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- Newsgroups: sci.military
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!rpi!psinntp!psinntp!ncrlnk!ciss!law7!military
- From: JMARTTILA@finabo.abo.fi
- Subject: Re: Discussion Of Shallow Water ASW
- Message-ID: <Bxyv0K.Fu0@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM>
- Sender: military@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM (Sci.Military Login)
- Organization: Turku School of Economics
- References: <Bxo178.63D@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM> <BxvFrE.9CD@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM>
- Date: Thu, 19 Nov 1992 14:02:44 GMT
- Approved: military@law7.daytonoh.ncr.com
- Lines: 82
-
-
- From JMARTTILA@finabo.abo.fi
-
- >From "Sean J. Roc D'Arcy" <bphdarcy@ubvmsb.cc.buffalo.edu>
- > Unless the array has some type of boyance device (which I believe some do)
- > it can't be used in shallow water at any great length. After doing some
- > calculations it would seem that in water less the 200 ft. deep, there would
- > be no convergence zone at all.
- > more hydrophones in many more places. A good towed array will allow
- > triangulation for distance, a single bow sonar dome would have quite a
- > problem with out moving to a new location. I think this is one big
- > function of a towed array many people keep overlooking. Passive sonar is
- > not real efficient in giving range when the sensors are very close
- > together.
-
- These devices, at least some of them have some sort of a steering system
- which allows floating them in different depths. Therefore shallow water is like
- any other environment. The length doesn't need to be 2 miles to make it
- effective. Actually 500 yards would do fine in shallow water - you see, like
- you mentioned there are no convergence zones in shallow water so the distances
- are much shorter. Two measurement points 500 yards away of eachother give a
- rather good fix on the target say, 10 miles away.
-
- > About layers: I guess a bit would depend on local thermoclime (sp?)
- > conditions and more on how on defines shallow water. Coastal currents in
- > most cases eliminate any seperation of water into temperature gradiants via
- > the under-over surrents meeting a land mass.
-
- You are right... this depends a lot of the local conditions. For example in the
- Baltic there are not too many of such currents. Therefore for example the
- change of season causes quite stabile thermal differences.
- These currents might also actually create separations. When a warm current
- meets a cold one the cold water tends to go down while the warm water stays
- near the surface. This might happen for example near a river delta.
-
- > A point of clarification: A few people who mailed me thought I was asking
- > a question about the Mk-46's performance. I was using it as an example of
- > a troubled device in shallow water situations.
-
- I admit that you probably have to drop it relatively close to the target to
- make it function O:)
-
- > I have as yet not heard of this new shallow water torpedo the Swedes have.
- > Could you post or send me some information on it? Also, who and what
- > country manufactures it? Thanks.
-
- I have unfortunately no further information about this except that it is of
- French origin, if I remember right. I'm sure, however, that the Swedish readers
- of this group can enlighten us about the case.
-
- > On the subject of Iran and the Kilo, I'm not sure that Iran will have
- > access to something akin to the FUSSR MK-65.
-
- If I remember right, the Kilo has only 533mm tubes so it can't launch type 65
- torpedos. A couple of Kilos could, however block strategic routes like the
- strait of Ormuz. This could be regarded as a serious threat since the ASW
- forces of the local countries are not like the US's.
-
- > >Nuclear submarines can't just like that turn off their reactor since it
- > >takes time to turn it on. They are also much larger and hard to manoevre in
- > >tight spaces.
- > But, they can turn them back quite a bit. I believe at low output an US
- > LA class can turn off its circulation pumps and becomes very quite. And in
- > shallow water, I don't know if the sound difference would be all that much.
- > A lot comes down to the noise of the reactor/turbines/generator systems of
- > the sub. While finding an November sitting on the bottom would be easy, I
- > don't know if one could even hear a Trafalgar.
-
- Sitting on the bottom often means doing that for a relatively long time, not
- just a few minutes. If the reactor is turned even to the minimum output, I
- believe the coolant devices are needed in the long term to prevent the reactor
- from overheating (I don't know the structure of the reactors they use in
- submarines, so I won't bet my head for it O:).
- I've heard that at least the Russian Victor III had a special battery powered
- creep drive to avoid the reactor noise in slow speed combat situations.
-
- JM
-
- _______________________________________________________________________
- Jouni Marttila - Yo-kyl{ 11 B 25, 20540 Turku, FINLAND - +358 21 374624
- jmarttila@finabo.abo.fi - jmarttila@finabo - abovax::jmarttila
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