Submarine warfare remains probably the most significant danger to any surface combatant, including large vessels such as aircraft carriers. There is a reason that submariners believe that there are only two types of vessels in the world. The first are the submarines, the second are targets...meaning everyone else.
Numerous defensive measures have been developed, both for vessels in port, and on the high seas. These have mainly been oriented towards either blocking access in harbor, or more and more sophisticated decoys at sea. They also include the speed and agility of the vessels, though generally, the larger and more valuable a vessel, the less speed and agility it has (one exception is the speed of the US nuclear carriers...if they have time get up to speed).
So, I thought a thread discussin the technology and systems available would be a good thing on SD. I mean actual systems that are being developed or are already deployed and must be documents as such. This thread is not meant to be, and will not turn into a sci-fi, or fan boy conjecture of systems.
So here's an important start.
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The US Navy is actively developing and testing a comprehensive anti-torpedo weapon system that is called the Surface Ship Torpedo Defense (SSTD) system consisting of a Toprdeo Warning System (TWS), a Target Acquisition Group (TAG), and a Tactical Control Group (TAG) to emply a Countermeasure Anti-Torpedo (CAT) against incoming enemy torpedos of all types:
US Navy countermeasure anti-torpedo (CAT) launches from USS George Bush, CVN-77, in May 2013
See also:
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This is a very important development. The first end-to-end test of this system was conducted in May 2013 aboard the USS Geroge Bush, CVN-77 (as shown above in the picture of the launch of the CAT).
Numerous defensive measures have been developed, both for vessels in port, and on the high seas. These have mainly been oriented towards either blocking access in harbor, or more and more sophisticated decoys at sea. They also include the speed and agility of the vessels, though generally, the larger and more valuable a vessel, the less speed and agility it has (one exception is the speed of the US nuclear carriers...if they have time get up to speed).
So, I thought a thread discussin the technology and systems available would be a good thing on SD. I mean actual systems that are being developed or are already deployed and must be documents as such. This thread is not meant to be, and will not turn into a sci-fi, or fan boy conjecture of systems.
So here's an important start.
-------------------------------------------------------------
The US Navy is actively developing and testing a comprehensive anti-torpedo weapon system that is called the Surface Ship Torpedo Defense (SSTD) system consisting of a Toprdeo Warning System (TWS), a Target Acquisition Group (TAG), and a Tactical Control Group (TAG) to emply a Countermeasure Anti-Torpedo (CAT) against incoming enemy torpedos of all types:
US Navy countermeasure anti-torpedo (CAT) launches from USS George Bush, CVN-77, in May 2013
US Naval Institute said:The US Navy has is developing a weapon designed to intercept and destroy guided enemy torpedoes immune to U.S. countermeasures, Naval Sea Systems Command officials told USNI News on Wednesday.
The Surface Ship Torpedo Defense (SSTD) program under development to protect high dollar surface warships — like the Navy’s nuclear aircraft carriers — from torpedoes specifically designed to attack large ships like aircraft carriers and large civilian oil tankers.
The tests — conducted in May onboard the USS George H.W. Bush (CVN-77) — pair a Torpedo Warning System (TWS) towed behind the ship with a highly maneuverable Countermeasure Anti-Torpedo (CAT) that seeks and destroys the incoming enemy weapon. The CAT is currently being developed by the Pennsylvania State University Applied Research Laboratory.
The torpedo warning system is towed behind the ship. When the TWS detects an enemy weapon an operator on the ship decides whether or not to launch the CAT, NAVSEA told USNI News.
Development of the SSTD helps cover a serious threat to major U.S. ships from Soviet-designed torpedoes initially developed in the 1960s, naval analyst Norman Friedman told USNI News.
“Torpedoes are an often-unappreciated threat to surface ships. The usual countermeasures are noisemakers intended to decoy an approaching homing torpedo. Unfortunately the Russians use wake-following torpedoes that do not respond to the usual countermeasures at all," Friedman said.
The Russian Type-53 torpedo includes sensors that detect the churn made by ships underway. Once the torpedo senses the chopped water it will follow a ship in a S-pattern between the wakes until it finds its targets.
“Anyone who buys Russian Kilo-class submarines — almost anyone the U.S. would come into conflict with — uses torpedoes which do not respond to U.S. torpedo countermeasures,” Friedman said.
Russia has heavily exported the Kilo diesel/electric submarine to Southeast Asia and the attack boat is a mainstay of navies in Vietnam, India and China.
The Chinese People’s Liberation Army Navy fields 12 Kilos with Soviet-era Type 53-65 wake homing torpedoes with a range of 11.8 miles.
As conflicts in the South China Sea intensify and the Pentagon shifts more forces to the Pacific, submarines have been high on the wish lists for countries in the region.
Chief of Naval Operations, Adm. Jonathan Greenert, has called for increased research and development into anti-torpedo torpedoes since he took the top Navy job in 2011.
See also:
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This is a very important development. The first end-to-end test of this system was conducted in May 2013 aboard the USS Geroge Bush, CVN-77 (as shown above in the picture of the launch of the CAT).