Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Undersea Warfare.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Undersea Warfare."— Presentation transcript:

1 Undersea Warfare

2 Agenda Submarine Classes Deployment Cycles Weapons and sensors
Submarine Missions

3 Hunters, Killers & Nuclear Deterrence
Force Structure America’s Submarines Hunters, Killers & Nuclear Deterrence Stealth Classified missions Agility Anywhere, everywhere Endurance Global operations on nuclear power Multi-mission Payload Delivery Strike, undersea, mine & special warfare

4 34% of the Nation’s Warships – Less than 6% of Navy Manpower
Force Structure America’s Submarines SSN - 55 Fast Attack Submarines SSGN - 4 Guided Missile Submarines SSBN - 14 Ballistic Missile Submarines 34% of the Nation’s Warships – Less than 6% of Navy Manpower

5 US Navy Submarines Fast Attack Submarine Classes (SSN)
Los Angeles Class Seawolf Class Variable deployment cycle Ballistic Missile Submarines (SSBN) Ohio Class Two crews, four month deployments Guided Missile Submarines (SSGN) Still considered Ohio Class (only 4 units) Fast Attack submarines can go on 6 month deployments and are stand by for whenever they need to be called. Older Class Submarines include the Sturgeon Class (SSN) There are two Los Angeles Class Submarines one is an improved version of the other.

6 Forward Presence Attack Submarine Missions Missions Strike Warfare
Anti-Surface / Submarine Warfare Mine Warfare Battle Group Operations Intelligence, Surveillance, & Reconnaissance Special Warfare

7 Los Angeles Class (SSN) – 44 strong

8 Los Angeles Class (SSN)
Dimensions: 362 x 33 x 32.3 ft. Displacement: 6080 tons standard 6927 tons submerged Crew: 120 enlisted 13 officers Sonar: BQQ 5A(V) – BQQ 5D/E active/passive BQR 23/25 – TB-23/29 thin line towed array BQS 15 active close range ice detection MIDAS mine detection after SSN 751 Lead Number SSN 688 (52+10) I believe the new version lead number is the SSN 719. Sonar is active and passive

9 Los Angeles Weapons Systems
Tomahawk: TLAM-N, TLAM-C/D, TASM Vertical Launch System (after SSN 719) McDonnell Douglas Harpoon Mines: Mk 67 Mobile and Mk 60 Captor Torpedoes: Mk 48 wire-guided option Countermeasures: Mk 2 torpedo decoys WLR-12, WLR-9A Electronic countermeasures

10 SEAWOLF (SSN 21-23)

11 Fastest, Quietest and Most Capable
USS SEAWOLF - Unmatched Capability SSN 21 - SEAWOLF Commissioned: July 1997 SSN 22 - CONNECTICUT Commissioned: December 1998 SSN 23 - JIMMY CARTER Commissioned: 2005 Fastest, Quietest and Most Capable Submarine In The World

12 Seawolf Class (SSN) Dimensions: 353 x 42.3 x 35.8 ft.
Displacement: 7460 tons standard 9137 tons submerged 12,158 for SSN 23 Crew: 121 enlisted 12 officers Sonar: BQQ 5D suite TB-16 and TB-23 towed arrays Lead Number SSN 21 (2) Towed Arrays: 1 surveillance, 1 tactical

13 Seawolf Class Weapons Systems
SLCM: 12GDC Tomahawk SSM: Tomahawk, Harpoon Mine Capable Torpedoes: Mk 48 ADCAP wire-guided option Countermeasures: Mk 2 torpedo decoys WLQ-4(V)1 SDV (Swimmer-SEAL Delivery Vehicle) ASDS (Advanced Swimmer Delivery System)

14

15

16 Virginia Class (SSN-774)

17 Virginia Class (SSN) Length: 377 feet (115 meters)
Beam: 34 feet (10.4 meters) Draft: 30.5 feet (9.3 meters) Displacement: Surfaced: approx. 6,950 tons      Submerged: approx. 7,800 tons Speed: Surfaced: approx. 25 knots      Submerged: approx. 32 knots Armament: Tomahawk missiles from 12 VLS tubes, four 533 mm torpedo tubes for Mk-48 torpedoes, Harpoon, advanced mobile mines and unmanned undersea vehicles Crew: 113

18

19 Ohio Class (SSBN/SSGN)

20 Ohio Class (SSBN) Dimensions: 560 x 42 x 36.4 ft.
Displacement:16,600 tons standard 18,750 tons submerged Crew: 160 enlisted officers Sonar: BQQ 5D/E Passive Search with BQQ 13 BQR 15 passive towed array BQR 19 active navigation

21 Ohio Class Weapons Systems
C4 Trident I Missiles D5 Trident II Missiles Torpedoes: Mk 48 wire-guided option Countermeasures: Mk 2 torpedo decoys WLR-8(V)5 D5 Missiles are the newer version. More accurate, powerful, and with longer range.

22

23

24 Ohio Class SSGN

25

26

27 SSN/SSGN Missions and SSBN
Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance Mine Warfare Power Projection and Strike Warfare Landing Special Operations Forces Sea Control Strategic Deterrence

28 Intelligence Surveillance and Reconnaissance
Difficult to detect Capable of transmitting real-time information ACINT and collection of tactical information Littoral reconnaissance prior to amphibious warfare

29 Strike Warfare Precision Strike on shore based targets up to 650 nm.
Tomahawk (TLAM)

30 Special Operations SEAL transportation and recovery SDV ASDS SSGN

31 Missions SEAL Delivery Blackhawk.mpg

32 Special Operations Forces (SOF)
Missions Special Operations Forces (SOF) Ship attack Homeland Defense Battlespace preparation Intelligence, Surveillance, & Reconnaissance (ISR) SEAL Team Insertion & extraction DDS SDV.mpg

33

34 Strategic Warfare

35 Support of Surface Units
Highly capable surface and subsurface interdiction platform 20% of CSG Tomahawk firepower Mine detection by UUV’s and acoustics Protects surface units from underwater threats

36 Submarine Tactics: Considerations: Acoustic Advantage Speed Advantage
= Tactical Advantage (yes or no)

37 Submarine Tactics: Localization Attack Detect, Track, Classify
Operate per sensors Maneuver to keep on beam Attack General due to clearances Preferred firing position Alertment position

38 Typical Deployment Cycles
SSN – typical 6 month SSBN / SSGN - ~ 112 day cycle

39 Conformal Acoustic Velocity Sonars (CAVES)
Future of Submarines SSGN Class UUV – Mine detection, sea floor mapping, danger areas CAVES – More compact sensors that can be placed all over the ship for wider acoustic range Current: 11 up 53 down - baffles Conformal Acoustic Velocity Sonars (CAVES) Unmanned Undersea Vehicles

40

41 Questions?


Download ppt "Undersea Warfare."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google