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Kronshtadt-class battlecruiser
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Kronshtadt-class battlecruiser : ウィキペディア英語版
Kronshtadt-class battlecruiser

The ''Kronshtadt''-class battlecruisers, with the Soviet designation as Project 69 heavy cruisers, ((ロシア語:''Тяжёлые крейсера проекта 69'')), were ordered for the Soviet Navy in the late 1930s. Two ships were started but none were completed due to World War II. These ships had a complex and prolonged design process which was hampered by constantly changing requirements and the Great Purge in 1937. They were laid down in 1939, with an estimated completion date in 1944, but Stalin's naval construction program proved to be more than the shipbuilding and armaments industries could handle. Prototypes of the armament and machinery had not even been completed by 22 June 1941, almost two years after the start of construction. This is why the Soviets bought twelve surplus , and their twin turrets, similar to those used in the s, from Germany in 1940. The ships were partially redesigned to accommodate them, after construction had already begun, but no turrets were actually delivered before Operation Barbarossa.
Only ''Kronshtadt''s hull survived the war reasonably intact and was about 10% complete in 1945. She was judged obsolete and the Soviets considered converting her into an aircraft carrier, but the idea was rejected and both hulls were scrapped in 1947.
==Design==
The ''Kronshtadt''-class battlecruisers had their origin in a mid-1930s requirement for a large cruiser ((ロシア語:bol'shoi kreiser)) capable of destroying cruisers built to the limits imposed by the Washington Naval Treaty, to which the Soviets were not a signatory. Several designs were submitted by the end of 1935, but the Navy was not satisfied and rejected all of them. It asked for another design, displacing and armed with guns, in early 1936, eventually designated Project 22, but this design was cancelled after the Soviets began negotiations in mid-1936 with the British that ultimately resulted in the Anglo-Soviet Quantitative Naval Agreement of 1937 and agreed to follow the terms of the Second London Naval Treaty which limited battleships to a displacement of . The Soviets had been working on a small battleship design (Battleship 'B') for service in the Baltic and Black Seas and had to shrink it as a result of these discussions to a size close to that of the Project 22 large cruiser so that the latter was cancelled. Battleship 'B' was redesignated as Project 25 and given the task of destroying Treaty cruisers and German pocket battleships. The Project 25 design was accepted in mid-1937 after major revisions in the armor scheme and the machinery layout and four were ordered with construction to begin in late 1937 and early 1938. However, this decision occurred right before the Great Purge began to hit the Navy in August 1937 and two of the ship's designers were arrested and executed within a year. The Project 25 design was then rejected on the grounds that it was too weak compared to foreign ships and the whole program was cancelled in early 1938 after an attempt to modify the design with larger guns had been made.〔McLaughlin, pp. 100–05〕
However the Soviet Navy still felt a need for a fast ship that could deal with enemy cruisers and the original concept was revived as Project 69. They wanted a ship not to exceed 23,000 metric tons with a speed of and an armament of nine 254 mm guns, but the requirement proved to be too ambitious for the specified size and it increased to in the design submitted in June 1938. By this time, however, details were becoming available for the s and the ship was deemed inferior to the German ships. The State Defense Committee revised the requirements and specified a size about , an armament of nine guns, an armor belt thick and a speed about . A revised design was finished by October which was wargamed against the Japanese s, the French s as well as the ''Scharnhorst'' class. It was deemed superior to the ''Kongo''s at medium range and inferior to the ''Dunkerque''s at the same range, but generally superior to the ''Scharnhorst''s, although it is doubtful that the Soviets were fully aware of the true specifications of the ''Kongō''s as rebuilt or of the ''Scharnhorst''s as the displacement of the latter had been given as , more than short of their true displacement. The Navy's Shipbuilding Administration thought that the original secondary armament of guns was too small and that the armor on the turrets, conning tower and the forward transverse bulkhead was too thin. A revised, 35,000-ton design with guns and extra armor was submitted to the State Defense Council in January 1939.〔McLaughlin, pp. 105–06〕
This was approved and the detailed design work began with the basic concept that the ship should be superior to the ''Scharnhorst''-class ships and able to outrun the s. At this time the horizontal protection was revised after full-scale trials revealed that a bomb would penetrate both a upper deck and a middle deck to burst on the main armor deck. So the middle deck was thickened to with the lower deck intended to catch any splinters penetrating the armor deck. This mean that the main belt had to be extended upwards to meet the main armor deck at a significant penalty in weight. The Defense Committee approved the sketch design on 13 July 1939, but the detailed design was not approved until 12 April 1940, after construction had already begun on the first two ships.〔McLaughlin, pp. 107, 109, 112〕
It was already apparent that the 305 mm guns and turrets were well behind schedule when Joseph Stalin asked the German representatives in Moscow on 8 February 1940 to negotiate a trade agreement if it would be possible to use the triple turrets in lieu of the triple 305 mm turrets of the Project 69 ships. They replied that the turrets were out of production, but new ones could be built. He then asked if twin turrets could be used instead. The Germans said that they would have to check back for the technical details. Krupp had six incomplete turrets on hand that had originally been ordered before the war to rearm the ''Scharnhorst''-class battleships, but they were cancelled after the start of World War II when the Germans decided that they could not afford to have the ships out of service during the war. A preliminary purchase agreement was made to buy twelve guns and six turrets later that month, well before any studies were even made to see if the substitution was even possible. The Shipbuilding Commissariat reported on 17 April that it was possible so the agreement was finalized in November 1940 with the deliveries scheduled from October 1941 to 28 March 1943. The order also included rangefinders and searchlights.〔McLaughlin, pp. 109, 111〕
The Soviets never did get the detailed data required to redesign the ship's barbettes and magazines, but they did know that the 380-mm barbettes was bigger in diameter than that of the 305 mm turret as well as taller than the Russian turrets. So the barbette of turret number two had to be raised to clear turret number one and the height of the conning tower had to be raised to clear turret number two. Similarly the anti-aircraft guns behind turret number three had to raised as well.〔McLaughlin, p. 111〕 The new turrets required more electrical power which meant that the output of the turbo generators had to be increased to 1,300 kilowatts.〔Usov & Mawdsley, p. 382〕 All of these changes added over to the ships' displacement and the sketch design was completed by 16 October 1940, as Project 69-I (''Importnyi''—Imported), even though they still lacked data for the turrets and their barbettes. This was presented to the State Defense Committee on 11 February 1941, but the design was not approved until 10 April when it ordered that the first two ships be completed with German guns while the others would continue to use the 305 mm guns. The detailed design was supposed to be completed by 15 October 1941, but it was rendered pointless when the Germans invaded the Soviet Union in June.〔

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