Raketa (hydrofoil)

Summary

Raketa (Russian: Раке́та, Rocket) was the first type of hydrofoil boats commercially produced in the Soviet Union. They were manufactured from 1957 until the early 1970s. The chief designer was Rostislav Alexeyev and the project 340 vessels had been planned already in the late 1940s.

Raketa 234
Raketa-234 on the Volga River, 2004
Class overview
BuildersKrasnoye Sormovo, Sormovo, Nizhny Novgorod
Built1957–1970s
General characteristics
TypeHydrofoil riverboat
Displacement25 230[clarification needed]
Length26.9 m (88 ft 3 in)
Beam5 m (16 ft 5 in)
Draft
  • 1.8 m (5 ft 11 in) displacement mode
  • 1.1 m (3 ft 7 in) foilborne
Propulsion900–1,000 hp (671–746 kW) (depending on the model), propeller
Speed
  • 60–65 km/h (37–40 mph) cruising
  • 70 km/h (43 mph) maximum
Capacity64 or 66 passengers (depending on the model)

The first model, Raketa-1, was built by Krasnoye Sormovo (Красное Сормово) shipbuilding plant in Sormovo, Nizhny Novgorod (Нижний Новгород). On its maiden voyage, on 25 August 1957, it carried 30 passengers from Nizhny Novgorod to Kazan (420 km) in seven hours.

Raketa boats were soon in wide commercial service on the Volga River and elsewhere in the Soviet Union. To this day, the name is often used generically in Russian for all hydrofoil river boats. Later designs include the Meteor and Kometa types, among many others.

There were several versions of project 340 vessels: project 340 (проект 340), project 340E (проект 340Э) and project 340ME (проект 340МЕ).

Operators edit

Austria edit

  • "Dolphin"

Cambodia edit

People's Republic of China edit

England edit

  • River Thames[1]

Finland edit

In Finland the traffic with project 340 vessel started in 1962, when the cities of Lahti and Jyväskylä had a joint-venture company, which bought one vessel. They prolonged the operations until 1983. After that the ownership was transferred to the private persons. The first name of the vessel was Tehi due to the one part of the southernmost Päijänne, Vesijärvi. Later the hydrofoils were taken off. Later M/S Tehi became M/S Suvi-Tuuli.

M/S Tehi edit

M/S Tehi started its operations in 1962. Later the M/S Tehi was renamed as M/S Suvi-Tuuli (without hydrofoils):Lake Päijänne cities of Lahti and Jyväskylä 1962–1983, Pyhäjärvi 2008, river Kokemäenjoki 2009- [2]

M/S Rosetta edit

M/S Rosetta is Raketa 314, which was bought from Tartu of Estonia in 1993. From 1995 to 2005 it was operated under the name M/S Suvijet . It was bought from Estonia and has been operated in Lake Päijänne for Royal Cruises since 2005 after the second renaming as M/S Rosetta. Raketa-314 was built in Feodocija in 1963. It may not prolong the chartered trips on Lake Päijänne after its sale.[3] The home harbour of M/S Rosetta is in Lahti.

The vessel does not have its original engine just like M/S Suvi-Tuuli does not have. Both of the vessels has a MAN 2842 LYE. The highest speeds are from 29 to 32 knots. During the renovation the steering was changed from the back side to the front.

Netherlands edit

 
Rheinpfeil in Rhein, now Raketa 72, Rotterdam

Hungary edit

  • In use between 1962–1985

Lithuania edit

The Lithuanian remaining Raketa has been operated by the UAB "Nemuno linija" line from the Kaunas passenger dock to Nida until 2010.[4] It had two Raketas named "Aistė" and "Lina" of which "Aistė" was renovated. Both "Aistė" and "Lina" were constructed in 1963. In June 2020 first passengers was taken from Kaunas to Nida and back current "Laivas Raketa" operator is "Vši Vandens kelias"

Poland edit

Romania edit

  • 8 boats were imported in Romania, Expres, Rapid, Sageata, Venus, Tismana, Fulger, Olanesti and Steaua.

Russia edit

 
Raketa 69 in Bor
 
Raketa 246 in Moscow
 
Raketa 246 in Moscow
 
Raketa 205 in Kineshma

Slovakia edit

  • Raketa I
  • Raketa II
  • Raketa III

Ukraine edit

 
Raketa-7 in Vylkove, 2003, retired

More than 150 ships overall in use on Dnieper, Danube and Bug until 1990s, then most of these ships were sold or scrapped. Some were preserved as memorials (for example Raketa-7 in Vylkove) or as private property not available for passenger use. Some attempts were made to launch new routes in 2019–2020 with the first irregular services from Kyiv to Kaniv launched in 2021 and first regular services from Kyiv to Kaniv and Chornobyl planned for 2022.[6] Due to Russian full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 this plans were postponed indefinitely.

Yugoslavia edit

  • Serbia, since the mid-1980s on the River Danube
  • Croatia, since mid '60s. "Atlas" tourist agency used 8 of them for fast transfers, island hopping and daily excursions from Split, Zadar and Dubrovnik. Also, for excursions from Istria to Venice, Italy.

They were all named starting with "Krila" (Croatian for "wings"), i.e. Krila Dubrovnika / Wings of Dubrovnik.

Since 1988, two received engine upgrades. Old, Russian engines were swapped for Italian ones manufactured by Isotta Fraschini.

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  • Trips with Raketa and Polese hydrofoil boats
  • Russian River Ships: Passenger Hydrofoils
  • Russian Passenger Hydrofoils
  • Romanian Passenger Hydrofoil Express
  1. ^ "Soviet fleet on the Thames (Part 1)". 19 May 2020.
  2. ^ "Sydän-Satakunta ja Jokilaakso". www.sydansatakunta.fi. Archived from the original on 2012-03-25.
  3. ^ "Motor Boats for Sale - New and Used boat sales | Boatshop24".
  4. ^ "Home". nemunolinija.lt.
  5. ^ "Russian-ships.info".
  6. ^ "З Києва до Канева по Дніпру за 2,5 години: оновлена Ракета вирушила в перший рейс. Фото". OBOZREVATEL NEWS (in Ukrainian). 2021-09-16. Retrieved 2023-07-17.