R-13 (missile)

(Redirected from SS-N-4)

The R-13 (Russian: ракета-13) was a submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) developed by the Soviet Union starting around 1955. It was assigned the NATO reporting name SS-N-4 Sark and carried the GRAU index 4K50.

R-13 monument at Severomorsk naval base

History

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Development of the R-13 was authorised by the Soviet Supreme Council on 25 July 1955 for use on the Project 629 and Project 658 submarines. The design work was started by OKB-1 under Sergei Korolev before being transferred to CB Miasskoe engineering / Makeyev Rocket Design Bureau (chief designer - Viktor Makeyev). Final technical specifications was approved by 11 January 1956. Serial production was undertaken at Zlatoust Machine-Building Plant in 1959. The R-13 was a single-stage liquid-fuel rocket and entered service in 1961. This missile was somewhat similar in design to the R-11FM missile, which caused some confusion in Western intelligence services during the Cold War. The missiles were phased out from 1965 to 1975.

This missile was the first[citation needed]R-7? Soviet design to use a small set of rocket engines (vernier thrusters) to perform course and trajectory alterations instead of aerodynamic control surfaces, although a set of four stabilizers were used to keep the missile on-course during initial flight.

During initial testing before the missiles were deployed, 26 of 32 missiles (81%) were successfully launched. While the systems were deployed from 1961 to 1975, 225 of 311 launches (72%) were successful.

Operators

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  Soviet Union

Specifications

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  • Length: 11.8 m (38 ft 9 in)
  • Diameter: 1.3 m (4 ft 3 in)
  • Diameter (to stabilizers): 1.9 m (6 ft 3 in)
  • Launch weight: 13.7 t
  • Warhead: single thermonuclear: 1.2 to 2.0 Mt (perhaps as low as 1.0 Mt)
  • Propulsion: liquid-fuel rocket, single stage
    • Engine: Isaev S2.713 liquid rocket engine, 252 kN of thrust
    • Oxidizer: AK-27I
    • Fuel: TG-02
  • Range: about 600 km (370 mi)
  • Launching technique: surfaced
  • CEP: 1.8 to 4 km (1.1 to 2.5 miles)

See also

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References

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