The KSShch (Russian: Корабельный снаряд «Щука» (КСЩ);[1] tr.:Korabelny snaryad Shchuka (KSShch); English: Anti-Ship Missile "Pike") was a Soviet anti-ship cruise missile design that carried a nuclear warhead. Its GRAU designation is 4K32. It was sometimes referred to as P-1 Strela (П-1 «Стрела», "Arrow"). It was used in the 1950s and 1960s. The missile's NATO reporting name was SS-N-1 Scrubber. It was tested in 1953–1954 on the destroyer Bedovyy (Kildin-class) and entered service in 1955, being deployed on Kildin- and Krupnyy (later converted to Kanin)-class ships. It was fired from a heavy rail launcher SM-59, with an armoured hangar. As those ships were retrofitted and modernized between 1966 and 1977, the missiles were removed (in favor of the SS-N-2 on the Kildin class and an anti-aircraft/anti-submarine weapons suite on the Kanin class).
Specifications
- Total length: 7.6 m (25 ft)
 - Diameter: 900 mm (3 ft)
 - Wingspan: 4.6 m (15 ft)
 - Weight: 3,100 kg (6830 lb)
 - Warhead: nuclear warhead or High Explosive
 - Propulsion: liquid-fuel rocket
 - Range: 68 km (42 mi)
 - Guidance: inertial guidance
 - Contractor: NPO Mashinostroenia
 - Entered service: 1955
 
Operators
- The Soviet Navy employed the KSShch on Kildin and Kanin class ships. The missile was withdrawn by 1977.
 
See also
- KS-1 Komet
 - Saab Rb 08
 - P-20 Sokol[2]
 - P-40
 
References
- ↑ (in Russian) Black Sea Navy Archived 2012-02-07 at the Wayback Machine
 - ↑ "MilitaryRussia.Ru — отечественная военная техника (после 1945г.) | Статьи".