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SS-N-3

Utjos (Utes , Sotka , Object 100)
Утёс ( объект 100 , Сотка )
Sevastopol Balaklava, Russia (de facto)
Utjos (Utes , Sotka , Object 100) is located in Crimea
Utjos (Utes , Sotka , Object 100)
Utjos (Utes , Sotka , Object 100)
Coordinates 44°27′05″N 33°39′09″E / 44.451389°N 33.6525°E / 44.451389; 33.6525
Type coastal bunker AShM missile launchers
Site information
Owner  Russia VMF Russia , Republic of Crimea Crimean Armed Forces Ensign of the Russian Border Guard
Operator BRaV CmF ВМФ ЧмФ БРВ (Black Sea Fleet Coastal Missile Forces) VMF Russia Ensign of the Russian Border Guard
Controlled by Russia VMF VKS Russia Republic of Crimea Crimean Navy Ensign of the Russian Border Guard Ensign of the Russian Border Guard
Open to
the public
no
Condition operational (to be re-operational probably , poxible)
Site history
Built 1950 ? , 60' - 80'
Built by  URS ,  Russia

The P-5 "Pyatyorka" (Russian: П-5 «Пятёрка»; "Pyatyorka", "fiver" in English), also known by the NATO codename SS-N-3C Shaddock, was a Cold War era turbojet-powered cruise missile of the Soviet Union, designed by the Chelomey design bureau. The missile entered service in 1959. Pyatyorka is a common name for the missile as the "digit 5", corresponding to the R-7 Semyorka, the digit 7.

The basic version of the missile was an inertially-guided submarine-launched cruise missile to threaten the US coast. The missile could be armed with either a 1000 kg high explosive or a 200 or 350 kt nuclear warhead. It had a speed of about 0.9 Mach, range of 500 km and CEP of about 3000 m. The later variant had a range of possibly up to 1000 km. The first missiles were installed in Project 644, Whiskey Twin Cylinder and Project 665, Whiskey Long Bin submarines.

Versions of P-5 were later developed equipped with radar homing to be used as anti-ship missiles. The last anti-ship versions were retired from active service about 1990, replaced by the P-500 Bazalt and P-700 Granit.

There were actually three versions of turbojet-powered, cruise missiles that were called "SS-N-3" by Western intelligence sources, with multiple variants. The earliest, P-5 was called SS-N-3c, and later versions SS-N-3a and SS-N-3b. The various Russian designations are believed to be P-5 "Pyatyorka", P-6, P-7, and P-35 Progress. Some sources indicate that missiles 'P-10' and 'P-25' may also have existed.

NATO called the submarine-launched radar-homing versions of the P-6 SS-N-3A 'Shaddock'. These were carried by Echo II- and Juliett-class submarines for targeting US aircraft carriers. The Echo I-class submarines were incapable of accommodating the targeting radar for the anti-ship version, and were not equipped with missiles after the land-attack variant was withdrawn, probably in the mid-1960s when sufficient nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines (SSBNs) became available.


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Wikipedia

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