This Russian Submarine Is Called the "Black
Hole" For One Terrifying Reason
It is very stealthy.
The National Interest
January 5, 2018
Kyle Mizokami
Twenty-four
Kilo-class submarines were operated by the Soviet Union, of which eleven are
still operated by Russia. One was sold to Poland, which remains operational,
but another, sold to Romania, is no longer in service. Ten were sold to India;
nine are still operational while the tenth caught fire and
sank pierside in August 2013. Iran has three Kilos, and Algeria has
two. China had two submarines, purchased after the end of the Cold War.
Unlike the
United States Navy, which went all-in on nuclear power, Russia maintains fleets
of both diesel and nuclear-powered submarines. A land power encompassing much
of Eurasia, Russian submarines are based much closer to “the action” than
American submarines are. While Russia maintains nuclear submarines for distant ocean
patrols, its fleet of diesel submarines is more than adequate for conflicts in
Europe, the Middle East and the Russian near abroad.
The
mainstay of the Russian Navy’s conventionally powered fleet are Project
877–class submarines, known as the Kilo class to NATO and the West. Nicknamed
the “Black Hole” submarine by the U.S. Navy, the Improved Kilos are extremely
quiet. The class has been built more or less continuously for thirty years, a
testament to their effectiveness at sea.
The Kilo
class was originally meant to serve the navies of the Warsaw Pact countries,
replacing older Whiskey- and Foxtrot-class boats. The sub measures just 238
feet long by thirty-two feet wide, and displace 3,076 tons submerged. The ship
has a crew of just twelve officers and forty-one enlisted men, and has an
endurance of forty-five days before needing to be resupplied.
The ships
are powered by two diesel generators and an electric drive, giving them enough
power to make ten knots at the surface and seventeen knots underwater. They are
not fast submarines. They have a range of six thousand to 7,500 nautical miles,
meaning that from the Russian Northern Fleet headquarters they can patrol for
one thousand nautical miles and then go on to Cuba.
Neither are
they particularly deep divers. According to Combat
Fleets of the World [6], the Kilo class
normally dives to just 787 feet, with a maximum diving depth of 984 feet. The
submarines do particularly well in shallow water, where a pair of ducted props
powered by low-speed motoring motors likely allows it to operate closer to the
sea floor.
A lot of
silencing went into the Kilos. The hull is described as having the approximate
shape of a drop of water and greatly reducing water resistance over older,
World War II–era submarine designs. The propulsion plant is isolated on a
rubber base so it doesn’t touch the hull, preventing vibrations from turning
into noise that can be heard outside the boat. The ship has a rubbery anechoic
coating to deaden noise emanating from the submarine, which occasionally gives
the submarines a blocky appearance noticeable in photographs. The air
regeneration system can keep the crew supplied with oxygen for up to 260 hours,
giving the ship almost two weeks’ worth of underwater endurance.
The sensor
suite consists of the MGK-400 Rubikon (Shark Gill) low-frequency active and
passive radar suite with a passive hull array. It also has a MG519 Mouse Roar
high-frequency radar for target classification and mine avoidance. For simple
surface navigation and search the Kilos are equipped with the MRK-50 Albatros
radar.
Finally,
the Kilos have six torpedo tubes of standard 533-millimeter diameter, and were
originally configured to carry homing torpedoes and eighteen SS-N-15A Starfish
antisubmarine missiles. On the last ships of the class, two of the torpedo
tubes are capable of firing wire-guided torpedoes. Also unique to this class is
a position for a seaman with a shoulder-figured Igla man-portable air-defense
missile launcher.
Twenty-four
Kilo-class submarines were operated by the Soviet Union, of which eleven are
still operated by Russia. One was sold to Poland, which remains operational,
but another, sold to Romania, is no longer in service. Ten were sold to India;
nine are still operational while the tenth caught fire and sank pierside in
August 2013. Iran has three Kilos, and Algeria has two. China had two
submarines, purchased after the end of the Cold War.
Submarines
were some of the first vessels Russian shipyards started building after the
dissolution of the USSR. An improved version of the Kilo class, known as
Project 636.3 or just “Improved Kilo,” was developed to rejuvenate a flagging
Russian submarine force and gain hard currency from exports.
The 636.3
class was an all-around upgrade. The dimensions of the submarine are
essentially the same, but the bow has been reshaped to improve hydrodynamic
flow. It features improved quietness due to further isolation of the machinery,
moving other machinery to areas where they would make less noise. The submarine
also has 25 percent greater range than previous versions. Major sonar systems
however are largely the same as in the original Kilo class.
One major
improvement of the 636.3 class is the ability to launch Kalibur cruise
missiles. Kalibur (the export version is known as Klub) is a versatile class of
missile with land-attack, antiship, and antisubmarine warfare versions. In
December 2016, the Russian submarine Rostov-on-Don launched Kalibur land-attack missiles against Islamic State
[7].
The
People’s Republic of China was an early customer for the 636.3, buying ten
submarines in the 1990s. The subs are apparently split between the East and
South Sea Fleets. Another customer has been Algeria, which has bought two
modern Kilos to supplement its pair of original submarines.
Vietnam
bought six 636.3 boats, with http://thediplomat.com/2016/02/vietnam-gets-fifth-submarine-from-russia/" rel="nofollow - - five [8] so far
delivered, as the nucleus of an anti-access/area denial force against its
traditional enemy, China. The two countries have a history of mutual hostility,
currently stoked by Chinese oil drilling in a contested Exclusive Economic Zone
and competing claims in the South China Sea. Vietnam purchased six submarines
for an estimated $1.8 billion dollars
[9]—a real bargain.
Finally,
Russia bought six 636.3 submarines to shore up its own submarine fleet. The
last submarine, Kolpino, was launched in February from the
Admiralty Shipyard in St. Petersburg. Kolpino will serve in
the Black Sea Fleet, where it could conduct future cruise missile strikes
against ISIS targets. Russia has apparently halted further purchases of the
Kilos, seeking to transition to the Lada class.
The Kilo
class of submarines were very successful in both a technical and export sense.
A submarine meant nearly as an afterthought for Soviet allies became a legend
in the eyes of NATO. Fifty-three submarines were built over a period of
thirty-three years, often providing Russian shipyards with critical work that
kept them open during the lean post Cold War years. In addition to Russian
operations against Islamic State, as tensions in the South China Sea increase
the possibility of a naval skirmish, we could see Kilo submarines in action in
Asian waters.
|