Kirov Battlecruiser (Fixed)
NOTES
FOR THOSE WHO WANT THIS SHIP IN ANDROID, HERE'S THE LINK
https://www.dropbox.com/s/wxllsxvi66r0ljk/Battlecruiser%20Kirov.xml?dl=0
HISTORY
She was laid down on 27 March 1974, at the Baltiysky Naval Shipyard in Leningrad, launched on 26 December 1977, and commissioned on 30 December 1980, part of Soviet Northern Fleet.
When she appeared for the first time in 1981, NATO observers called her BALCOM I (Baltic Combatant I). Her first major deployment was in 1984 where she undertook a voyage to the Mediterranean Sea.
During her second major deployment from 1 December 1989 to 17 February 1990 to the Mediterranean, she suffered a reactor accident. Afterwards, she was placed in reserve. Repairs were never carried out, due to lack of funds and the changing political situation in the Soviet Union. She may have been cannibalized as a spare-parts cache for the other ships in her class.
For political reasons, Kirov was renamed Admiral Ushakov after the 18th-century admiral Fyodor Fyodorovich Ushakov in 1992, but subsequent photos suggest that it has since reverted to its original name. An overhaul was started in 1999, but the ship was written off in 2001 and was slated to be dismantled in 2003.
In June 2004, the name Admiral Ushakov was transferred to the Sovremennyy-class destroyer Besstrashnyy. In September 2004, it was revealed that the Severodvinsk-based Design Bureau Onega had been tasked with developing the dismantlement project for the cruiser, currently moored at the Severodvinsk Zvezdochka plant. According to the Zvezdochka plant, dismantlement of the former Admiral Ushakov would cost $40 million. This plan was halted when the Russian Navy planned to bring her back to service.
In 2010, the Russian Navy again announced new plans for an overhaul of the cruiser. At the time, the plan was to modify and reactivate all of the Kirov battlecruisers by 2020. However, in 2012 it was reported that Admiral Ushakov and Admiral Lazarev would not be overhauled due to being in a state of "beyond repair". In 2015, Zvezdochka shipyard CEO Vladimir Nikitin claimed that it was dangerous to remove the spent nuclear fuel from the vessel's two reactors given the fact the ship had been given minimum maintenance for 34 years.
In April 2019, Russia decided to scrap and recycle the Admiral Ushakov in 2021.
ARMAMENT
2X AK-100
24x P-700 Granite
2x SS-27 Topol M (Nuclear Warhead)
6x SS-N-16
8x AK-630 (Auto Aim)
CONTROL
AG-1 = activate AK-630 and AK-100
AG-2 = activate AK-630 and AK-100
LANDING GEAR = open Missile hatch
GALLERY
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FEATURES
-BUG FIXES
-REPLACE THE AK-100 CANNON
Specifications
Spotlights
- Dracul0Anderson 2.3 years ago
- Panzerwaifu69 2.5 years ago
- KmsGelvain 2.5 years ago
General Characteristics
- Created On Android
- Wingspan 34.1ft (10.4m)
- Length 457.9ft (139.6m)
- Height 105.4ft (32.1m)
- Empty Weight 213,678lbs (96,922kg)
- Loaded Weight 217,866lbs (98,822kg)
Performance
- Power/Weight Ratio 0.185
- Horse Power/Weight Ratio 0.004
- Wing Loading 70.2lbs/ft2 (342.9kg/m2)
- Wing Area 3,102.2ft2 (288.2m2)
- Drag Points 124158
Parts
- Number of Parts 911
- Control Surfaces 0
- Performance Cost 4,275
NOTES
FOR THOSE WHO WANT THIS SHIP IN ANDROID, HERE'S THE LINK
https://www.dropbox.com/s/wxllsxvi66r0ljk/Battlecruiser%20Kirov.xml?dl=0
@Directbean724 really? didn't know about it
@Varrell007 The Japanese version is faster
@Directbean724 yeah but phantom is one of the amongst fastest fighter jet right
@Varrell007 if that's what you like I don't have a problem with it
@Directbean724 didn't much like it
@Varrell007 But the phantoms tho
@Directbean724 not mig-23, mig-25
Bro if you are into the mig 23 you will love the phantoms