![]() Oscar II class submarine  | |
| History | |
|---|---|
| Name | Krasnodar | 
| Laid down | 22 July 1982 | 
| Launched | 3 March 1985 | 
| Commissioned | 30 September 1986 | 
| Decommissioned | 2012 | 
| Status | Undergoing scrapping | 
| General characteristics | |
| Type | Oscar-class submarine | 
| Displacement | 
  | 
| Length | 155 m (508 ft 6 in)[1] maximum | 
| Beam | 18.2 m (59 ft 9 in) | 
| Draught | 9 m (29 ft 6 in) | 
| Installed power | 2 × pressurized water cooled reactors (HEU <= 45%[2]) | 
| Propulsion | 2 × steam turbines delivering 73,070 kW (97,990 shp) to two shafts | 
| Speed | 
  | 
| Endurance | 120 days[1] | 
| Test depth | 830 m | 
| Complement | 94/107[1] | 
| Armament | 
  | 
Krasnodar (K-148) was a Russian Oscar II class submarine which was built at Sevmash under serial number 617, it was launched in March 1985 and decommissioned in late 2012. On March 17, 2014 a fire broke out on or near the vessel during its scrapping at the Nerpa Russian Naval Shipyard near the administratively closed city Snezhnogorsk. A spokesperson for the shipyard reported that the fire was quickly extinguished, without injuries or radioactive releases.[3][4]
See also
Krasnodar (B-265), a Kilo-class submarine commissioned in 2015.
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 Podvodnye Lodki, Yu.V. Apalkov, Sankt Peterburg, 2002, ISBN 5-8172-0069-4
 - ↑ "Marine Nuclear Power:1939 – 2018" (PDF). July 2018. Retrieved 30 December 2022.
 - ↑ "Life and death in five former secret Soviet cities". Balkanist. June 20, 2014.
 - ↑ Digges, Charles (March 17, 2014). "Monday fire at Nerpa naval shipyard reveals pattern of neglect in delicate nuclear decommissioning practices". bellona. Retrieved 2 January 2016.
 
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