HMS Torbay (S90)

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HMS Torbay
Career (UK) Royal Navy Ensign
Ordered: June 26, 1981
Laid down: December 3, 1982
Launched: March 8, 1985
Commissioned: February 7, 1987
Status: active in service
General Characteristics
Displacement: Surfaced: 4,740 tons
Dived: 5,208 tons
Length: 280.1 ft (85.4 m)
Beam: 32.1 ft (9.8 m)
Draught: 31.2 ft (9.5 m)
Propulsion: Rolls-Royce PWR1 nuclear reactor
2 × GEC turbines
1 × shaft pump jet 15,000 hp (11 MW)
motor for emergency drive
emergency retractable propellor
2 × W H Allen turbo generators 2 MW
2 × Paxman diesel alternators 2,800 hp (2.1 MW)
Speed: Dived: 32 knots (59 km/h)
Complement: 18 officers
112 enlisted
Sensors and processing systems: Ferranti/Gresham Dowty DCB/DCG
Type 2072 hull-mounted flank array passive sonar
Plessey Type 2020 or Marconi/Plessey Type 2074 hull-mounted active and passive search and attack sonar
Ferranti Type 2046 towed array passive search sonar
Thomson Sintra Type 2019 PARIS or Thorn EMI 2082 passive intercept and ranging sonar
Marconi Type 2077 short range active classification sonar
Kelvin Hughes Type 1007 I band navigation radar
Pilkington Optronics CK34 search periscope
Pilkington Optronics CH84/CM010 attack periscope
Type 2076 sonar from February 2003
Electronic warfare and decoys: 2 × SSE Mk8 launchers for Type 2066 and Type 2071 torpedo decoys
RESM Racal UAP passive intercept
CESM Outfit CXA
Armament: 5 × 21 in (533 mm) torpedo tubes
Spearfish torpedoes (originally Tigerfish torpedoes) with 20 reloads
UGM-84 Harpoon submarine-launched cruise missile
Mines
UGM-109 Tomahawk scheduled for 2006

HMS Torbay (S90) is a Trafalgar-class submarine of the Royal Navy.

HMS Torbay has the unique distinction that, because she was the first vessel fitted with the new command system SMCS-NG (derived from the earlier SMCS), she was also the first Royal Navy vessel to put to sea under the command of the Microsoft Windows operating system.

HMS Torbay has recently also been used in an experiment into using colour schemes to reduce the visibility of submarines from the air. In early 2006 the black in which Royal Navy submarines have traditionally been painted was relaced by a carefully selected shade of blue. This was after researchers said black was the worst possible colour for a submarine avoiding detection from the air. This change is the result in part of the changing nature of Royal Navy commitments since the end of the Cold War. A more expeditionary foreign policy has led to Navy operations moving from the murky waters of the North Atlantic to the clearer waters of the Arabian Sea and the Indian Ocean. [1] [2]

See HMS Torbay for other ships of the same name.


Trafalgar-class submarine

Trafalgar | Turbulent | Tireless | Torbay | Trenchant | Talent | Triumph

List of submarines of the Royal Navy
List of submarine classes of the Royal Navy


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