Patrol Ship “Cyclone”
Technical Data
- Uragan-class patrol ship, Series I (Project 2) — the first Soviet surface warship design
- Displacement: 600 t
- Length: 71.5 m
- Speed: 29 knots
- Armament: 2 x 102mm guns, 3 x 37mm AA guns, depth charges, mine rails
- Crew: 104 men
- Lost on August 28, 1941
- Discovered by our team in 2021
- Depth: 96 m
Historical Background
Cyclone was an Uragan-class patrol ship — the first Soviet surface warship design. Laid down at Shipyard No. 190 in Leningrad in 1927, she was commissioned in 1932. The six ships of this class built for the Baltic Fleet were jokingly nicknamed the “Bad Weather Division” by sailors — all bore names of weather phenomena (Uragan/Hurricane, Taifun/Typhoon, Smerch/Tornado, Cyclone, Groza/Thunderstorm, Vikhr/Whirlwind).
During the Tallinn Breakthrough, Cyclone served in the rearguard under Rear Admiral Yu.F. Rall, alongside the destroyers Kalinin, Artyom, and Volodarsky, and patrol ships Sneg and Burya. The rearguard was tasked with laying mines on the Tallinn roadstead and covering Convoys III and IV from the rear.
After the transport Balkhash struck a mine and sank, Cyclone was the first ship to rush to the aid of the sinking transport Everita. She entered the field of debris and began pulling survivors from the water. However, in the darkness, Cyclone herself struck a mine from the same mineline. The explosion tore the ship in half; the wreckage sank almost instantly.
Condition on the Seabed
The wreckage of Cyclone lies at a depth of 96 meters. During the search for submarine M-96, expedition members initially mistook the detached bow section for a submarine, but it was later identified by its structural features as the patrol ship Cyclone.
