Sutton - Covert Shores
Sutton - Covert Shores
Sutton - Covert Shores
A26
Wed 11 April 2018
By H I Sutton
A-26 Blekinge Class Next Generation AIP Attack Submarine
Saab
The A-26 is one of the most advanced and forward-looking non-nuclear submarine designs in the world. The baseline
version is optimized for littoral combat where larger nuclear-powered attack submarines are at their weakest, and larger
derivatives are steadily enhancing its blue-water credentials also.
The program has its origins in the ambitious 1990’s ‘UBåt-2000 Flundran’ program. In the post-Cold War climate politicians
considered a new submarine unnecessary and the project lay dormant until the 2000s when it was reborn as the Viking project.
This would have been a jointly developed submarine with Norway and Denmark but defense cuts in the partner countries
crashed the program. Eventually the all-Swedish A-26 program was born in the mid-2000s.
Initially the Blekinge Class will replace the ageing Södermanland-class and possibly later the Gotland-class. Difficulties
between ThyssenKrupp (then owners of Kockums) and the Swedish government delayed the project, leading to Saab acquiring
Kockums in 2014. Finally in March 2015 the Swedish government officially placed an order for two boats. There is interest
from export customers, notably the Netherlands.
Swedish submarines have a tradition of being relatively small to suit their Baltic primary operating environment, and feature
very high levels of automation resulting in very small crews. They also pioneered the modern wave of Air Independent Power
(AIP, also known as Air Independent Propulsion). More subtle design features include the carriage of 400mm lightweight
torpedoes. Unlike other lightweight torpedoes these are wire guided and can be mass-fired.
The A-26 has a designed-in Special Forces capability, primarily consisting of a large hangar between the torpedo tubes (known
as the multi-mission portal) and two storage containers under the casing. The submarine would normally bottom on the sea
floor to allow the Special Forces divers to exit or enter via the hangar. There is discussion of carrying this out while the
submarine is not bottomed-out using a hover mode.
The A-26 is one of the new generation of submarines with hull lines designed to reduce target strength. This is most visible in
the sail which incorporates a distinctive chinned profile. The AIP is apparently quieter than on previous boats allowing more of
the patrol phase of the mission to be conducted on AIP then current AIP boats.
Unlike earlier generations of submarine the command center is in the bow (front). This is made possible because the traditional
periscope is replaced by an 'optronics mast' like a video-periscope. So there is no longer a reason to have the control room
directly under the periscope. This has the advantage that there is no-one walking through the command room to get from one
end of the boat to the other.
For export purposes the A-26 family is divided into three key derivatives:
A-26 Pelagic
Designed for limited endurance operations in littoral environments, this is the smallest version. It has the overall
length reduced by over 12m from the baseline version and has a surfaced displacement of about 1,000 tons. Range is
4,000 nautical miles at 10 knots, and its endurance of over 20 days at patrol speed. Crew complement is reduced to
just 17 - 25 submariners.
A-26 Oceanic
More or less the export version of the baseline Swedish variant. Length is increased slightly to 65m, with a surfaced
displacement of 2,000 tons. Range is over 6,500 nautical miles at 10 knots and its endurance at patrol speed is
greater than 30 days. Crew complement is 17 to 35 submariners.
The modular design of Swedish submarines allows hull extenstions to be inserted or replaced during mid-life upgrades. It is
now typical for Swedish submarines' mid-life upgrades to equate to a new class of submarine.
Saab
Saab
Weapons
The main weapon in swedish service is the 533mm (21") Torped-62 heavyweight torpedo (HWT). It is wire guided and can
track and classify several targets simultaneously. It has four times the range of the older Type-613 at 40 nautical miles at a
speed of 40 knots.
Torpedo-62, Saab
The torpedo tubes can also be used to fire smaller 400mm (15.75”) torpedoes. Sweden is unique in fielding wire-guided
torpedoes (with passive or active terminal homing) in the lightweight class. Wire guidance has been found to be more reliable
than fire-and-forget weapons in the confined and crowded Baltic, especially in the archipelagoes. They also have the advantage
that two can be accommodated in each torpedo tube. They can then be tandem fired against the same or different targets.
Swedish submarines hold the record for multiple simultaneous wire-guided torpedo launches from the same submarine.
Multimission Portal (Flexible Payload Lock)
The multimission portal can accommodate a range of unmanned underwater vehicles (UUVs) and special forces vehicles.
There is also the future potential to fit it with a liner for four 533mm (21”) torpedo tubes:
The AUV-6-MR is an automatous vehicle which can fit within a torpedo tube or the multi-mission portal. The baseline electric
powered model can be extended by a multi-fuel system. It is capable of operating in very shallow water, and in both fresh and
salt water. Missions include ISR (Intelligence Surveillance and reconnaissance). The UUV can be retrieved by being parked on
the seabed in front of the submarine which is also parked, and then gathered by the SubROV.
Saab Double Eagle MkIII with a trainable forward-looking sonar. It can be configured as either an ROV-S or AUV.
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