Benjamin Franklin class submarine

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USS Benjamin Franklin
Class overview
Operators: Naval flag of United States United States Navy
Preceded by: James Madison-class
Succeeded by: Ohio-class
Completed: 12
General characteristics
Length: 425 ft (130 m)
Beam: 33 ft (10 m)
Draft: 31 ft (9.4 m)
Propulsion: S5W reactor

The Benjamin Franklin class of submarine was an evolutionary development from the James Madison class of fleet ballistic missile submarine. Having quieter machinery and other improvements, they are considered a separate class. A subset of this class is the re-engineered 640 class starting with the USS George C Marshall (SSBN 654). Together with the George Washington, the Ethan Allen, the Lafayette, and the James Madison classes, they comprised the "41 for Freedom."

The Franklin class submarines were built with the Polaris A-3, and later converted to carry the Poseidon C-3. During the late 1970s and early 1980s, select units were further modified to carry Trident-I (C-4) missiles.

In the early 1990s, to make room for the Ohio-class ballistic missile submarines within the limits set by SALT II, the missile tubes of Kamehameha and James K. Polk were disabled. Those boats were redesignated special operations attack submarines and given SSN hull classification symbols. USS Kamehameha was decommissioned on 2 April 2002, the last ship of the entire class to be decommissioned.

[edit] Boats

(Boats marked with * indicate C-4 conversions.)

[edit] See also