Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 18, 2026

Type 051 destroyer

The Type 051 destroyer was a class of guided missile destroyers based on the hull of the Soviet Neustrashimy-class destroyer deployed by China. It was the first guided missile destroyer fielded by the People's Liberation Army Navy (PLAN), and the first designed and built in China. 17 were built from 1970 to 1990; it was not until the 21st century that China would again build a class in such large numbers.

Last revised
Jun 18, 2026
Read time
≈ 9 min
Length
2,044 w
Citations
193
Source
Chongqing on 23 September 2018
Class overview
Builders
Operators People's Liberation Army Navy Surface Force
Preceded byAnshan class
Succeeded by
Built1968–1991
In service1971-2020
Completed172
Active02
Retired172
Preserved12
General characteristics
TypeDestroyer
Displacement3,670 tons
Length132 m (433 ft 1 in)
Beam12.8 m (42 ft 0 in)
Draught4.6 m (15 ft 1 in)
Propulsion
  • 2 steam turbines
  • 72,000 shp (53,700 kW)
Speed32 knots (59 km/h)
Range2,970 miles
Complement280
Armament
Aircraft carried1-2 helicopters: Harbin Z-9C ASW/SAR (Jinan (105), Luda II only)
Aviation facilities
  • Hangar and flight deck
  • Landing assistance system

The Type 051 destroyer (NATO/OSD Luda-class destroyer)3 was a class of guided missile destroyers based on the hull of the Soviet Neustrashimy-class destroyer deployed by China. It was the first guided missile destroyer fielded by the People's Liberation Army Navy (PLAN), and the first designed and built in China. 17 were built from 1970 to 1990;2 it was not until the 21st century that China would again build a class in such large numbers.4

NATO/OSD broadly grouped variants from refits and newer construction under the Luda I,5 Luda II,6 Luda III,7 and Luda IV classes.5

History

The PLAN began designing a warship armed with guided missiles in 1960 based on the Soviet destroyer Neustrashimy, with features from the Kotlin-class destroyer, but the Sino-Soviet split stopped work. Work resumed in 19658 with nine ships being ordered.98 Construction started in 1968, with trials beginning in 1971. The ships nominally entered service in the early 1970s, but few were fully operational before 1985; workmanship was poor due to the Cultural Revolution.8

Construction of the second batch began in 1977,10 with the last commissioning in 1991.11 The second batch may have been ordered due to the Cultural Revolution disrupting development of a successor class.8 These ships may be designated Type 051D.10

The PLAN initiated an abortive modernization program for the first batch in 1982. The ships would be reconstructed with British weapons and sensors acquired from British Aerospace. The Falklands War made the prospective upgrades less impressive and cost effective, and the project was cancelled in 1984. A 1986 upgrade project using American power plants, weapons, sensors, and computers was cancelled after the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests.8

Jinan, the first of the class, became a trials ship in 1987; a helicopter hangar and flight deck replaced the rear armament.9 This configuration was referred to as Luda II.12

The last two ships, Zhanjiang and Zhuhai, were upgraded with foreign – mainly French – systems,12 possibly being designated as Type 051G, and referred to as Luda III.13 They became test beds and many of the systems were later employed on the Type 052 and Type 051B destroyers.12 Both ships were decommissioned on 3 September 2020, being the last of their class to retire from service.14

Twelve ships of the class – Jinan, Yinchuan, Nanjing, Nanchang, Chongqing, Xining, Zhanijiang, Zhuhai, Hefei, Zunyi, Dalian, and Xi'an – have been preserved as museum ships.

Variants

Type 051

The Type 051 was the initial design using Soviet or Soviet-derived systems.

The anti-ship missiles were P-15 Termit derivatives (HY-1,15 and possibly later HY-2) in two triple-launchers.11 Guns were two twin 130 mm (5 in) gun mounts (SM-2-1 derivatives), and four twin 37 mm (1.5 in) anti-aircraft guns.15

Anti-submarine equipment were Soviet hull-mounted Pegas 2 and Tamir-2 sonars, depth charges, and FQF-2500 rocket launchers (Soviet RBU-1200 derivatives).16

The Type 051 was according to NATO part of the Luda I class.10

Type 051D

Dalian (110) before modernization. source ↗

The Type 051D was from the second batch. It had changes to electronics10 and was equipped for underway replenishment.8

The Type 051D was according to NATO part of the Luda I class.10

Type 051DT

Kaifeng (109) with "X" turret replaced by HQ-7 launcher source ↗

The Type 051DT was a modernized Type 051D. Kaifeng and Dalian were modernized to somewhat different designs.11

Kaifeng initially received the Thomson-CSF Tavitac combat data system, the Type 393 surface search radar, and HQ-7 (Crotale derivative) surface-to-air missiles (SAM); the missiles replaced "X" turret. In 1999, YJ-8 missiles replaced the HY-series, and electronic warfare systems were upgraded.11

Dalian received a similar modernization as Kaifeng. A notable difference was Dalian used the ZKJ-1 combat data system, which was also used on the Type 051Z.11

They were later equipped with YJ-83 anti-ship missiles.2

The Type 051DT was according to NATO part of the Luda III class,11 and later the Luda IV class.5

Type 051Z

The Type 051Z was a command variant with the ZKJ-1 combat data system.10 Anti-aircraft warfare capabilities were improved by replacing the 37 mm guns with Soviet 57 mm (2.2 in) guns,15 and fitting modern Type 381A 3-D radar.10

One Type 051D, Hefei, was converted to a Type 051Z.10

The Type 051Z was according to NATO part of the Luda I class.10

Helicopter destroyer variant

The helicopter hangar and flight deck on Jinan (105) source ↗

Jinan was a helicopter destroyer. The gun turrets aft of the aft missile launcher were replaced by a hangar and flight deck for two Harbin Z-9C helicopters.9

One Type 051, Jinan, was converted into a "Luda II"12 in 1987 for trials.9

Type 051G

The Type 051G was an improved variant to which design the last two ships, Zhanjiang and Zhuhai, were completed.13 They were equipped with Type 354 3-D air and surface search radar.711 Four twin YJ-8 launchers replaced the HY-1/HY-2 launchers.7 The Soviet sonar was replaced by French DUBV-23 search sonar and DUBV-43 variable depth sonar (VDS).17

Zhuhai was modified in 1999. The Soviet 130 mm guns were replaced by Type 79A 100 mm (4 in) guns,11 derived from French Creusot-Loire Compact, with automated reloaders.15 An HQ-7 SAM launcher replaced the "X" turret, as on the Type 051DT. Zhuhai was similarly modified.11

Zhanjiang and Zhuhai were equipped with the ZKG-4A and ZKG-4B combat data systems respectively.11

The Type 051G was also the first Chinese ship to deploy the YU-7 lightweight torpedo,17 and the Italian 40 mm (1.6 in) anti-aircraft gun.15

The Type 051G was according to NATO part of the Luda III class,11 and later the Luda IV class.5

Ships of class

All these ships were built at three shipyards: (1) the Luda Shipyard (since 2000 called the Dalian Shipyard) in Liaoning, (2) the Zhonghua Shipyard (now called the Hudong-Zhonghua Shipyard) in Shanghai, and (3) the Huangpu Shipyard, in Guangzhou. The number in the first column is the order of completion.9

Number Hull no. Name Builder Launched Commissioned Decommissioned Fleet Notes
Type 051
29 1609 广州 / Guangzhou Dalian 28 April 197111 30 June 19741811 9 March 1978 South Sea Fleet12 Suffered an explosion in 1978, as a result of which she was sunk, then raised and scrapped.10
39 1069 西安 / Xi'an9 Luda9 September 1970 28 November 197411 29 September 2007 North Sea Fleet9 Preserved as museum ship.
49 161 9 长沙 / Changsha9 Dalian9 28 June 1973 31 December 19789 26 August 2008 South Sea Fleet9 Inactive.2
59 1079 银川 / Yinchuan9 Luda9 30 July 1970 31 December 197111 15 November 2007 North Sea Fleet9 Preserved as a museum ship.2
69 1629 南宁 / Nanning9 Dalian9 27 October 1976 23 March 197911 September 2012 South Sea Fleet9 Inactive.2
79 1319 南京 / Nanjing9 Zhonghua9 11 December 1973 6 February 197711 26 September 2012 East Sea Fleet9 Preserved as a museum ship.2
Helicopter destroyer variant
19 1059 济南 / Jinan9 Luda11 30 July 197011 31 December 197119 15 November 2007 North Sea Fleet9 Built as Type 051. Converted in 1987.9 Preserved as a museum ship in Qingdao.2
Type 051D
89 1089 西宁 / Xining9 Luda9 16 October 197811 29 January 198011 25 September 2013 North Sea Fleet9 Preserved as a museum ship.2
119 1639 南昌 / Nanchang9 Zhonghua9 22 December 197911 15 November 198211 26 September 201619 South Sea Fleet9 Preserved as military tourist attraction in Nanchang, Jiangxi.19
139 1339 重庆 / Chongqing9 31 October 198011 15 November 198211 26 September 2014 East Sea Fleet9 Preserved as military tourist attraction in Tianjin.
149 1349 遵义 / Zunyi9 25 November 1983 28 December 198411 16 May 20192 North Sea Fleet2 Preserved as a museum ship.20
159 1649 桂林 / Guilin9 Dalian9 20 June 198411 10 July 198711 16 May 20192 North Sea Fleet2 Transferred from the South Sea Fleet.9 To be expended as target ship.
Type 051DT
109 1099 开封 / Kaifeng9 Luda9 3 November 197911 25 December 198211 16 May 20192 North Sea Fleet2 Built as Type 051D. Converted in 1999.11 To be expended as target ship.
129 1109 大连 / Dalian9 20 August 198111 26 December 198411 16 May 20192 North Sea Fleet2 Built as Type 051D.11 Preserved as a museum ship.
Type 051Z
99 1329 合肥 / Hefei9 Zhonghua9 November 197811 18 March 198011 25 September 2013 East Sea Fleet9 Built as Type 051D.9 Preserved as a museum ship.2
Type 051G
16 1659 湛江 / Zhanjiang9 Dalian9 1 August 198811 30 December 198911 28 August 202011 South Sea Fleet9 Inactive.21 Will be transformed into a museum ship.
17 1669 珠海/ Zhuhai9 18 October 199011 21 November 199111 28 August 202011 South Sea Fleet9 Inactive.21 Will be transformed into a museum ship.
See also

See also

Equivalent destroyers of the same era

References

References

  1. Bussert and Elleman: Chinese Naval Shipyards
  2. Tate, Andrew (17 May 2019). "PLAN decommissions four Type 051 destroyers". Jane's 360. Retrieved 7 June 2019.
  3. After the former Chinese city of Lüda.
  4. Cole: page 24
  5. United States Navy Office of Naval Intelligence (2018). PLA Navy Identification Guide (Report). Archived from the original on 30 April 2019. Retrieved 29 April 2019.
  6. Jane's Warship Recognition Guide: page 74
  7. Jane's Warship Recognition Guide: page 76
  8. Forecast International: page 4
  9. Jane's Fighting Ships 2004-2005: p. 127
  10. Jane's Fighting Ships 2009-2010: p. 139
  11. Jane's Fighting Ships 2009-2010: p. 140
  12. Bussert, James C. (August 2004). "China Builds Destroyers Around Imported Technology". Afcea International. Retrieved 8 June 2019.
  13. Jane's Fighting Ships 2004-2005: page 128
  14. Lei, Zhao (3 September 2020). "Last two Type 051 destroyers decommissioned". China Daily. Archived from the original on 17 September 2020.
  15. Bussert and Elleman: The Luda's Gun and Missile Systems
  16. Bussert and Elleman: The Luda's Antisubmarine Warfare Capability
  17. "Undersea dragon: Chinese ASW capabilities advance" (PDF). Jane's. 2017. Retrieved 24 May 2019.
  18. Forecast International: page 1
  19. "Farewell to Nanchang: first-generation Chinese guided missile destroyer decommissioned". Ministry of Defense of the People's Republic of China. People's Daily Online. 9 September 2016. Archived from the original on 8 June 2019. Retrieved 8 June 2019.
  20. "海军134舰于1988年命名的"遵义舰"要回家了-贵阳网-贵阳市融媒体中心". www.gywb.cn. Archived from the original on 2021-01-31. Retrieved 2021-04-21.
  21. "Chinese military's last Type 051 destroyer to retire and settle down in Zhuhai". China Military Official Website.
Bibliography

Bibliography