Spaceships: Air Resistance and car/pet/rock
As I like pointing out, I'm not an engineer.
The issue with non-streamlined objects, or even semi ones is air resistance; so you need to figure out exactly at what speed does control problems kick in, because before that, turbulence shouldn't effect it significantly.
It's not supersonic, I think even streamlined planes have problems at eighty percent mach, though less if they can become transonic; I assume it's sound waves interference, and leaving them behind once you break the barrier.
Even propeller planes encounter problems trying to even reach that speed, mostly due to the blades, and sort of stuck at a speed band below that, with powerful enough engines.
I don't think you can get a rock to fly smoothly at Great Patriotic War speeds, though you could streamline it by just melting off all those edges; if you did that, it's sort of semi-streamlined, and I don't see any restrictions on adding aerofins to a planetoid. This would be pretty much up in the air as to feasibility.
Current attack helicopters can reach three hundred kilometres per hour.
Great war biplanes hover at around one hundred fifty to two hundred fifty kilometres.
Zeppelins should be able to hit a hundred kilometres, so that should be viable for a floating rock.