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#1 |
Subsim Diehard
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Why don't the state of the art diesel electric subs like the Collins or the Type 212 use pumpjet propulsors like the Astute, Trafalgar, or VA?....:hmm: Supposedly pumpjets are more efficient so the subs would gain longer ranges with more fuel effeciency hypothetically. What's keeping them from equipping them?
Ideas?
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#2 |
Planesman
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One thing is that pumpjets have higher inertia than propellers so they do not respond as quickly as an unshrouded propeller to speed variations. I imagine that for shallow water operations this has a certain importance.
Also, not all shrouded propellers and pumpjets are more efficient than propellers, and not in all ranges of speed. in brief: a shrouded propeller with an accelerating shroud (i.e. a duct in which the water accelerates from the inlet to the outlet) is generally more efficient than an unshrouded propeller. This is in part due to the fact that the propeller/duct, creating a lower pressure or suction field on the inner side of the duct itself, creates a positive thrust on the shroud. This thrust more or less compensates the additional drag that the above mentioned suction field generates on the after body of the boat. In reality the shroud itself has a certain drag so the thrust that has to be produced by the shrouded propeller may not always be smaller than the thrust that should be produced by an equivalent unshrouded propeller. But I don't think that submarines use accelerating ducts because a shrouded prop with an accelerating duct has smaller diameter and higher rpm than a shrouded propeller with a decelerating duct and it should be more noisy. On the other end, a shrouded prop with a decelerating duct creates a negative thrust on the shroud therefore the thrust that has to be produced can be (and usually is) larger than the thrust produced by and equivalent unshrouded prop. On the other end it usually has better efficiencies than shrouded props with accelerating ducts (working with the same outlet-inlet speed difference) because it has higher specific diameters. Also it has the advantage of having lower rpm and lower loads. Having lower rpm it is less prone to cavitate (at given depth and given boat speed) than an unshrouded prop. But since a diesel sub operates most of the times at low speed the andvantages of a pumpjet are very limited in terms of quieting and could actually increase the Ah consumption.
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![]() Last edited by aaken; 07-27-06 at 04:41 AM. |
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#3 |
Sub Test Pilot
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#4 |
Ace of the Deep
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Am I wrong or is this a Kilo class?????
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#5 |
Sub Test Pilot
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Black sea fleet Kilo class submainre her name is alrosa trailing a waterjet propulsor unit and above thats what one is close up, pictures taken in sevstopl.
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#6 |
Ace of the Deep
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Cool, I've always loved the Kilo class but now she looks even better! I wonder if the pumpjet makes them even more silent than they are right now.:hmm:
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#7 | ||
Subsim Diehard
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![]() Quote:
![]() And it still is strange that the other newer SSKs have decided not to bother with them... Quote:
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"Seek not to offend or annoy... only to speak the truth"-a wise man Last edited by LoBlo; 07-27-06 at 01:11 PM. |
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#8 |
Subsim Diehard
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On a side note:
That pumpjet used on that Kilo sure is different looking. I mean it obviously has the rotor showing and the aft placed stator disconnected and on the ground below. But the prop housing itself is strange in that is blends into the aft dive plane and rudder supports. Not only that, but it inlet opening are tightly hugged to the hull instead of the more distant and widely opened pumpjets on the SW or VA. http://www.combatindex.com/hardware/.../ssn21_13.html ![]() http://www.combatindex.com/hardware/...ssn774_07.html ![]()
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