from the Project 30, but were slightly larger with better sea-keeping and significantly increased endurance. These ships were longitudinally framed and completely welded. The ships were built in 101 modular pre-fabricated sections which led to rapid building times. The machinery and main armament was essentially identical to those of the Ognevoy class destroyers but the boilers employed forced draught for increased power.

Modernisation

The ships were modernised in the 1950s with new anti-aircraft guns and anti-submarine mortars and updated sensors. One bank of torpedo tubes were removed and extra accommodation added.

Ships

70 ships were built for both the Soviet navy and for export, this is the largest production run for any large Soviet surface warship.
Soviet ships:
Exported ships were:
The Soviet ships were decommissioned and scrapped between 1965 and 1984.