The Juliett boats were designed to carry four nuclear-armed cruise missiles. Juliett 484 - known in the Soviet Navy as submarine K-77 - also carried up to 22 torpedoes, capable of being fired from ten torpedo tubes.
Juliett originally carried P-5 cruise missiles, which featured a special system of two unfolding wings, allowing it to be launched from the relatively small diameter cylindrical submarine launcher. P-5 had a range of about 300 miles at an altitude of 650-1300 feet and carried a 2000-pound nuclear payload. More accurate self-guided cruise missiles P-6 and P-500 were later commissioned for targeting US aircraft carriers, such as USS Saratoga.
Juliett's low-profile hull was manufactured from austenitic steel, which provided a very low magnetic signature. The hull was then covered with a specially designed sonar/ sound-absorbing sheath. Consisting of two-inch thick hard rubber tiles, this "second skin" made her especially difficult to track. Unique silver zinc batteries allowed her to travel submerged at 17.5 knots for short periods. She had a maximum underwater range of 810 miles.
She was fitted with many sophisticated radio and electronic devices, such as a Kasatka satellite downlink that provided targeting information. A powerful target guidance radar measuring more than 100 square feet in area was built into the forward edge of the sail structure. The radar was deployed from the front of the sail, which opens by rotating 180 degrees.
Original plans called for 35 of these submarines to be built, augmenting nuclear-powered Project 675 (ECHO II) class boats. (The ECHOs were an enlarged nuclear version of the Juliett with 8 missile launchers.) Only 16 Julietts were actually built; most were produced by a shipyard in Gorky between 1962 and 1968.
Six submarines were assigned to the Northern Fleet, six were split between the Baltic and the Black Sea and four were assigned to the Pacific Fleet. In 1987, all the Northern Fleet boats were re-assigned to the Baltic Fleet.


JULIETT 484 TECHNICAL CHARACTERISTICS
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