After his appointment as
Commander-in-Chief of the Soviet Navy in 1956,
Admiral of the Fleet of the Soviet Union Sergey Gorshkov instigated a new vision for the service with a focus on destroying the
aircraft carriers of the
United States Navy using
anti-ship missiles. Key to this was the development of a weapon system able to operate at long distance. Leadership for the design was given to V. A. Nikitin, The subsequent Project 58 ships were given the designation of (guided missile cruiser) or RKR. They were known as the Kynda-class cruisers to NATO. Out of the four of the planned ten that were constructed,
Admiral Golovko was the third to be ordered, approval for the design being given on 6 December 1956.
Displacing standard and full load,
Admiral Golovko was in
overall length with a
beam of and a
draught of . Power was provided by two TV-12 steam turbines, fuelled by four KVN-95/64 boilers and driving two fixed pitch
screws. Design speed was , which the ship exceeded, and range was at . The ship's
complement consisted of 25 officers and 304 other crew. The ship was designed for
anti-ship warfare around two quadruple SM-70 P-35 launchers for sixteen
4K44 missiles (
NATO reporting name SS-N-3 'Shaddock'). To defend against aircraft, the ship was equipped with a single twin ZIF-102 M-1 Volna launcher with sixteen
V-600 4K90 (SA-N-1 'Goa') missiles forward and two twin guns aft, backed up by two single guns. Defence against submarines was provided by two triple
torpedoes and a pair of
RBU-6000 anti-submarine rocket launchers.
Admiral Golovko was equipped a MR-310 Angara (NATO reporting name 'Head Net A')
search radar, and one Don (NATO reporting name 'Don Kay')
navigational radar. For
fire-control purposes, the vessel had a single Binom radar for the surface-to-surface missiles and a 4R90 Yatagan radar (NATO reporting name 'Peel Group') for the surface-to-air missiles. Two R-105 Turel radars supported the AK-726 guns. A Burya fire control system was fitted for the anti-submarine rockets and a Zummer system for the torpedoes. The ship carried two each of the Nickel-KM and Khrom-KM
IFF systems and
electronic warfare equipment that included two Krab-11 and two Krab-12
radar-jamming devices. A GS-572 Gerkules-2M
sonar was also fitted. In 1975, the missiles were updated, the main radar was upgraded to MR-310A and two Uspekh-U radars were added. Four
AK-630 close-in weapon systems were also added in the 1980s to improve anti-missile defence. ==Construction and career==