Nunbora-class destroyer
This article is incomplete because it is pending further input from participants, or it is a work-in-progress by one author. Please comment on this article's talk page to share your input, comments and questions. Note: To contribute to this article, you may need to seek help from the author(s) of this page. |
The Nunbora class were a group of destroyers built in the Democratic People's Republic of Menghe during the 1960s and 1970s. They were designed for anti-surface warfare, and carried only minimal anti-air and anti-submarine weaponry. A total of 24 Nunbora-class ships were built, making them Menghe's most numerous destroyer class. As of 2020, all have been retired from service.
Development
The Nunbora-class destroyers are derived from the plans for the Letnian Project 56 destroyer. While the interior is largely identical, the Nunbora design incorporates a number of changes and modernizations, particularly in the area of armament. The use of an existing design helped expedite the development process, allowing Menghe to rush the ships into large-scale production just a few years after the end of the Menghean War of Liberation.
At the time of the ships' construction, Menghean naval commanders considered anti-ship missiles to be a secondary weapon in naval combat, owing to their poor reliability and large size in the 1960s. As a result, they stressed that the Nunbora class should be able to launch a salvo of anti-ship missiles first, and then close with the enemy to initiate a gun engagement.
Characteristics (as built)
The Nunbora-class destroyer resembles a late-PSW destroyer in layout, but with triple AShM boxes in place of the torpedo tubes. In the as-built configuration, all ships carry YDH-20 missiles; during the 1980s, however, several were refitted with modified launchers to support the improved YDH-22. The launchers are carried in a forward-facing position for regular travel, but can traverse 90 degrees port or starboard to fire. To reduce the risk of damage to the superstructure, the missiles are only fired directly to either side.
Gun armament consists of two SM-2-1 turrets, each carrying two 130mm guns. These use Letnian 130mm ammunition, which is not compatible with the 130mm guns on the Taepung-class destroyers. The guns have a rate of fire of 11-15 rounds per minute with automated loading, depending on elevation; with manual loading this falls to 8-9 rounds per minute. The turrets are stabilized in two axes, and have a train rate of 18 degrees per second. Menghean and Letnian sources cite a maximum range of 27 kilometers. In contrast to the Letnian Project 56, which had one fire-control tower, the Nunboras were all built with two, to improve aiming arcs aft of the ship and increase redundancy in the event of damage.
Beyond the dual-purpose guns, anti-air armament on all ships of the class is limited to close-in weapon systems, though with six mounts arranged in three pairs this armament is relatively strong. The first sixteen ships carried AK-230 turrets, though from Haejilnyŏk onward the remaining eight used the more capable AK-630. Ships in the later group also had an improved air search radar on a rebuilt aft mast.
Anti-submarine armament is the most minimal, consisting of three sixteen-tube depth charge rocket launchers. These are further constrained by an obsolte "Pegas-2" sonar of 1950s vintage. The last eight ships, of the Haejilnyŏk subclass, deleted these weapons altogether in favor of chaff and smoke launchers.
Refits and upgrades
Haejilnyŏk and the seven ships which followed her represent a distinct subclass of the Nunbora series, with modestly improved air defense capabilities. Menghean sources, however, do not treat them as a separate ship class, as they do with the Hyŏngnam-class destroyers.
Over the course of the 1980s, several ships in the class were refitted to support the YDH-22 missile. The most visible change is a "bulged" door on the launch tubes, to accommodate missiles roughly half a meter longer. Onboard electronics were also upgraded as part of the refit process. Haejilnyŏk subclass ships were given priority in these refits, but a few early hulls were also modified. No new refits to this standard were made after 1990, likely in anticipation of the more capable YDH-24 missile which would soon enter service.
The arrival of the YDH-24 brought a new round of refits. This rebuild involved stripping off the traversing missile launchers and installing two fixed quad-missile boxes in place of each. This increased the number of missiles to 16. The aft radar mast was also rebuilt to support a HR-280 surface-search radar, which exploits atmospheric ducting to detect surface targets at longer ranges. On early-hull ships given this conversion, the anti-submarine weapons were replaced with smoke and chaff launchers, as on the Haejilnyŏk subclass. New ESM and ECM antennas were added to improve electronic warfare capability, and radio communication systems were upgraded. On two ships the aft fire-control tower was replaced by a four-tube YDG-38 missile launcher, with reload tubes stored in the former fire control room below it.
Classification
When they were first built, the Nunbora class were classified as destroyers (guchugham), or to translate the term more literally, "pursuers." This was the same classification used for the postwar Taepung-class destroyers, and for Menghean destroyers in the Pan-Septentrion War. With the introduction of the Chŏndong-class destroyers, however, both the Nunbora and Chŏndong classes were reclassified as "missile destroyers" (yudotan guchugham). This aimed to distinguish them from the older Taepung class, which relied on torpedoes instead of anti-ship missiles as its main long-range armament.
This distinguishes the Taepung, Nunbora, and Chŏndong classes from other Menghean "destroyers," such as the Yobu and Hyŏngnam classes. These are classified as howiham, or "escort ships." This distinction refers to their different roles on the maritime battlefield: gughugham are designed to pursue, engage, and destroy enemy surface ships, while howiham are intended to escort landing ships, cruisers, and surface-to-surface combatants.
Ships in the class
In keeping with the postwar Menghean nomenclature tradition, the Nunbora-class destroyers are named for weather conditions. The first 19 were named for weather conditions in northeastern Menghean vocabulary, that is, terms without corresponding Gomun characters. The remaining 5 ships, from Ubing onward, reverted to weather terms with corresponding Gomun characters.
Name | Meaning | Builder | Laid down | Launched | Commissioned | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nunbora | Snowstorm | Gyŏngsan | 1969 May 01 | 1970 Aug 05 | 1972 Oct 03 | -- |
Gurŭm | Cloud | Kimhae | 1969 Jul 14 | 1970 Oct 11 | 1973 Jan 29 | -- |
Angae | Mist | Gyŏngsan | 1969 Nov 28 | 1971 Jan 19 | 1973 Feb 20 | -- |
Baram | Wind | Gyŏngsan | 1970 Aug 12 | 1971 Dec 04 | 1974 Jan 26 | -- |
Sonagi | Shower | Kimhae | 1970 Oct 20 | 1971 Nov 05 | 1973 Mar 11 | -- |
Bi | Rain | Gyŏngsan | 1971 Jan 28 | 1972 Mar 21 | 1973 Dec 13 | -- |
Ryŏngorŭm | Waterspout | Kimhae | 1973 Nov 13 | 1973 Jan 14 | 1974 May 07 | -- |
Jangma | Monsoon | Gyŏngsan | 1971 Dec 18 | 1973 Jan 31 | 1974 Sep 04 | -- |