French submarine Le Triomphant (S616)
This article needs additional citations for verification. (February 2009) |
Le Téméraire; sister ship of Le Triomphant | |
History | |
---|---|
France | |
Name | Le Triomphant |
Cost | €4.282 billion (2010)[1] |
Laid down | 9 June 1989 |
Launched | 26 March 1994 |
Commissioned | 21 March 1997[2] |
Homeport | Île Longue |
Identification | S616 |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | Triomphant-class submarine |
Displacement | |
Length | 138 m (453 ft)[2] |
Beam | 12.50 m (41.0 ft) |
Draught | 10.60 m (34.8 ft) |
Propulsion | |
Speed | over 25 knots (46 km/h; 29 mph)[2] |
Range | Unlimited distance; 20–25 years |
Test depth | Over 400 m (1,300 ft) |
Complement | 110, including 15 officers[3] |
Sensors and processing systems |
|
Electronic warfare & decoys | ARUR 13 |
Armament |
Le Triomphant is a strategic nuclear submarine of the French Navy; the submarine is the lead boat of her class commissioned in 1997 with the home port of Île Longue. The vessel carries sixteen strategic missiles, whose launch can only be authorized by the President of France.
History
[edit]Construction and testing
[edit]The first metal of Le Triomphant was cut at DCN Cherbourg in October 1986, and the boat's engine was shipped to the boat from DCN Indret five years later. The reactor was built into the vessel in August 1991, with the fore and aft sections being welded on in January and April 1992 respectively. The boat was armed and given a commander in May 1992 and moved from the assembly site to the completion basin in July 1993. The boat's launching in March 1994 was followed by the first dive that June and the trip from DCN Cherbourg to lle Longue that July down the "free route" between Cherbourg and Brest, with a crew of 110 and engineers from DCN Cherbourg. On 4 January 1995, during testing, the boat reached maximum depth for the first time and made the first firing of a ballistic missile the following month. Photographs of the boat were exhibited to the Senate of France from 15 to 23 May 1995. In June, the boat set off back to Cherbourg for Post-Testing Upgrades (Remises A Niveau Après Essais or RANAE), then set off for a second set of trials, making 1,300 hours of test dives in total and a five-week trip. The boat then spent five weeks in maintenance at Cherbourg and during the main weapons tests took on 11 torpedo models, five trial torpedoes and one Exocet SM39 exercise. As a deterrent system, a salvo of 15 models was successfully launched and, in the last round of development, the boat functioned successfully as a missile platform.
Characteristics
[edit]Conventional and nuclear armament
[edit]Le Triomphant entered active service in March 1997. On 18 October 2001, the fleet support service notified the DCN that Triomphant was about to take the first period of Unavailability for Maintenance and Repairs (IPER or Indisponibilité pour Entretien et Réparations). The 150 million Euro contract was granted to DCN, with the IPER starting at Ile Longue on 2 April 2002, scheduled for 29 months in all. In this, the boat's first major refit, the missiles and the fuel elements of the nuclear boiler were disembarked. In August 2004 L'Humanité ran a piece with the headline "Pas si Triomphant que ça" reporting that Le Triomphant had suffered a nuclear leak from one of her nuclear warheads by the end of 1997 and from her reactor in 2004, though the FOST downplayed the incidents and stated no radiation had been released since the reactor had been non-operational at the time. Le Triomphant carried out a test flight of a M45 strategic missile on 1 February 2005 in the Atlantic.
Since 1972, patrols by Submarines forces are conducted 24/7 365/year, embarking each sixteen strategic missiles, which launching can only be authorized by the President of France, and which could destroy 96 targets with an equivalent effect of a hundred times the explosions of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Active service
[edit]In the night between 3–4 February 2009, Le Triomphant collided with the Royal Navy submarine HMS Vanguard in the Atlantic.[2][10] Both vessels returned to home bases under their own power, Vanguard to Her Majesty's Naval Base Clyde in the Firth of Clyde on 14 February 2009, and Le Triomphant to Île Longue in Brittany, escorted by a frigate as per procedure. The French Navy originally reported that Le Triomphant had "collided with an immersed object (probably a container)". After Vanguard returned to harbour, it was confirmed that the light brief contact collision was in fact with the designated boat.[10]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "French Audit Report Reveals Weapon Prices, A400M Details". defence-aerospace.com. 18 February 2010. Archived from the original on 14 October 2013. Retrieved 7 August 2015.
- ^ a b c d e Byers, David; Charles Bremner (February 16, 2009). "British and French nuclear submarines 'crash in Atlantic'". The Times. London. Archived from the original on February 13, 2011. Retrieved 2009-02-16.
- ^ https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/18321557.pdf [bare URL PDF]
- ^ "AFP: La marine française met un quatrième sous-marin nucléaire en service". Archived from the original on January 24, 2013. Retrieved 7 January 2020.
- ^ "IA M51 : Chape de plomb sur le nucléaire". Mer et Marine. 4 October 2010. Archived from the original on 9 October 2010. Retrieved 4 October 2010.
- ^ Kristensen, Hans. "France" (PDF). Assuring Destruction Forever: Nuclear Weapon Modernization Around the World. Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom. Retrieved 11 April 2013.
- ^ Reif, Kingston (8 December 2009). "Nuclear weapons: The modernization myth". Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. Retrieved 11 April 2013.
- ^ a b "Nuclear subs 'collide in ocean'". BBC. 16 February 2009. Retrieved 2009-02-16.