![]() |
Quote:
Quote:
|
Given the Russians track record of greatly over exaggerating abilities which we only found out about after the iron curtain fell I doubt their claims. At the same time we all know the Silent Service is very tight lipped about the true abilities of its machines. This has always been her motto and it served her well for many years (and probably a huge reason the fleet was so successful during WW2). 250m is only a bit over 700 feet. We know that the Thresher back in 1963 was way below 400 m when she imploded.
|
http://www.csg2.navy.mil/Texas.htm
USS Texas(SSN 775) Depth: Greater than 800 feet http://www.milparade.com/security/49/01_01.shtml K-335 Gepard operational diving depth 520 m and max depth 600 m I don't know the conversion. Feet and inches are french to me ^^ Have a tool here somehwere but can't find it to convert. As a side note, many of the workers who built the Russian sub, were so poor, that they took their families to the dockyard to feed them, as food was supplied there. I heard on the doco, (The russian one, sorry they might be lying?) that at 450m, the pressure is like balancing an elephant on a dinner plate. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
I realise that elite hunter has you all riled up, but being defensive and ripping apart my statements without providing ANY information of your own is worse than stating something from memory. I suggest you take a break from the forums. As you may notice, im not american or russian and I dont care who has the 'Better' of this that or the other. I'm here because I like subs and the SH4 game. P.S can a moderator please lock this thread before demon has an anuerism |
Quote:
But here: http://www.ucsusa.org/global_securit...-programs.html and here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-satellite_weapon these are just starters. There is much much more for you. And I ask for you to provide info of sub diving depth. You make a claim, I just ask where you're get the info from. Don't be so defensive. I have never seen anything that dilineates Russia's current subs diving depths greater than American subs depth. In the 80's the russians had the titanium hulls. and yes, their diving depths were known to be deep. But it's not the same anymore. Russia's not building subs from that material anymore. Do you have something that is definite? I'm just interested. You do know the Seawolf's are constructed from HY-100 steel. Quote:
|
Entirely agree on the ASAT stuff, but on the subs...
Quote:
Don't be so impressed. First, HY-100 is nothing new. They actually considered making Los Angeleses out of that stuff. They just couldn't quite hack the metallurgy back then, especially with the Los Angeleses already running late and overbudget. So it was HY-80 for all of them. The Russians actually had a long history of outdiving American subs. The November, for all its reliability horrors, still had a test depth of 300m at a time when Skipjacks were only rated for 700 feet, and crush was estimated at 1050. However you define "test", when one side's test is w/i50 feet (K-3 wound up diving to 310m/1017feet) of your Crush, the other side definitely has the deeper diving boat. The Thresher then went all the way to 400m test depth by improved wielding and weighed 700 tons more. The Soviets then went to AK-29 steel (HY-100 equiv) for the Vics and matched it at ~100t lighter (surface displacement) than Thresher despite a weight-consuming double-hull configuration. Then came the all too famous decision to shed hull weight for the 688s, cutting the test depth down to 300. The Soviets had their run with titanium subs, but at around the same time they advanced to AK-32 (100kg/cm^2 or about HY-140 equiv). The Akula wound up having a test of 600m, and a "normal operating depth" of 400-480m. That's actually comparable to even Sierra. When you are almost getting the same results with steel (still at a heavier weight, but hardly the chasm it was at the beginning) as you can with titanium, obviously you are going to go with steel. Part of the reason, that Russian subs successfully used higher yield steels, I suppose, may have to do with their work with titanium as well as their choice of a double hull. It allows the hydrodyamics to be "separated" from the strength. So while the Americans struggle to get the complex hydrodynamic shape without cracking any of the steel, the Soviets can make the hydrodynamic outer hull out of thin plates of lower grade steel and make the strength pressure hull in a way that's easy to make, not in a way that's good for hydrodynamics. |
Quote:
The precise factor is 1 foot=30.46cm (shoe size 46). |
Exact crush depths are classified anyway, I heard rumours that the Traffie can go near 2000ft which is just insane depths for an SSN. The Alfa, Mike and Sierra classes could go damn deep but in the Alfas case it was damn noisey, in the Mikes case it caught fire and was too expensive to build a new one, not so sure about the Sierras, heard they were quite effective.
The major problem the Soviets had was a lack of money to run their navy the way they wanted, something which thanks to the global oil crisis, is now solved for the most part. I think this is the first time in many years that the Russians are virtually neck and neck with the US in terms of technology, perhaps because of the 'glasnost' of technology which occured at the end of the cold war, more people now know about the capabilities of US submarines and US technology, we know how Stealth works, we know about pumpjet propulsors, and while I have no doubt that the US has even better toys that we DON'T know about, now that the Russians are getting more money, I have no doubt that they will begin making their own special toys. Who knows, we might not be far off from a global arms race the likes of which hasn't been seen since the 50s/60s. |
Quote:
Quote:
|
Ok...let's get back on the topic of Putin and his threats.
The timeline is just too close. On the 3rd, Poland agrees to the US Missile Defense Shield, for the past 3 months they carried out exercises in mutliple fleet operation zones (Atlantic, Med, Pacific, and Artic Oceans). On the 12th, Putin makes a statement that "It's frightening not just to talk about this, but even to think about, that in response to such deployment, the possibility of such deployments - and one can't theoretically exclude these deployments - that Russia will have to point its warheads at Ukrainian territory". Finally, on the 15th, he stated after 'throwing a fit' "We have a ready-made plan and we know what we are going to do". So...with all of these cards on the table, let's look at the results. |
Quote:
Aaaah, yeah 1715 ft sounds about right to what I heard :up: Another problem with the Alfa was that damned power plant ;) |
|
Here's an interesting transcript about the upcoming SM-3 attempt.
http://www.defenselink.mil/transcrip...nscriptid=4145 Obviously the US is not going to come out and threaten Putin's ability to launch missile attacks. But it's hard not to think that Putin can't see that if this system works, or is being worked on to this degree, there will be challenges faced. |
Ok everyone...the first part has taken place...sit back and let's keep the civility as time goes by.
Kosovo Declares Independance Fox News Coverage Has pictures of Kosovo Albanians holding British and American flags. CNN Coverage |
As expected. But I think Kosovo has turned more Albanian than independant. More important, it is a late total victory for islamic land-taking. In a medium- and long range perspective, for the West it is set to prove to be a pyrrhus victory only, and it is not worth the row it has created with Moscow. The US and the EU may have piushed for this move together, yes - but the consequences will affect Europe exclusively. Wishing wisely is an art. The West does not excel in it, but is like a kid in a store full of sweets.
|
Yes, we never were good at looking at things in the long term, the Treaty of Versailles is a good example of that... :damn:
|
|
Quote:
What the west needs to do is have more sex which equals more babies which equals more citizens with western democratic values. So have at it. |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 03:07 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 1995- 2025 Subsim®
"Subsim" is a registered trademark, all rights reserved.