On Tuesday (13 December 2022), Singapore Prime Minister (PM) Lee Hsien Loong officiated at the launch ceremony for the Republic of Singapore Navy (RSN)'s second and third Type 218SG Invincible-class submarines, Impeccable and Illustrious, at thyssenkrupp Marine Systems (tkMS) shipyard in Kiel, Germany.
The ceremony marked a rare occasion when observers could take a close look at the 70-metre long, 2,000-ton boats, which look set to be the largest and most advanced diesel-electric, AIP-capable hunter-killer submarines in Southeast Asia.
The Type 218SGs, the largest submarines designed and built by the German yard, had been photographed on many occasions while on sea trials. But the images and videos were all taken from a distance.
The launch ceremony for the name ship of the class, Invincible, in February 2019, had the boat hoisted out of the water, with her upper hull and deck features not visible to guests.
While the sight of two submarines side by side was visually appealing, there's a lot left unsaid about what these boats can do.
Here are six things that caught our attention (kementah.blogspot.com):
Just as Type 219SG's hull was on show - yet not shown fully thanks to the bunting - neither was the boat's screw. The blade count and shape of blades are normally points of interest for ship watchers. At Tuesday's ceremony, the screws for both boats were not visible as the water level in the dock kept their design features out of sight.
This milestone is significant. The Formidable-class CMS benefitted from years of experience developing and fielding similar systems for the Republic of Singapore Air Force (RSAF). The frigate's abovewater sensor suite, which tracks surface and aerial contacts, is essentially a mobile and seaborne version of radars and other sensors used by the RSAF.
A submarine's CMS suite, however, demands rather different skillsets. It is more challenging than applying the know-how needed to display and interprete data from a ground-based radar to a shipborne radar.
The expertise needed to master underwater sensors is in a class of its own. These include sensors like active and passive sonar technology. Operating conditions beneath the waves are also different and engineers must develop an appreciation of water conditions - temperature, salinity, prevailing currents and tidal flows - and things like the seabed profile and acoustic conditions in the area of operations for the CMS to make sense of what is around the submarine. Otherwise, the sub fights blind.
So watch closely for any signs of the degree of local involvement in the submarine CMS, as this would telegraph a noteworthy step up in Singapore's defence engineering expertise.
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1 comment:
With regards to the Invincible class, there is some news in the grapevine of a possible 5th Type 218SG submarine which was approved by the previous chancellor of Germany Angela Merkel before she stepped down in 2021. It is in the web if you know where to look for it.
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