Soviet destroyer Stroyny (1940)

An unidentified Storozhevoy-class destroyer in the Black Sea
History
Soviet Union
NameStroyny (Orderly (Slim))
Ordered2nd Five-Year Plan
BuilderShipyard No. 190 (Zhdanov), Leningrad
Yard number527
Laid down29 December 1938
Launched29 April 1940
Completed15 September 1942
Commissioned30 August 1941
Renamed
  • SDK-10, 20 March 1956
  • SS-17, 27 December 1956
  • TsL-2, 14 September 1963
Reclassified
  • As rescue and decontamination ship, 17 February 1956
  • As rescue ship, 27 December 1956
  • As target ship, 14 September 1963
Stricken27 August 1965
FateScrapped after 27 August 1965
General characteristics (Storozhevoy, 1941)
Class and typeStorozhevoy-class destroyer
Displacement
Length112.5 m (369 ft 1 in) (o/a)
Beam10.2 m (33 ft 6 in)
Draft3.98 m (13 ft 1 in)
Installed power
Propulsion2 shafts, 2 steam turbine sets
Speed40.3 knots (74.6 km/h; 46.4 mph) (trials)
Endurance2,700 nmi (5,000 km; 3,100 mi) at 19 knots (35 km/h; 22 mph)
Complement207 (271 wartime)
Sensors and
processing systems
Mars hydrophones
Armament

Stroyny (Russian: Стройный, lit.'Orderly') was one of 18 Storozhevoy-class destroyers (officially known as Project 7U) built for the Soviet Navy during the late 1930s. Although she began construction as a Project 7 Gnevny-class destroyer, Stroyny was completed in 1942 to the modified Project 7U design.

Beginning her sea trials when Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the Soviet Union, began in June 1941, the destroyer was placed in service to provide naval gunfire support in September. Stroyny spent the Siege of Leningrad bombarding German positions and was completed in September 1942. Postwar, she officially joined the Baltic Fleet and began a refit in 1953. The latter became a conversion into a rescue ship ultimately designated SS-17 that was completed in 1958. Reduced to a target ship in 1963, she was struck from the Navy List almost two years later, then scrapped.


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