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Missile Boat „Gdynia”
ORP Gdynia, hull number 423, was the third Polish ship with this
name. She was one of the Soviet Project 205 missile boats (NATO
reporting name “Osa I”). The Project 205 boats were initially
classified as small missile cutters. For a long time, all information
about them was classified. At first, a different system of hull
numbers was used and the numbers often changed.
ORP
Gdynia
was one of over 400 small attack boats produced
from 1950s to 1980s in Leningrad, Vladivostok and Rybinsk.
The 205 missile cutter, planned as a carrier of P-15 guided
anti-ship missiles used during the Arab-Israeli War in 1967 and
the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971, was designed in the Leningrad
based Central Design Bureau (CDB-5). The cutters were produced
on license also by China and North Korea. The introduction
of modernised P-15U missiles with folding wings triggered
the construction of the project 205U cutters (“Osa-II”) with
smaller tube-shaped launchers. The last modification was
the introduction of P-15M (P-20) missiles in the 1970s. Apart from
the Polish Navy and the Soviet Navy, these small missile boats
were also used in the fleet of Algeria, Angola, Benin, Bulgaria,
China, Cuba, Egypt, Ethiopia, Finland, German Democratic
Republic, India, Iraq, Lebanon, Libya, North Korea, Romania,
Somalia, Syria, Vietnam, Yemen and Yugoslavia.
When the decision about introducing missile armament
was made, Poland purchased 13 Project 205 missile boats at
the beginning of the 1960s. The ships entered service in the
years 1964–1975. They were named after the Polish Baltic ports.
Initially they belonged to the 3rd Torpedo Boat Brigade and from
1971 to the 3rd Flotilla of Ships.
Over the years, the ships lost their combat value. Their
decommissioning began in 1984 and finished in 2006 with
the last two vessels being removed from the fleet. In 2008,
a decision was made to keep OPR
Władysławowo
in the Museum
of Polish Arms, from where in 2010 it was towed to Kołobrzeg and
placed on land as a showpiece of the marine open air museum.
ORP
Gdynia
was built in the Rybinsk Shipyard. She was
the third boat of this type in Poland. On 7 September 1965, she
entered service in the 3rd Torpedo Boat Division of the 3rd Torpedo
Boat Brigade in Gdynia. From 1971 until decommissioning from
the Navy, she belonged to the 2nd Missile Torpedo Boat Squadron
of the 3rd Flotilla of Ships in Gdynia. In November 1989, she was
reclassified into a patrol boat with hull number 301, retaining
her former name, and in June 1991 she was transferred to the
Maritime Regional Unit of Border Guard as one of three boats
of this type. In the same year, she was refurbished, with her
main weapons removed and replaced with a 25-mm 2M-3M
twin naval gun. Registered subsequently as „SG-301”, the boat
was in service until 1 March 1995, first in the Pomorski Vessel
Squadron of the Maritime Regional Unit of Border Guard
in Świnoujście and then in the Kaszubski Vessel Squadron
in Gdańsk.
The commanders of ORP Gdynia included two future
commanders of the Polish Navy, namely, Lieutenant Romuald
Waga and Lieutenant JG Ryszard Łukasik, as well as Lieutenant
Jan Dziżyński, Lieutenant Henryk Grunert, Lieutenant JG Maciej
Drogosiewicz, Lieutenant JG Zenon Jakubowski, Lieutenant JG
Szczepan Halarewicz and Lieutenant JG Jacek Choczyński.
The Project 205 missile cutter had a displacement of 172 tons
(standard), length of 38.6 m, beam of 7.6 m and draught of 2.7 m.
She was powered by three 2940 kW Diesel engines. Her cruising
speed was 15 knots and maximum speed was 37 knots, with
a range of 800 nautical miles at 25 knots. Her endurance was
5 days and the crew consisted of 30 persons. The armament
consisted of four single launchers of guided anti-ship P-15
or P-15M (P-20) missiles (NATO designation SS-N-2A/C Styx
or Modified Styx), Strela-2M anti-aircraft guided missile
launcher (NATO designation SA-N-5 Grail) and two 30 mm twin
naval guns.
Walter Pater
The Polish Navy Museum