Global Information Lookup Global Information

Yugoslav frigate Split information


Split moored in the Bay of Kotor in 2008.
History
Yugoslav frigate SplitSoviet Union
NameSokol
BuilderZelenodolsk Shipyard, Zelenodolsk, Soviet Union
Laid downJanuary 1978
Launched21 April 1979
Commissioned30 November 1979
FateTransferred to the Yugoslav Navy in 1980
Yugoslav frigate SplitSFR Yugoslavia
NameSplit
NamesakeCity of Split
Acquired1980
FateCommissioned in the Navy of FR Yugoslavia/Serbia and Montenegro in 1992
Yugoslav frigate SplitFR Yugoslavia/Serbia and Montenegro
NameRF-31
Acquired1992
Decommissioned17 August 2001
FateScrapped in 2013
General characteristics
Class and typeKoni-class (Project 1159) frigate
Displacement1,590 t (1,565 long tons) (full load)
Length96.5 m (316 ft 7 in)
Beam12.5 m (41 ft 0 in)
Draught4.1 m (13 ft 5 in)
Propulsion
  • CODAG powering three shafts:
  • 1 × gas turbine
  • 2 × diesel engines
Speed27–28 knots (50–52 km/h; 31–32 mph)
Range1,800 nmi (3,300 km; 2,100 mi) at 14 knots (26 km/h; 16 mph)
Complement123
Armament
  • 4 × P-20 anti-ship missiles
  • 1 × 4K33 Osa-M surface-to-air missile launcher
  • 2 × double-barrelled AK-726 76.2 mm (3.00 in) naval guns
  • 2 × double-barrelled AK-230 30 mm (1.2 in) guns
  • 2 × RBU-6000 anti-submarine rocket launchers

Split (pennant number VPBR-31) was a Koni-class frigate in service with the Yugoslav Navy (JRM). Laid down and completed during the late 1970s as Sokol of the Soviet Navy, it was the fourth ship of a class that was being built by the Zelenodolsk Shipyard primarily for export to various friendly navies. The ship was acquired by the JRM in 1980 and commissioned as Split, becoming the second ship in JRM service to be named after the city of Split. It was soon followed by a second Koni-class hull, Koper (VPBR-32), commissioned in the JRM in 1982. Designated as a Large Patrol Boat (Serbo-Croatian: Veliki patrolni brod – VPBR) by the JRM, Split's original armament consisting of naval guns, anti-submarine rocket launchers and anti-aircraft missiles was further improved by the addition of four P-20 anti-ship missiles, making it the most versatile ship in the JRM inventory at the time.

Following the outbreak of the Croatian War of Independence in 1991, Split was involved in enforcing a naval blockade of the Croatian coast. In mid-November it served as the command ship of a tactical group which was controlling the waters around its namesake, the city of Split. On 14 November, Croatian naval commandos attacked and damaged the patrol boat Mukos (PČ-176), leading to a naval engagement that would become known as the Battle of the Dalmatian Channels. The following morning, Split and the rest of its tactical group opened fire against the islands of Šolta and Brač and the city of Split itself. Faced with Croatian Navy coastal artillery returning fire, Split began retreating east, sailing through the Korčula Channel to the JRM-controlled island of Vis.

With the Yugoslav People's Army ending its campaign in Croatia in early 1992, Split and the rest of the JRM fleet was relocated to Montenegro where it would be reformed as the Navy of FR Yugoslavia (RMVJ). In the RMVJ, Split was redesignated as RF-31 and possibly renamed Beograd, although sources are contradictory regarding this issue. The ship was decommissioned on 17 August 2001 and spent the next several years moored in the Bay of Kotor. After two unsuccessful attempts of selling it as a complete warship, it was sold for scrap and broken up in 2013.

and 15 Related for: Yugoslav frigate Split information

Request time (Page generated in 0.8636 seconds.)

Yugoslav frigate Split

Last Update:

Split (pennant number VPBR-31) was a Koni-class frigate in service with the Yugoslav Navy (JRM). Laid down and completed during the late 1970s as Sokol...

Word Count : 1904

Split

Last Update:

of the X game series Yugoslav destroyer Split, decommissioned in 1980 Yugoslav frigate Split, Koni-class Split (graph theory) Split (mathematics), a property...

Word Count : 483

Yugoslav destroyer Split

Last Update:

The Yugoslav destroyer Split was a large destroyer designed for the Royal Yugoslav Navy in the late 1930s. Construction began in 1939, but she was captured...

Word Count : 1700

Yugoslav Navy

Last Update:

The Yugoslav Navy (Serbo-Croatian: Југословенска ратна морнарица, Jugoslavenska ratna mornarica, lit. 'Yugoslav War Navy'), was the navy of Yugoslavia from...

Word Count : 3078

History of Split

Last Update:

tragic such incident occurred on 15 November 1991, when the JRM light frigate Split fired a small number of shells at the city and its surroundings. The...

Word Count : 6232

List of ships of the Yugoslav Navy

Last Update:

The Yugoslav Navy (Serbo-Croatian: Jugoslavenska ratna mornarica; JRM) was the naval branch of the Yugoslav People's Army (Jugoslavenska narodna armija;...

Word Count : 1734

Battle of the Dalmatian Channels

Last Update:

Yugoslav Navy vessels moored in Šibenik. Croatian forces using naval mines deployed in Kaštela Bay rendered the Yugoslav Navy base at Lora in Split inaccessible...

Word Count : 3574

Brodosplit

Last Update:

advanced vessels. These include warships - frigates, patrol boats, landing craft, submarines etc. for the Ex-Yugoslav Navy, as well as the current Croatian...

Word Count : 808

List of flagships

Last Update:

and Geodetic Survey. Royal Yugoslav Navy KB Dubrovnik Destroyer leader 1932-1941, captured in action Yugoslav Navy JRM Split Destroyer leader 1958-1980...

Word Count : 331

List of naval ship classes in service

Last Update:

Zagreb/Kotor-class frigate Builders:  Yugoslavia /  Croatia (Uljanik shipyard in Pula and Tito shipyard in Kraljevica) Type: Light multi-role frigate (Yugoslav designation...

Word Count : 18498

Destroyer

Last Update:

decommissioned its last W-class destroyer in 1976.  Yugoslav Navy decommissioned its only destroyer, Split in 1980.  Swedish Navy decommissioned both its Halland-class...

Word Count : 7051

List of admirals of Croatia

Last Update:

Varaždin Ogulin Sinj Bihać Muć Sv. Juraj Smokvica Split Šibenik Croatian Navy Yugoslav Navy Royal Yugoslav Navy Austro-Hungarian Navy Admirals from Croatia...

Word Count : 997

History of the Croatian Navy

Last Update:

of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia and later in socialist Yugoslavia. During this period, many Croats took over high duties in Yugoslav Navy whose main bases...

Word Count : 1537

Adriatic Sea

Last Update:

of Croatia's coast by the Yugoslav Navy, leading to the Battle of the Dalmatian channels and a later withdrawal of Yugoslav vessels. Montenegro declared...

Word Count : 18494

Siege of Dubrovnik

Last Update:

Presidency of Yugoslavia Stjepan Mesić and the former Prime Minister of Croatia Franjo Gregurić—was initially stopped by the Yugoslav frigate JRM Split between...

Word Count : 9753

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net