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Originally posted by Schaden
Experts say the new Shang is comparable to a Victor III.
An Akula II in my estimate is without question better than a type 093.Advanced relative to the Han.
Originally posted by chinawhite
The future of Submarine propulsion
Borei Class. Pump jets are supposed to better disperse bubbles compared to the skewed blades currently used
Originally posted by chinawhite
The future of Submarine propulsion
Originally posted by chinawhite
Its actually quite different in saying they want capability and they have the capability. Your absolutely correct in saying that the Indian military want a SSN I'm saying from all aviable information, they do not have that capability.
I
Its a ensemble of past Chinese articles so they could range from when the article was published all the way to the 80's.
The Chinese did not claim it as a record and kept it secret so I assume other navies did as well to hide their operational capabilities
Where did you get 10MW?
The Institute of Nuclear Energy Technology (INET) at Qinghua University has constructed a ten-megawatt HTGR, known as HTR 10.
Actually I'm interested in the possiblities or desinated submarines for different missions. The possible design implications that the sentence holds
Originally posted by chinawhite
I didn't describe it in detail but arent Pump jets more efficent than a normal propellor so that it can have a slower revolution but achieve the same speed thus giving it an increased speed overall. Maybe my description of "bubbles" is incorrect?
[edit on 4-8-2008 by chinawhite]
Originally posted by Harlequin
reply to post by orangetom1999
As to your question about how a reactor is run to change to max speed...I will not comment on how this is done nor go into this arena in the intrest of security
they decrease the amount of containment rods to increase the reaction process - standard procedure on nuclear reactors - unless the US has somehow managed to not use graphite rods for control - which would be a first on teh entire planet really (because how else would you control the neutron emissions in the event of a scram)
Originally posted by chinawhite
You mean the ONLY reference you made....GlobalSecurity?.
Actually it states
"The new Type 093 Shang-class SSN is thought to be similar in performance to Russian second generation designs such as the Victor III, although it would be incorrect to describe the Chinese submarine as a copy of the Russian Victor III."
And the reason why the Victor III is made as a reference is because it was believed that the Rubin Central Design Bureau was involved with its development. As you can see the second line below, they actually "thought" it might turn out to be a Victor III clone.
The Type 093 is thought to be approaching the early variants of the U.S. Navy 688 (Los Angeles) class SSN in terms of capability and noise level, but still inferior to the more advanced Seawolf and Virginia class.
Originally posted by chinawhite
I very much doubt that any expert could ascertain a conclusion based on a picture or in Global Securities case, a lack of one. If all reports are correct, the 093 has a HTGR which would, design alone, make it significantly quieter than a LWR
originally posted by Schaden
An Akula II in my estimate is without question better than a type 093. Advanced relative to the Han.
Based on?
Originally posted by Daedalus3
"There is no immediate initiative to acquire any nuclear submarine assets (indigenous or otherwise) that would bear operational fruit in the next 5-10 years."
They claim it right here IMO:
Not sure what it running on the 093 class; any ideas on the max speed for these boats?
Originally posted by Schaden
You seem to be implying the Victor III analogy is inaccurate because it wasn't a clone. That wasn't the sole basis of analysis!
How about sinodefense.com ?
It is incorrect to say, by design alone, an HTGR submarine is significantly quieter than a PWR submarine.
If experts believe the type 093 is still behind an early Los Angeles class,
Originally posted by Schaden
How Quiet Is It?
I see a lot of comparisons thrown around about how quiet Chin’s 093 and 094 submarines are, with comparisons to the Victor III and Los Angeles-class (USN 688) submarines.
Data for that is hard to come by, but in 1997, the Office of Naval Intelligence released a chart comparing the performance of China’s new nuclear powered attack submarine (SSN), the 093, on which the 094 is said to share a design heritage.
Obviously, ONI didn’t release any numbers. But thanks to Tom Stefanick’s classic Strategic Antisubmarine Warfare and Naval Strategy, we can place China’s SSBN between 130-150 decibels (with a lot of specific qualifications outlined on pp272-279).
ONI’s estimate was done before we actually saw the submarine, however. An interesting comparison would be to compare the volume of the 093 to the Victor III. Modern quieting involves sound isolating mounts; Stefanick observes a relationship between quieting and larger submarines.
You may question my sources all day long, but everything I've read on the web says the same thing.
Type 093 wouldn't stand a chance against a modern western SSN. It would be detected and sunk before it knew what happened.
HTGR minus the pumping systems is significantly quieter than a LWR. All things being equal the HTGR will produce less movement. Just look at a pebble bed reactor and tell me what you think.