Walrus class submarine

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Walrus class attack submarine
Class Overview
Class Type Attack Submarine
Class Name Walrus
Preceded By Zwaardvis class submarine
Ships of the Class: Walrus, Zeeleeuw, Dolfijn, Bruinvis

The Walrus class submarine is the only submarine class currently in operation in the Royal Netherlands Navy. They have been in use since 1990 and are all named after sea mammals. The Walrus class submarines are unusual in that instead of a cross-shaped assembly of stern diving planes and rudders, they mount four combined rudders and diving planes in an "X" configuration. This tail configuration was first testest in 1960 on the United States Navy's USS Albacore (AGSS-569), but has since been used only by the Walrus class, the Swedish Navy's Södermanland class, and the Royal Australian Navy's Collins class.

[edit] Ships

[edit] General characteristics

  • Displacement: 2450 t surfaced, 2800 t submerged, 1900 t standard
  • Dimensions: 67.73 x 8.4 x 6.6 m
  • Propulsion: 3 diesels, diesel-electric, 5,430 shp, 1 shaft, 5 blades
  • Speed: 13 knots surfaced, 20 knots submerged
  • Complement: 50 to 55
  • Surface Search Radar: Signaal/Racal ZW 07
  • Sonar Systems: Thomson Sintra TSM 2272 Eledone Octopus, GEC Avionics Type 2026 towed array, Thomson Sintra DUUX 5 passive ranging and intercept
  • Fire Control: HSA SEWACO VIII action data automation, GTHW integrated Harpoon and torpedo FCS
  • Armament: 4 21 inch (533mm) torpedo tubes (20 Honeywell Mk 48 or Honeywell NT 37 torpedoes, mines, SubHarpoon SSM)

[edit] References

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