Now hold on a second...
1. Although little is known about the Barracuda from first drawings it appears to have a more modern shape than the Astute class subs, it shares some hydrodynamical features with recent submarines like the German U-212A class. I'm not so sure about it being more useful in littoral waters though.
Although an X-rudder is more suitable for shallow waters (lower draft) it seems the Barracuda doesn't have bow or sail rudders which provide very good depth steering capabilities. The Astute has a bow rudder, so I guess in terms of shallow water operations, I can't see any advantage for the Barracuda class. Or will it have retractable rudders?
2. Size does matter... at least if you need room for noise reduction measures. I'm very surprised about the French engineers' braveness as rumours go the Rubis resembles a submerged fleet oiler in terms of noise profile. Some of these noise reduction measures are very bulky and it remains to be seen if a 85m vessel is big enough, even if the new reactor is very small.
BTW, I think the Brits did wise with designing the Astute with a big weapon load. When involved in a land strike operation you'd be rather pissed if you ran out of ammo too soon...
3. We all know about the difficulties the Brits had with their program and their engineering gap. The French did better bridging the time between two designs with e.g. messing with us in the SSK export market. However, I reckon they (the Brits) solved these issues and the Astutes will be doing their jobs very well.
And I'd place a very high bet that the Barracuda program will have delays and will have cost overruns. That's just the way it goes with such complex programs.
In the end we'll have two very capable European SSNs, and that's great!
4. The 2076 type sonar is by far the best sonar suite that's in the water today. It's remains to be seen if the Barracuda really will be a generation ahead in that respect. I dare doubt it, sorry.
5. In my world if you have a reactor that doesn't need to be refuelled during lifetime that's a plus.
1. Although little is known about the Barracuda from first drawings it appears to have a more modern shape than the Astute class subs, it shares some hydrodynamical features with recent submarines like the German U-212A class. I'm not so sure about it being more useful in littoral waters though.
Although an X-rudder is more suitable for shallow waters (lower draft) it seems the Barracuda doesn't have bow or sail rudders which provide very good depth steering capabilities. The Astute has a bow rudder, so I guess in terms of shallow water operations, I can't see any advantage for the Barracuda class. Or will it have retractable rudders?
2. Size does matter... at least if you need room for noise reduction measures. I'm very surprised about the French engineers' braveness as rumours go the Rubis resembles a submerged fleet oiler in terms of noise profile. Some of these noise reduction measures are very bulky and it remains to be seen if a 85m vessel is big enough, even if the new reactor is very small.
BTW, I think the Brits did wise with designing the Astute with a big weapon load. When involved in a land strike operation you'd be rather pissed if you ran out of ammo too soon...
3. We all know about the difficulties the Brits had with their program and their engineering gap. The French did better bridging the time between two designs with e.g. messing with us in the SSK export market. However, I reckon they (the Brits) solved these issues and the Astutes will be doing their jobs very well.
And I'd place a very high bet that the Barracuda program will have delays and will have cost overruns. That's just the way it goes with such complex programs.
In the end we'll have two very capable European SSNs, and that's great!
4. The 2076 type sonar is by far the best sonar suite that's in the water today. It's remains to be seen if the Barracuda really will be a generation ahead in that respect. I dare doubt it, sorry.
5. In my world if you have a reactor that doesn't need to be refuelled during lifetime that's a plus.