Submarine Fleet

Author
Discussion

Bright Halo

Original Poster:

3,521 posts

250 months

Friday 11th June 2021
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Are all our subs in dock?

Scrump

23,420 posts

173 months

Friday 11th June 2021
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Laid up submarines awaiting disposal.

bigandclever

14,046 posts

253 months

Friday 11th June 2021
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They’ve been there for ages.

moktabe

960 posts

120 months

Friday 11th June 2021
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Have a mate who's a Submariner.

Apparently half of them are out of service.

junglie

1,996 posts

232 months

Friday 11th June 2021
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Here are the others.

MiniMan64

18,200 posts

205 months

Friday 11th June 2021
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The first image is Devonport which is all decommissioning isn’t it?

Scrump

23,420 posts

173 months

Friday 11th June 2021
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moktabe said:
Have a mate who's a Submariner.

Apparently half of them are out of service.
Your mate is half right. wink

ApOrbital

10,409 posts

133 months

Friday 11th June 2021
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Aye that's 50/50. smile

Scrump

23,420 posts

173 months

Friday 11th June 2021
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MiniMan64 said:
The first image is Devonport which is all decommissioning isn’t it?
The ones in the image are awaiting disposal but Devonport also has the in service boats in for refits/refuelling etc. as required.

FourWheelDrift

90,955 posts

299 months

Friday 11th June 2021
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Yep, there's about 20 awaiting disposal at Devonport and Rosyth, subs from the Valiant, Resolution, Churchill, Swiftsure and Trafalgar classes, plus Dreadnought.

McGee_22

7,461 posts

194 months

Friday 11th June 2021
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Here's the lowdown on UK Submarine disposal...

https://www.navylookout.com/the-painfully-slow-pro...

Bright Halo

Original Poster:

3,521 posts

250 months

Saturday 12th June 2021
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That is interesting reading and has fully explained what is going on.
Thank you

Spare tyre

11,364 posts

145 months

Saturday 12th June 2021
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I’ll have one

Psycho Warren

3,087 posts

128 months

Sunday 13th June 2021
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you wouldnt want one most were heavily stripped out and are basically empty hulks.

FourWheelDrift

90,955 posts

299 months

Sunday 13th June 2021
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Psycho Warren said:
you wouldnt want one most were heavily stripped out and are basically empty hulks.
Half the job done already, just nail some wood flooring down. off to Ikea for some furniture and your on your way to having a nuclear powered AirBnB hehe

Scrump

23,420 posts

173 months

Sunday 13th June 2021
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A few years ago our offices were becoming very full and we were looking around for larger premises.
There was a suggestion of mooring a few of these decommissioned boats in the docks near the office and moving all the ex submariners onboard.
The ex matelots seemed okay with this on the condition that they received sea pay hehe

Teddy Lop

8,301 posts

82 months

Sunday 13th June 2021
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McGee_22 said:
Here's the lowdown on UK Submarine disposal...

https://www.navylookout.com/the-painfully-slow-pro...
Wow that's scandalous.

I thought it was the russians with the ticking time bomb nuclear vessel disposal problem that we should be most concerned about

That actually shifts my opinion a little on the debate on whether we should operate these types of vessel.

McGee_22

7,461 posts

194 months

Sunday 13th June 2021
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Teddy Lop said:
Wow that's scandalous.

I thought it was the russians with the ticking time bomb nuclear vessel disposal problem that we should be most concerned about

That actually shifts my opinion a little on the debate on whether we should operate these types of vessel.
Scandalous? Not really - wander up onto the granite moors of Devon and Cornwall and you'll get a higher dose of radiation than if you stand on the casing of one of those old hulks.

Time consuming and technically difficult to dispose of a submarine - certainly; but once they've done the first one (Swiftsure?) they'll fully develop the program and get cracking on the rest.

Scrump

23,420 posts

173 months

Sunday 13th June 2021
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There is world of difference between how the UK looks after old boats and the way Russia does.

Condi

18,833 posts

186 months

Sunday 13th June 2021
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McGee_22 said:
Scandalous? Not really - wander up onto the granite moors of Devon and Cornwall and you'll get a higher dose of radiation than if you stand on the casing of one of those old hulks.

Time consuming and technically difficult to dispose of a submarine - certainly; but once they've done the first one (Swiftsure?) they'll fully develop the program and get cracking on the rest.
"Get cracking" in the mind of a nuclear engineer means somewhere between 3-5 years if it's not too complicated, or decades if requires more paperwork!