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Virginia class submarine

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Virginia-class attack submarine
USS Virginia (SSN-774)
Class Overview
Class Type Attack Submarine (SSN)
Class Name In honor of the Commonwealth of Virginia
Preceded By Seawolf-class
Succeeded By N/A, latest attack submarine class authorized
Ships of the Class: Virginia, Texas, Hawaii, North Carolina, New Hampshire, New Mexico

The Virginia class (or SSN-774 class) of attack submarines are the first U.S. subs to be designed for a broad spectrum of open-ocean and littoral missions around the world. They are slated to replace aging Los Angeles-class attack submarines, some of which have already been decommissioned.

Innovations

The Virginias incorporate several innovations. Instead of periscopes, the subs have a pair of two extendable "photonics masts" outside the pressure hull. Each contains several high-resolution cameras with light-intensification and infrared sensors, an infrared laser rangefinder, and an integrated Electronic Support Measures (ESM) array. Signals from the masts' sensors are transmitted through fiber optic data lines through signal processors to the control center. They also make use of pump-jet propulsors for quieter operations.

Construction and Controversy

The Virginias were intended, in part, as a slightly cheaper ($1.8 vs $2 billion) alternative to the Seawolf subs, whose production run was stopped after just three vessels. To reduce costs, the Virginias use many "off-the-shelf" components, especially in their computers and data networks. In practice they actually cost about $2.3 billion (in fiscal year 2005 dollars) each, due in part to the lack of an economy of scale.

In hearings before both House of Representatives and Senate committees, the Congressional Research Service and expert witnesses testified that the current procurement plans of the Virginia class—one per year at present, accelerating to two per year beginning in 2012—resulted in high unit costs and (according to some of the witnesses and some of the committee chairmen[link]) an insufficient number of attack submarines. In a March 10, 2005 statement[link] to the House Armed Services Committee, Ronald O'Rourke of the CRS testified that, assuming the production rate remains as planned, "production economies of scale for submarines would continue to remain limited or poor."

The Virginia class is built through an industrial arrangement designed to keep Electric Boat and Northrop Grumman Newport News in the submarine-building business. Under the present arrangement, the ships are built at two shipyards, the General Dynamics Electric Boat facility in Groton, Connecticut and the Newport News site in Virginia, which are the only U.S. shipyards capable of building nuclear vessels. O'Rourke wrote[link] in 2004 that, "Compared to a one-yard strategy, approaches involving two yards may be more expensive but offer potential offsetting benefits." Among the claims of "offsetting benefits" that O'Rourke attributes to supporters of a two-facility construction arrangement is that it "would permit the United States to continue building submarines at one yard even if the other yard is rendered incapable of building submarines permanently or for a sustained period of time by a catastrophic event of some kind", including an attack.

A preliminary Pentagon budget draft circulated in January 2005 indicated that the Virginia-class submarine program may be deeply cut due to the growing Federal budget deficit.

Trivia

Technical information

Rollout of the USS Virginia (SSN-774)
Enlarge
Rollout of the USS Virginia (SSN-774)

General characteristics

Ships


Virginia-class submarine
Virginia | Texas | Hawaii | North Carolina | New Hampshire | New Mexico
List of submarines of the United States Navy
List of submarine classes of the United States Navy

 


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