Trafalgar-class submarine


The Trafalgar class was a class of nuclear-powered fleet submarines that was in service with the Royal Navy, and the successor to the. Like the majority of Royal Navy nuclear submarines, all seven boats were constructed at Barrow-in-Furness shipyard, Cumbria. The class made up part of the Royal Navy's nuclear-powered 'hunter-killer' submarine force. The Trafalgar class was replaced by the larger and more capable, of which five are in service. The name Trafalgar refers to the Battle of Trafalgar fought between the Royal Navy and the combined fleets of France and Spain in 1805.

Development

The Trafalgar class were designed in the early 1970s during the Cold War as a refinement of the preceding Swiftsure class. Including, the Trafalgar class are the fifth class of nuclear-powered fleet submarines to enter service with the Royal Navy. The lead boat of the class, HMS Trafalgar, was ordered on 7 April 1977 and completed in 1983. The last, HMS Triumph, was ordered on 3 January 1986 and completed in 1991. All seven boats of the class were built and completed by Vickers Shipbuilding and Engineering at the Barrow-in-Furness shipyard.
In 1982, Jane's Fighting Ships recorded: "Estimated cost of fourth submarine £175 million including equipment and weapon system when fitted." In 1986, Jane's Fighting Ships recorded that the average cost for this class was £200 million at 1984–85 prices.

Characteristics

As a refinement of the preceding Swiftsure class, the design of the Trafalgar class bore some similarity, including its internal layout and the Rolls-Royce PWR1 Core 3. However some improvements over the Swiftsure class included its reduced acoustic signature, which was due to the hull being covered in anechoic tiles which were designed to absorb sound rather than reflect it, making the boats quieter and more difficult to detect with active sonar. A pumpjet propulsion system was also used from the second vessel onward, rather than a conventional propeller. The Trafalgar class were long, have a beam of, a draught of and a dived displacement of. Each boat had a complement of 130. Like all Royal Navy submarines, the Trafalgar class had strengthened fins and retractable hydroplanes, allowing them to surface through thick ice.
Four boats of the class — Torbay, Trenchant, Talent and Triumph — were fitted with the Sonar 2076 system. Beginning in 2014, the last four boats of the class underwent a communications package upgrade.
The Trafalgar class was equipped with five torpedo tubes with accommodation for a mixture of up to 30 weapons:
The Tomahawk missiles are capable of hitting a target to within a few metres, to a range of.
Ostensibly, the submarines used the same steering column as was used in the Wellington bombers of the Second World War.

Boats of the class

Initially, the last five boats of the Trafalgar class were to be replaced by the 'Future Fleet Submarine' programme, however, this was effectively cancelled in 2001. The are replacing the Trafalgar class.
NamePennant No.BuilderLaid downLaunchedCommissionedDecommissionedStatus
S107Vickers Shipbuilding and Engineering, Barrow-in-Furness25 April 19791 July 198127 May 19834 December 2009Awaiting disposal
S87Vickers Shipbuilding and Engineering, Barrow-in-Furness8 May 19801 December 198228 April 198414 July 2012Awaiting disposal
S88Vickers Shipbuilding and Engineering, Barrow-in-Furness6 June 198117 March 19845 October 198519 June 2014Awaiting disposal
S90Vickers Shipbuilding and Engineering, Barrow-in-Furness3 December 19828 March 19857 February 198714 July 2017Awaiting disposal
S91Vickers Shipbuilding and Engineering, Barrow-in-Furness28 October 19853 November 198614 January 198920 May 2022Awaiting disposal
S92Vickers Shipbuilding and Engineering, Barrow-in-Furness13 May 198615 April 198812 May 199020 May 2022Awaiting disposal
S93Vickers Shipbuilding and Engineering, Barrow-in-Furness2 February 198716 February 199112 October 1991July 2025Awaiting disposal

Operational service

The submarines of the class saw service in a wide range of locations, most notably firing Tomahawk land-attack cruise missiles in anger at targets during conflicts in Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya. Three of the Trafalgar-class boats were involved in such operations. In 2001 Trafalgar took part in Operation Veritas, the attack on al-Qaeda and Taliban forces following the 11 September attacks in the United States, becoming the first Royal Navy submarine to launch Tomahawk cruise missiles against targets in Afghanistan. During April 2003, Turbulent returned home flying the [Use of the Use of the Jolly Roger by submarines|Jolly Roger by submarines|Jolly Roger] after having launched thirty Tomahawk cruise missiles during the invasion of Iraq. As part of the 2011 military intervention in Libya, Triumph fired her Tomahawk cruise missiles on three occasions; first on 19 March, then again on 20 March, and finally on 24 March. Her primary targets were Libyan air-defence installations around the city of Sabha. Triumph returned to Devonport on 3 April 2011 flying a Jolly Roger adorned with six small Tomahawk axes to indicate the missiles fired by the submarine in the operation.
In 1993 Triumph sailed to Australia, covering a distance of whilst submerged and without any forward support. As of 2011, this remained the longest solo deployment by any British nuclear submarine.

Service problems

In 1998, Trenchant experienced a steam leak, forcing the crew to shut down the nuclear reactor. In 2000 a leak in the PWR1 reactor primary cooling circuit was discovered on Tireless, forcing her to proceed to Gibraltar on diesel power. The fault was found to be due to thermal fatigue cracks, requiring the other Trafalgar-class boats, and some of the remaining Swiftsure-class boats, to be urgently inspected and if necessary modified.
In 2013 the Defence Nuclear Safety Regulator reported that the reactor systems were suffering increasing technical problems due to ageing, requiring effective management. An example was that Tireless had had a small radioactive coolant leak for eight days in February 2013.

Potential export

In 1987, the Canadian White Paper on Defence recommended the purchase of 10 to 12 - or Trafalgar-class submarines under technology transfer, with the choice of the type of submarine due to be confirmed before summer 1988. The goal was to build up a three-ocean navy and to assert Canadian sovereignty over Arctic waters. The purchase was abandoned in April 1989 due to a growing budget deficit.

In fiction

In June 2019, ITV commissioned a six-part thriller to be set aboard a fictional Trafalgar-class submarine, HMS Tenacity. However, production on the series was paused in 2020, before being dropped all together by November 2021.