BARS-CLASS submarine

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aukepalmhof
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BARS-CLASS submarine

Post by aukepalmhof » Sun Jun 16, 2019 8:20 pm

The class was built on diverse yards in Russia for the Imperial Russian Navy between 1914 and 1917.
Displacement 650 ton surfaced, 780 ton submerged. Dim. 68 x 4.6 4.0m. (draught surfaced)
Powered: Diesel electric , 2,640 hp diesel, 900 hp electric as designed., twin shafts, speed 18 knots surfaced, 9 knots submerged.
Range 400 mile.
Armament: 1 – 63mm gun, 1 37mm AA gun. 4 – 457 mm torpedo tubes, 8 torpedoes in drop collars, later removed.
Crew 33.

The Bars class were a group of submarines built for the Imperial Russian Navy during World War I. A total of 24 boats were built between 1914 and 1917. A number of them saw action during the First World War, and three were lost in the conflict. The surviving boats were taken over by the Soviets after the Bolshevik Revolution and a number of them remained in service until the 1930s.

Design
The Bars class submarines were ordered by the Imperial Russian Navy under their 1912 construction programme. 24 boats were ordered; 12 for the Baltic Fleet, six for the Black Sea, and six for the Siberian flotilla. The Baltic Fleet unites were built at the Baltic Yard, St Petersburg, and the Noblessner Yard, Reval (now Tallinn). The Black Sea units were built at Nikolayev, at the Baltic and the Naval Yards. The Siberian units were also built in the Baltic, but the outbreak of the First World War made their transfer impossible, and they were reassigned to the Baltic Fleet in 1915. These boats were designed by Ivan Bubnov and based on the preceding Morzh class. They were single-hulled, but like the Morzh boats lacked internal bulkheads. The Morzh design was enlarged with more powerful engines, a larger torpedo armament, and larger guns.
As designed the boats were to have two 900hp electric and two 2640 bhp diesel engines, but a shortage of these diesels meant the boats had a variety of machinery fitted. Only KUGUAR and ZMEYA had the diesels originally intended for them. This and greater than expected hull resistance left them with lower than intended underwater speeds.
The gun armament too was problematic; the intended armament was one 63 mm and one 37 mm gun, but this to varied according to availability. Three units (BARS, VEPR and VOLK) carried two 63mm guns, while four others had an additional 75mm gun. The Black Sea boats had one 75mm and one 37mm gun.
The torpedo armament comprised four internal 18-inch (460 mm) torpedo tubes and eight external torpedoes in drop collars mounted in recessed niches low in the hull. Trials with BARS and VEPR showed these to be unsuitable and subsequent vessels had the niches and drop-collars moved to the upper deck; BARS and VEPR were later refitted to this pattern, before their ultimate complete removal.

The design had numerous shortcomings, including a lack of internal bulkheads and a slow diving time. Surviving boats were modernized after the Russian Civil War by installing bulkheads, new diesels, pumps and extra torpedo tubes (the external drop collars were removed).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bars-clas ... ine_(1915)
Bequia Grenadines of St Vincent 2015 $3.15 sg?, scott?
Attachments
Bars class submarine 1914.jpg
2015 BARS (2).jpg

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