History | |
---|---|
Nazi Germany | |
Name | Z15 Erich Steinbrinck |
Namesake | Erich Steinbrinck |
Ordered | 9 January 1935 |
Builder | Blohm & Voss, Hamburg |
Yard number | B504 |
Laid down | 30 May 1935 |
Launched | 24 September 1936 |
Completed | 31 May 1938 |
Commissioned | 8 June 1938 |
Fate | Allocated as war reparations to Soviet Union |
Soviet Union | |
Name | Pylky (Пылкий) |
Acquired | November 1945 |
Renamed | PK3-2 |
Stricken | 19 February 1958 |
Fate | Sold for scrap, 18 April 1958, broken up |
General characteristics (as built) | |
Class and type | Type 1934A-class destroyer |
Displacement | |
Length | |
Beam | 11.30 m (37 ft 1 in) |
Draft | 4.23 m (13 ft 11 in) |
Installed power |
|
Propulsion | 2 shafts, 2 × geared steam turbines |
Speed | 36 knots (67 km/h; 41 mph) |
Range | 1,530 nmi (2,830 km; 1,760 mi) at 19 knots (35 km/h; 22 mph) |
Complement | 325 |
Armament |
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Z15 Erich Steinbrinck was a Type 1934A-class destroyer built for Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine in the mid-1930s. The ship was named after the First World War German naval officer Erich Steinbrinck. At the beginning of World War II on 1 September 1939, the ship was initially deployed to blockade the Polish coast, but she was quickly transferred to the North Sea to lay defensive minefields. In late 1939 and 1940 the ship laid multiple offensive minefields off the English coast that claimed 24 merchant ships and a destroyer. Steinbrinck was under repair for most of the Norwegian Campaign of early 1940 and was transferred to France later that year.
After a lengthy refit in Germany, she returned to France in early 1941 where she escorted returning warships, commerce raiders, and supply ships through the Bay of Biscay for several months. After her refit was completed, Steinbrinck was transferred to Northern Norway in 1942 where she participated in several minor operations before she was damaged running aground and forced to return to Germany for repairs. The ship returned to Norway in mid-1943 where she escorted German capital ships as they moved between Norway and Germany and participated in the German attack (Operation Zitronella) on the Norwegian island of Spitzbergen, well north of the Arctic Circle. Steinbrinck was ordered home in November to begin a lengthy refit, during which she was badly damaged by Allied bombs, and was unserviceable for the rest of the war. She was turned over to the Soviet Union after the war as war reparations and only served a few years before she was converted into a training ship and then a barracks ship before being sold for scrap in 1958.