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Дата 07.10.2013 14:19:32 Найти в дереве
Рубрики Флот; Версия для печати

Тут вот интересная инфа обнаружилась по К-324

Известный случай, часто трактуемый как успех ВМФ. Не знаю - обсуждалось или нет, показалось интересным.

http://www.blnz.com/news/2008/05/13/BRONSTEIN_Little_Combatant_That_Made_2781.html

Здесь рассказ командира того самого фрегата, который лишился ГПБА:

In 1983, McCloy was dispatched to the "Yankee Box," a station off the US Eastern seaboard where the Soviets kept a Yankee-class ballistic missile sub with the range to attack US cities. "We were diverted to go find a Soviet Victor III, a brand new Soviet nuclear submarine that we had never seen in the Western Atlantic. With our TASS system we located the Victor III at extended range off Charleston but because of deteriorating weather and heavy shipping I wanted to get closer so we could pick him up in 'direct path.' We took in our tail and sprinted down to where we calculated we would pick him up. We streamed out the array and I went into the TASS van that we had installed inside the DASH hangar to see if we had reestablished contact."

The TASS display showed a very solid contact. So strong that Fry knew he was right on top of the Soviet boat. "Just then we felt a shudder and we lost array power. The tail stretched, and then snapped like a whip. The after lookout is standing 5-ft from the cable drum and was reporting that the cable was flying up above our mack like a whip, then'birdcaged'in the reel. We still had the Victor 777 passively on our 26. We handed him off to a P-3,1 sent an OPREP-3 Pinnacle Front Burner [a "highest precedence" emergency notification message to the highest levels of the Navy], and we went back into Norfolk where I expected to be relieved for cause. Shortly after the investigation commenced, the commander of the second Fleet, Vice Adm. Joe Metcalf sent a message to wide distribution that said, When McCloy gains contact, McCloy confirms contact. A new tail is on the way.' And that was the end of the investigation."

The next day, a Navy P-3 sighted a Soviet Victor III attack submarine stopped on the surface 282-mi west of Bermuda and 470-mi east of Charleston, South Carolina. A few days later a Soviet tug takes the boat under tow and into Cienfuegos, Cuba.

"It was the first good look at the non-circular hull of the V-777and her counter-rotating propellers," says K. J. Moore, co-author of Cold War Submarines. "She was embarrassed, we got a good look, and she got a good length of array."


А здесь рассказ участника событий с нашей стороны (комментарии Александра Воробьева)
http://azlok.livejournal.com/138294.html