The Soyuz 7K-OK vehicles carried a crew of up to three without spacesuits. The craft can be distinguished from those following by their bent solar panels and their use of the Igla automatic docking navigation system, which required special radar antennas. The 7K-OK was primarily intended as a variant of the 7K-LOK for Earth orbital testing. Mostly the same vehicle, it lacked the larger antenna needed to communicate at lunar distance. The early Soyuz models also sported an external toroidal fuel tank surrounding the engines and meant to store extra propellant for lunar flights, but it was left empty on the first nine flights. After the spacecraft's purpose was changed to space station ferry duties, the tank was removed. Soyuz 7K-OK spacecraft had a "probe and drogue"docking mechanism to connect with other spacecraft in orbit, in order to gather engineering data as a preparation for the Soviet space station program. There were two variants of Soyuz 7K-OK: Soyuz 7K-OK featuring an active "probe" docking port, and Soyuz 7K-OK featuring a passive "drogue" docking target. The docking mechanisms of 7K-OK and 7K-LOK did not allow internal transfer, thus cosmonauts had to spacewalk between docked modules. This procedure was conducted successfully on the jointSoyuz 4 and Soyuz 5 missions, where Aleksei Yeliseyev and Yevgeny Khrunov transferred from their Soyuz 5 to the Soyuz 4 craft. The first uncrewed test of this version was Kosmos 133, launched on November 28, 1966.
The last two Soyuz space craft of this series were of the designation Soyuz 7K-OKS. The main modification was the addition of the new SSVP docking system that allowed internal crew transfer, which was performed for the first time on the Salyut 1 space station by Soyuz 11. The SSVP docking adapter is still in use today on the ISS.
Uncrewed and test missions
Kosmos 133
Kosmos 140
Kosmos 186 and Kosmos 188, the first uncrewed automated docking in the history of spaceflight
Kosmos 212 and Kosmos 213, uncrewed automated docking mission
Kosmos 238
Soyuz 2, intended docking target for the crewed Soyuz 3
Crewed missions
Soyuz 1, the first crewed Soyuz flight, commander and sole crew-member killed on re-entry
Soyuz 3
Soyuz 4 and Soyuz 5, the first crewed docking and first crew transfer in the history of spaceflight
Soyuz 6
Soyuz 7 and Soyuz 8: Intended docking, to be filmed by Soyuz 6 crew – docking failed due to malfunction
Soyuz 9
Soyuz 10, Salyut 1 ferry, the first docking to a space station in the history of spaceflight
Soyuz 11, Salyut 1 ferry, the first manning of a space station in the history of spaceflight – crew killed on re-entry