Entered service |
1993 |
Crew |
132 men |
Dimensions and displacement |
Length |
149.9 m |
Beam |
12.8 m |
Draught |
12
m |
Submerged displacement |
15 900 tons |
Propulsion and speed |
Submerged speed |
25 knots |
Nuclear reactors |
1 x ? MW |
Steam turbines |
2 x 20.5 MW |
Armament |
Missiles |
16 x Trident 2 (D5) |
Torpedoes |
4 x 533-mm torpedo tubes |
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Unlike its
Polaris
missile-armed predecessor, the Resolution class the British
Vanguard-class nuclear powered ballistic missile submarine (SSBN) is
a completely new design. It has, however, utilised several of the
successful design features from previous SSBNs.
The Vanguard class is the
largest submarine type ever constructed in the UK, and the third
largest type of vessel in Royal Navy service. However, it is cloaked
in tight secrecy. Despite the ending of the Cold War and the
downgrading of its strategic mission, details on Vanguard weapon
systems and patrols are still highly classified.
All four of the boats,
HMS
Vanguard, HMS Victorious, HMS Vigilant and HMS Vengeance, were built
by Vickers Submarine Engineering Limited (now BAE Systems Marine) at
its dockyard in Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria. Such was their size that
a special production facility, the Devonshire Dock Hall, had to be
constructed. The boat's large hull was prompted by the Trident D5
Submarine-Launched Ballistic Missile (SLBM), of which it can deploy
16. However, the vessels patrol with a smaller complement of crew
than that of the previous Resolution class (132 as opposed to 149).
The first major transition
from Polaris to Trident occurred in 1996, when HMS Victorious was
deployed on patrol with a complement of Trident SLBMs. Trident has
since become the sole component of the UK's nuclear deterrent,
following the decommissioning of the WE177 tactical nuclear
gravity/depth bomb in 1998, as part of the UK Strategic Defence
Review. Furthermore, the Vanguard class boats had their readiness to
fire changed from a matter of minutes to a matter of days according
to the UK Secretary of State for Defence.
The Vanguard-class missile
suite contains 16 tubes and is based on the 24-tube design which the
US Navy deploys on its Ohio-class boats. The Trident missile
system was built by Lockheed Martin, and is technically leased from
the US. The Trident D5 is a MIRV (Multiple Independently-targeted
Re-entry Vehicle) system, capable of deploying 12 warheads per
missile.
Missile maintenance occurs
in the US. However, the UK Atomic Weapons Establishment at
Aldermaston undertakes all the design, construction, installation
and maintenance of the warheads.
Each Vanguard-class
submarine can carry a maximum of 192 nuclear warheads, although the
Royal Navy originally insisted that each boat would carry no more
than 96, deployed across eight missiles. Since the Strategic Defence
Review, this has been further reduced to 48 warheads per boat,
spread across four missiles. Although the Ministry of Defence
refuses to comment on how many missiles are deployed when a boat is
on patrol, it has indicated that the complement of Trident missiles
now only carries one warhead per missile, which is probably in the
sub-strategic kiloton range. A single Vanguard-class boat is on
deterrence patrol at any one time, and a reserve boat is also
available.
As well as having a new
strategic weapons system, the Vanguard also features several other
new systems. These include a Rolls-Royce nuclear Pressurised Water
Reactor propulsion system, a new tactical weapons fit including
Tigerfish and Spearfish torpedoes for short and medium defence.
Tigerfish has a range of 13-29 km depending on the homing
configuration, while Spearfish can hit targets up to 65 km away. The
submarine also features a greatly improved Electronic Counter
Measures (ECM) suite, and state-of-the-art attack and search
periscopes. These are fitted with a TV camera and thermal imager as
well as the traditional optical channel.
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