Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Project 131 Libelle Torpedo Boat

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Operators
  
Volksmarine

In commission
  
1974-1989

Lost
  
1

Built
  
1974-1977

Completed
  
31

Project 131 Libelle Torpedo Boat

Name
  
Libelle (Project 131.4)

Project 131 Libelle Torpedo boat, also known as the Libelle Klasse (German for "Dragonfly Class"), was a class of torpedo boats designed, build and used by the German Democratic Republic during the Cold War.

Contents

Setup

The Libelle class was based on a welded metal hull, housing a fueltank and a total of three soviet M-50F4 diesel engines, one to the rear and two to the front. The hull also contained one 533-mm torpedotube on each side. Project 131 carried no reloads for the torpedotubes. The boats were designed for short ranges only and were ment to operate from floating bases (projects 62 and 162), anchored close to their area of operation. Each Project 131 boat had a small compartment in the bow to accommodate the crew for some time.

On the deck, there was a pilothouse with four seats and an elevated seat in the center for the helmsman. On both sides of the pilothouse, removable ejectors for seamines could be mounted. On the aft deck, a rear facing ZU-23-2 23 mm gun was mounted for airdefence. The torpedoes were ejected to the rear, but faced forward, so that they were initially following the boats course after hitting the water.

Production and Service

30 boats were built in Rechlin and equipped in the Peene-Werft between 1974 and 1977.

The 30 boats were not given any names but had the numbers 131.401 to 131.430 assigned to them. One was lost in a collision off Hiddensee in 1986, the others were retired around 1989, with four boats being preserved.

References

Project 131 Libelle Torpedo Boat Wikipedia


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