According to the CRS report from August of this year, the Navy has admitted that it will be unable to have its first working SSN(X) submarine ready by the original target date of fiscal year 2035.
Summary: The U.S. Navy has postponed the construction of its next-generation attack submarine, the SSN(X), to the early 2040s ...
Here’s What You Need To Remember: Thus the U.S. Navy reportedly sees the beefier, more heavily armed characteristics of the Seawolf as a model for its next SSN(X) submarine—even if it ...
At a cost of $3 billion per unit, the Seawolf class was the most expensive SSN submarine. The Virginia class was put into production in full swing due to being smaller and carrying more manageable ...
more heavily armed characteristics of the Seawolf as a model for its next SSN(X) submarine—even if it comes at a similar cost ...
France is currently building a new class of nuclear subs. The six new Barracuda class SSN's (nuclear attack submarines), will cost about $1.6 billion each. The 4,100 ton boats are smaller than America ...
and a nuclear fast-attack submarine (SSN 694), which completed an around-the-world cruise on its first deployment in 1980 and was decommissioned in 1997. The first two Columbia-class submarines ...
and the Los Angeles-class nuclear attack submarine SSN -714 (1983-2015). The naming of the future USS Potomac (SSN 814) honors a river on the eastern seaboard and six prior ships with the same ...
At a cost of $3 billion per unit, the Seawolf class was the most expensive SSN submarine. The Virginia class was put into production in full swing due to being smaller and carrying more manageable ...