Bars-class submarine (1915)

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Bars in 1914
Class overview
NameBars class
Preceded byMorzh Class
Succeeded byDekabrist Class
In commission1914–1941
Completed24
Lost9
General characteristics [1]
TypeSubmarine
Displacement
  • 650 tons surfaced
  • 780 tons submerged
Length223 ft (68 m)
Beam15 ft (4.6 m)
Draft13 ft (4.0 m)
Propulsion
  • Diesel-electric
  • 2,640 hp diesel
  • 900 hp electric (as designed)
  • 2 shafts
Speed
  • 18 knots (33 km/h) surfaced
  • 9 knots (17 km/h) submerged
Range400 nmi (740 km)
Complement33
Armament
  • 1 × 63 mm (2.5 in) (as designed)
  • 1 × 37 mm (1.5 in) AA gun
  • 4 × 457 mm (18.0 in) torpedo tubes
  • 8 × torpedoes in drop collars (later removed)

The Bars class were a group of

Bolshevik Revolution
and a number of them remained in service until the 1930s.

Design

The Bars-class submarines were ordered by the

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.[1]

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 900

kW) electric and two 2,640 bhp (1,970 kW) 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.[1]

The gun armament too was problematic; the intended armament was one 63-millimetre (2.5 in) and one 37 mm (1.5 in) gun, but this too, varied according to availability. Three units (Bars, Vepr, and Volk) carried two 63 mm guns, while four others had an additional 75 mm gun. The Black Sea boats had one 75 mm and one 37 mm gun.[1]

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.[1]

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).

  • Vepr, showing the original low mounting of the external torpedoes
    Vepr, showing the original low mounting of the external torpedoes
  • Volk in 1916 showing the re-positioned external torpedo mountings
    Volk in 1916 showing the re-positioned external torpedo mountings
  • Pantera in 1916–1917 with external torpedoes removed
    Pantera in 1916–1917 with external torpedoes removed
  • Ersh, showing minelaying tubes at stern
    Ersh, showing minelaying tubes at stern

Service history

The Baltic Fleet units saw action during the First World War and made numerous war patrols in the Baltic, despite being limited by the short operating season. In the 1915 ice-free season they targeted German warships but with little success, these being generally fast and well-protected. In the 1916 and 1917 seasons they were employed attacking German iron-ore shipments along the Swedish coast, though again with little success, due to the restrictions imposed by Swedish neutrality.

Three vessels (

Bolshevik Revolution and the start of the Russian Civil War the surviving units in the Baltic were taken over by the Soviets and saw some action against Allied Intervention forces; in 1919 Pantera sank the British destroyer Vittoria.[1]

The Black Sea units were unfinished during World War I and were seized by the

With the end of the Civil War the surviving Bars-class vessels remained in service until the 1930s before being discarded.

Ships

Baltic Fleet[1]
Ship Namesake Builder Launch date Service/Fate
Bars
БАРС
(Leopard)[2] Baltic Shipyard, St. Petersburg 2 June 1915 Lost May 1917; cause unknown
Gepard
ГЕПАРД
(Cheetah) Baltic Shipyard, St. Petersburg 2 June 1915 Sunk 28 October 1917
Kuguar
КУГУАР
(Cougar)
Reval
1916 Hulked 1922
Leopard
ЛЕОПАРД
(Leopard)[2]
Reval
1916 Renamed Krasnoarmeets. Hulked 1936
Lvitsa
ЛЬВИЦА
(Lioness)
Reval
23 October 1915 Sunk 11 June 1917
Pantera
ПАНТЕРА
(Panther)
Reval
26 April 1916 Sank British destroyer
British Intervention in Russia. Aksel Berg
was navigating officer at the time. The ship was renamed Komissar and converted to a harbour training ship 1941
Rys
РЫСЬ
(Lynx)
Reval
1916 Renamed Bolshevik, sunk in an accident 13 September 1935
Tigr
ТИГР
(Tiger)
Reval
18 September 1915 Renamed Kommunar, broken up 1936
Tur
ТУР
(Aurochs)
Reval
1916 Renamed Tovarich, stricken in 1936
Vepr
ВЕПРЬ
(
Wild Boar
)
Baltic Shipyard, St. Petersburg 1915 Hulked 1922
Volk
ВОЛК
(Wolf) Baltic Shipyard, St. Petersburg 1915 Stricken 1936
Yaguar
ЯГУАР
(Jaguar)
Reval
1916 Renamed Krasnoflotets. Stricken 1936
Black Sea Fleet[1]
Ship Namesake Builder Launch Date Service/Fate
Burevestnik
БУРЕВЕСТНИК
(Petrel) Naval Yard, Nikolayev 1916 Seized by the Germans as SM US-1 and transferred to the White Russian forces in 1918, interned in Bizerte with Wrangel's fleet and scrapped 1924
Gagara
ГАГАРА
(Loon/Diver)
Baltic (Admiralty) Yard, Nikolayev
7 October 1916 Seized by the Germans as US 4 and scuttled 26 April 1919
Lebed
ЛЕБЕДЬ
(Swan) Naval Yard, Nikolayev 1917 Seized by the Germans and scuttled 26 April 1919
Orlan
ОРЛАН
(Sea eagle) Naval Yard, Nikolayev 1916 Seized by the Germans as US 2 and scuttled 26 April 1919
Pelikan
ПЕЛИКАН
(Pelican) Naval Yard, Nikolayev September 1917 Seized by the Germans and scuttled 26 April 1919
Utka
УТКА
(Duck)
Baltic (Admiralty) Yard, Nikolayev
1916 Seized by the Germans as US 3 and transferred to the White Russian forces in 1918, interned in Bizerte and scrapped 1924
Siberian Flotilla (served at Baltic Fleet)[1]
Ship Namesake Builder Launch Date Service/Fate
Edinorog
ЕДИНОРОГ
(Unicorn) Baltic Shipyard, St. Petersburg 1916 Sunk 25 February 1918.

Wreck found on 28 May 2009 by the Estonian Maritime Museum in the northern part of the Gulf of Finland.[3]

Zmeya
ЗМЕЯ
(Serpent) Baltic Shipyard, St. Petersburg 1916 Renamed Proletariy, sunk in an accident 22 May 1931
Ugor
УГОРЬ
(Eel) Baltic Shipyard, St. Petersburg 1916 Sunk 27 March 1920
Yaz
ЯЗЬ
(Ide/Orfe)
Reval
1917? Never commissioned. Used by
Kommuna
for training purposes. Stricken 1922
Erzh
ЕРШ
(Ruffe) Baltic Shipyard, St. Petersburg 1917? Converted to minelayer

Sunk in an accident 22 May 1931

Forel
ФОРЕЛЬ
(Trout) Baltic Shipyard, St. Petersburg 1916 Converted to minelayer

Stricken 1922

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Conway p. 316
  2. ^ a b Russian has two words for the leopard (pantera pardus); «барс» (from Turkish) and «леопард"» (from the Greek)
  3. ^ Rare submarine found at the bottom of Gulf of Finland: 28 May 2009, Postimees (in Estonian)

References

External links