What's new

China’s Submarine Fleet, Evolution & news

The first Type 093 was started in construction by 1998, and being deployed by 2006.
And it was put on display 3 years later on the 60th National Anniversary Parade. Like the news said, Chinese second generation nuclear sub was first seen in public in 2009.

Compare the Sail of this newly revealed sub to that of 093, we can easily spot few differences. Without the look-out windows on its sail, the new sub is designed to dive deeper. Also without the joint section of its hall and sail, the new sub seems using an integrated pressure hall structure design,which will make it new generation than its predecessor - the 3rd generation nuclear sub of China.

Some suggested the 4th generation will be without its sale planes

`4.jpg



The USS Asheville (SSN 758)
6.jpg
 
And it was put on display 3 years later on the 60th National Anniversary Parade. Like the news said, Chinese second generation nuclear sub was first seen in public in 2009.

Compare the Sail of this newly revealed sub to that of 093, we can easily spot few differences. Without the look-out windows on its sail, the new sub is designed to dive deeper. Also without the joint section of its hall and sail, the new sub seems using an integrated pressure hall structure design,which will make it new generation than its predecessor - the 3rd generation nuclear sub of China.

Some suggested the 4th generation will be without its sale planes

View attachment 312781


The USS Asheville (SSN 758)
View attachment 312782

Yep, those wings won't be seen on the tower of the 4th generation nuclear subs.
 
Those 2 wings will generate extra noise when sailing at high speed. Noise level at high speed is the only factor to judge how quite is a nuclear sub.

That's why the Type 09IIIB is still a 3.5th gen, but maybe it has already featured with the pump-jet.

Since the Type 09IIIB is transitional between the 3rd gen and 4th gen, also a test bed for many techs from the 4th gen.
 
I've yet to see a submarine without diving planes ("wings").... if not on the sail then on the front and/or rear of the hull. Sometimes retractable.


plane_animation03.gif


dive.gif


Sea wolf SSN
08002302.jpg
 
Last edited:
Some conventional subs

Type 212A SS
Mmi_S527.jpg


Type 214 SS
U-Boot-Klasse-214-001.jpg


Dolhpin SS
ShowImage.ashx


Scorpene
Chilean-navys-Scorpene-type-submarine.jpg


677 Lada
l4qM9.jpg


Yuan
6232774072_93d60771f4_b.jpg
 
I've yet to see a submarine without diving planes ("wings").... if not on the sail then on the front and/or rear of the hull. Sometimes retractable.


plane_animation03.gif


dive.gif


Sea wolf SSN
the rear wing is on all/most subs including chinese subs
s20_submarine.t.jpg

as for front wings they are typicaly found on most german designed subs and older french subs examples:

pakistans very own a90b has front wings
agosta-90b-the-first-pakistan-navy-indigenously-built-submarine-with-picture-id1352300

the type 209 is an exception as it wings are retractable but still at the front.
Germany_Submarine_Type_209_00.jpg94be653a-4fae-4909-9be6-cec6705cc204Original.jpg


the type 214 with the conventional front wings
submarine.jpg

the one that stands out is the 212
as it has sail wings
Mmi_S527.jpg
 
Is that rocket-assisted torpedo ???

View attachment 312959

Not quite, but not too wrong either. It's an EM52 rocket-assisted moored-mine:

20060726_07.jpg


Capture.JPG


They've been around for about 30 years. I've seen them in Iran's arsenal

It's similar to the US CAPTOR mine:

Mk.60_Captor.jpg


Being a surface-laid, encapsulated projectile, the EM 52, like the CAPTOR launches a projectile when a surface ship comes into range.

For the CAPTOR this is a MK46 light-weight torpedo:

1280px-MK46_torpedo_launch.jpg


For the EM52, it's actually a rocket rather then a torpedo. This makes the EM52 lack maneuverability or adaptability, but their projectile rises faster and leaves the target less time to react. Traditional torpedo countermeasures like Nixie also don't work against such weapons, which generally lack a homing system.

SLQ-25_Nixie_aboard_USS_Iowa_%28BB-61%29.jpg


Even hard-kill options like Torbuster would be of limited value as the rocket is attacking from below, rather then from the side or rear of the ship.

1001.jpg


The limitation of an EM52 type mine is that it requires the target to pass directly overhead, thus limiting its range versus a CAPTOR type design which can launch a homing torpedo that can follow its target.
 
Last edited:
the rear wing is on all/most subs including chinese subs
All subs have some form a rudder. Here the main difference is whether + or x design.

as for front wings they are typicaly found on most german designed subs and older french subs examples:
Scorpene is a post 2000 sub
http://en.dcnsgroup.com/news/dcns-at-udt-from-1-to-3-june-in-oslo-norway/

Scorpene_Tunku_Abdul_Rahman.jpg


Vistoria class (ex-UK Upholder)
94cda0abef585be7db2741a8aa15ff09.jpg


IKL TR-1700 for Argentinia (Thyssen Nordseewerke)
santa_cruz_class.jpg


Dutch Walrus class
image013.jpg


Collins class
HMAS_Rankin_2007.jpg


Modernized Swedish sub in Singapore service (Archer class)
5244411_orig.jpg


Newest Swedish A-26 submarine design.
a26-ngu-image2.jpg


TKMS Type 218SG
218sg2.jpg
 
Soryu class submarine
soryu_class_l1.jpg


Oyashio class submarine
2df68f7a-f96e-11e5-91e4-cb0759506578_1280x720.JPG


Harushio class
image017.jpg


Yushio class
image025.jpg


Uzushio class
image013.jpg


USS Barbel as launched
USS_Barbel%3B0858005.jpg


USS Barbel (definitively)
SS580_72-77.jpg


Barbel-class submarines were originally designed and built with bow planes. The Barbels were built with bow mounted diving planes, but these were replaced by sail planes (aka fairwater planes) within a few years. This feature was standard on US Navy submarines until bow planes returned with the improved Los Angeles class, the first of which was launched in 1988.

The Barbel class' design is considered to be very effective.[3] The Zwaardvis-class submarines of the Netherlands and the Hai Lung-class submarines of the Republic of China (built and sold by the Netherlands) were based on the Barbel class design and forerunner of the Walrus class. The Japanese Uzushio class and its successors were also influenced by the Barbel class.

Kilo class
kilo-class-2_081413045246.jpg
 
FIRST PICTURE OF CHINA'S SECRETIVE NEW SUBMARINE

THE TYPE 093B IS STEALTHY AND NUCLEAR

By Jeffrey Lin and P.W. Singer

Posted Yesterday at 10:30pm
type_093b_ssn.jpg

People's Navy Online

TYpe 093B SSN

The Type 093B SSN is China's newest nuclear attack submarine. Stealthy and fast, it can quickly fire a barrage of vertically launched cruise missiles at unsuspecting ships and land targets.

In June 2016, China's navy released a clear photo of its newest, stealthiest nuclear attack submarine (SSN) being loaded with missiles. China's nuclear submarines are among the most secretive Chinese military platforms--it's a rare event to have even a photo of a 40-year-old Type 091 Han submarine, or the Type 092 Xia nuclear ballistic missile submarine. So an official photo of a modern Type 093B submarine is definitely big news in the world of People's Liberation Army-watching.

type_093_ssn.jpg

Jeff Head

Type 093

The Type 093 was designed in the late 1980s/early 1990s, and launched in 2002 and 2003. Only two Type 093s were built, as they are considered noisy and expensive, though much an improvement over the 1960s era Type 091 SSN. The Type 093B is believed to be much quieter than the Type 093, building on decades of Chinese advances in metallurgy and reactor/propulsion refinements.

The Type 093B "Shang" nuclear attack submarine is quiet, fast and the first Chinese combat submarine to be able to fire vertically launched cruise missiles. The United States Defense Department believes that three Type 093B SSNs were launched in 2015, and may enter service later this year. The original two Type 093 SSNs, launched nearly 15 years ago, were plagued by noisy reactors and propulsion systems, especially at high speeds, which limited their combat utility by making them highly detectable to enemy anti-submarine efforts. The Type 093B, in contrast, uses advances in Chinese metallurgy and reactor design to make a more quiet submarine. Experts place its stealthiness between that of the USN Los Angeles Flight I and Flight III SSNs.

type_093b_ssn_sail.jpg

Xinhui via China Defense Forum

VLS

The VLS cells are housed in a module right behind the conning tower; its framed in this picture by the blue gangway. The VLS battery, which may have 12-16 cells, can carry a range of cruise missiles for anti-ship and land attack missions.

While the stealth and performance of the Type 093B's reactor are not discernible just from looking at the outside, there are other noticeable improvements. The biggest is the installation of a vertical launch system battery behind the conning tower, which can be seen in a hydrodynamic hump blended into the hull (the VLS battery can be seen under the blue gangway). The VLS cell gives the Type 093B an advantage over older Chinese attack submarines since instead of launching cruise missiles from the torpedo tubes, it can more quickly launch missiles from the VLS. The larger size of VLS cells also makes them a good place to launch future underwater robots and UAVs. The Type 093B will still carry torpedo tube-launched cruise missiles, as seen in this photo. (The Chinese sailors are clearly loading a cruise missile canister into the torpedo tube, given that the smooth canister lacks the control surfaces of a torpedo.)

type_093b_loading.jpg

Xinhui via China Defense Forum

The Old Fashioned Way

Even with its vertically launched cruise missiles, the Type 093B SSN's torpedoes are still deadly against even aircraft carriers (though the crew is loading a torpedo tube launched anti-ship missile canister in this photo).

The Type 093B's conning tower has a flared base, similar to modern attack submarines like the Type 39C conventional submarine, and the American Virginia class SSN. The flared base could contain sensors, in addition to reducing under hydrodynamic drag and noise at certain speeds. There are also large installation mounts on the hull sides for side-mounted active sonar that will sweep for both surface warships and submarines.

yj82-missile_canister.jpg

Hongjian at China Defense Forum

YJ-82 Canister

In addition to VLS cells, submarines can also fire anti-ship missile canisters from their torpedo tubes; the canisters surface and break open to launch their missiles. This older method though, imposes size constraints on the missile and is a slower firing method.

Impressive a leap as the Type 093B may be for China's underwater force, the PLAN is already working on its next SSN. The Type 095 nuclear submarine, which may be launched before 2020, has been described by the Office of Naval Intelligence as a nuclear cruise missile submarine (SSGN) meaning that it'll carry a significant amount of cruise missiles, in addition to being a stealthy ship and sub hunter killer. The Type 095 SSGN is also likely to be quieter than the Type 093B, as well having underwater networked capability to worth with other manned and unmanned platforms above and underwater, and improved passive and active sensors. China has been behind other Pacific powers like the US and Japan in the undersea realm, but these examples of military modernization show how it is racing to close the gap.

http://www.popsci.com/first-picture-chinas-secretive-new-submarine-type-093b
 
Back
Top Bottom