印度狐步级潜艇将于12月9日退役(19楼有新图)

来源:百度文库 编辑:超级军网 时间:2024/04/29 17:08:30


http://idrw.org/?p=1724

The Foxtrot class of submarines, the first to have joined the Indian naval fleet, will bid adieu to the elite services after 36 years in service.

The last of the Indian Navy’s Soviet-built Foxtrot submarines, with which the navy’s submarine arm came into being, will retire on December 9, bringing an era to an end. With the decommissioning, the already dwindling submarine strength of the force would dip further.

INS Vagli, the oldest operational submarine of the Indian Navy, undertook its last dive on July 21 and is presently berthed at Visakhapatnam. The submarine will be decommissioned on Thursday, a day after the Indian Navy marks its Submarine Day.

The submarine, presently commanded by Commander AA Kapre, is the last of the Foxtrot class of submarines that were built in the erstwhile USSR. It was commissioned on August 10, 1974, at Riga and has since operated extensively off both coasts of the country.

The Russian Navy had retired its last Foxtrots between 1995 and 2001. Earlier this year, the Indian Navy had retired INS Vela, commissioned in 1973.

The Foxtrot class was the NATO’s reporting name of a class of diesel-electric patrol submarines that were built in the Soviet Union. The first of the submarines was launched in 1957 and commissioned in 1958. By the time the last submarine was completed in 1983, the Foxtrot class had become obsolete.

The latest development is an eye-opener for the navy, which has not inducted a submarine in the last 17 years.

According to Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG), the navy’s submarine fleet is ageing and by 2012, 63 per cent of the vessels would have completed their operational life. Due to “serious slippages” in the induction plan, the CAG report said: “In what could seriously impact on the operational preparedness of the Indian Navy, more than 50 per cent of its submarines have completed 75 per cent of their operational life and some have already outlived their maximum service life.”

If the construction plan for new submarines is not expedited, the CAG said that “63 per cent of the existing fleet would complete their prescribed life by 2012 when the first new submarine will be inducted as per the present schedule.” The Indian Navy, operating just 16 submarines, has a submarine strength much below the envisaged force level and a large number of submarines in the existing fleet will become due for decommissioning in the immediate future, leading to a sharp decline in the fleet.

The construction of six Scorpene submarines at Mazagon Dock Ltd has been suffering chronic delays due to technology transfer issues. The indigenously-built nuclear submarine INS Arihant, which was launched in mid-2009, will be commissioned by 2012 end.

Taking note of the situation, the government has sanctioned the construction of six more conventional submarines, but the first of the submarines would be ready for commissioning only by 2015.

r_2010012609102724310300.jpg

U1335P27T1D502914F3DT20080529074209.jpg

http://idrw.org/?p=1724

The Foxtrot class of submarines, the first to have joined the Indian naval fleet, will bid adieu to the elite services after 36 years in service.

The last of the Indian Navy’s Soviet-built Foxtrot submarines, with which the navy’s submarine arm came into being, will retire on December 9, bringing an era to an end. With the decommissioning, the already dwindling submarine strength of the force would dip further.

INS Vagli, the oldest operational submarine of the Indian Navy, undertook its last dive on July 21 and is presently berthed at Visakhapatnam. The submarine will be decommissioned on Thursday, a day after the Indian Navy marks its Submarine Day.

The submarine, presently commanded by Commander AA Kapre, is the last of the Foxtrot class of submarines that were built in the erstwhile USSR. It was commissioned on August 10, 1974, at Riga and has since operated extensively off both coasts of the country.

The Russian Navy had retired its last Foxtrots between 1995 and 2001. Earlier this year, the Indian Navy had retired INS Vela, commissioned in 1973.

The Foxtrot class was the NATO’s reporting name of a class of diesel-electric patrol submarines that were built in the Soviet Union. The first of the submarines was launched in 1957 and commissioned in 1958. By the time the last submarine was completed in 1983, the Foxtrot class had become obsolete.

The latest development is an eye-opener for the navy, which has not inducted a submarine in the last 17 years.

According to Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG), the navy’s submarine fleet is ageing and by 2012, 63 per cent of the vessels would have completed their operational life. Due to “serious slippages” in the induction plan, the CAG report said: “In what could seriously impact on the operational preparedness of the Indian Navy, more than 50 per cent of its submarines have completed 75 per cent of their operational life and some have already outlived their maximum service life.”

If the construction plan for new submarines is not expedited, the CAG said that “63 per cent of the existing fleet would complete their prescribed life by 2012 when the first new submarine will be inducted as per the present schedule.” The Indian Navy, operating just 16 submarines, has a submarine strength much below the envisaged force level and a large number of submarines in the existing fleet will become due for decommissioning in the immediate future, leading to a sharp decline in the fleet.

The construction of six Scorpene submarines at Mazagon Dock Ltd has been suffering chronic delays due to technology transfer issues. The indigenously-built nuclear submarine INS Arihant, which was launched in mid-2009, will be commissioned by 2012 end.

Taking note of the situation, the government has sanctioned the construction of six more conventional submarines, but the first of the submarines would be ready for commissioning only by 2015.

r_2010012609102724310300.jpg

U1335P27T1D502914F3DT20080529074209.jpg


印度海军目前还有两艘在役,一艘是于1973年服役的“威勒”(Vela)号,另外一艘是于1974年服役的“威格利”(Vagli)号。
第一艘“狐步”级潜艇于1957年开始龙骨铺设,1958年服役,该级潜艇的最后一艘于1983年建造完毕。印度海军有关人士表示,印度海军第一次从俄罗斯购买了4艘“狐步”级潜艇,这是印度海军的第一批潜艇装备。随后于1971年,印度海军再次从俄罗斯购买了4艘“狐步”级潜艇。但目前仅只有2艘潜艇可用,由于六年才进行一次维护和改装,首批4艘潜艇的性能迅速下降。印度海军在那个时候缺少能进行潜艇维护的专家,而俄罗斯方面又由于本国潜艇维护的工作量很大,所以也不愿意对印度潜艇进行维护。

    “狐步”级潜艇水下续航时间为45天,每天只需要浮出水面一次补充氧气。已经退役的一艘“狐步”级潜艇已经被改装成一个潜艇博物馆,目前正位于印度维沙卡帕特南港口。

印度海军目前还有两艘在役,一艘是于1973年服役的“威勒”(Vela)号,另外一艘是于1974年服役的“威格利”(Vagli)号。
第一艘“狐步”级潜艇于1957年开始龙骨铺设,1958年服役,该级潜艇的最后一艘于1983年建造完毕。印度海军有关人士表示,印度海军第一次从俄罗斯购买了4艘“狐步”级潜艇,这是印度海军的第一批潜艇装备。随后于1971年,印度海军再次从俄罗斯购买了4艘“狐步”级潜艇。但目前仅只有2艘潜艇可用,由于六年才进行一次维护和改装,首批4艘潜艇的性能迅速下降。印度海军在那个时候缺少能进行潜艇维护的专家,而俄罗斯方面又由于本国潜艇维护的工作量很大,所以也不愿意对印度潜艇进行维护。

    “狐步”级潜艇水下续航时间为45天,每天只需要浮出水面一次补充氧气。已经退役的一艘“狐步”级潜艇已经被改装成一个潜艇博物馆,目前正位于印度维沙卡帕特南港口。
还要买啥?是不是德国,法国又有福利了?
这两条F级用这么久也不错了,使用时间和PLAN中剩下的R级差不多了。。。
问题是三的F潜艇都是苏联援助的吧,TG的R级(33级)应该都是自行建造的吧
和我们的033差不多一个时代的东东了
问题是天朝一口气自制R级将近80艘,阿三……
中华海帝 发表于 2010-12-7 20:38


    三儿是大爷,有人伺候着
中华海帝 发表于 2010-12-7 20:38


    钱神马的在三哥那都是浮云。我鳖还是不给力啊。不然三哥一下买80艘鱿鱼给你看看。
咱们的破潜艇都退了吧
哎哟,这一比才看出来基洛确实大
前段日子不是还有我国要拆的俄国F级潜艇被俄国媒体爆料说技术泄露啥的吗
F级和R一个时代的吧,一个中型一个大型,还技术。。。。
阿3能够用这么长时间已经很不错拉!
造不如买 买不如租
楼上说的是油轮吧,你租一艘航母试试
smzg 发表于 2010-12-8 15:16


    欢迎去深圳租,多少天都行
smzg 发表于 2010-12-8 15:16


    土共租不到,
三儿要租英国的退役航母还是可能滴
All_COs_of_Vagli_with_the_C-in-C-740498.jpgVAGLI_1-755072.JPGVAGLI_2-757675.JPGVice_Admiral_Anup_Singh_isigns_the_Visitors__Book_of_Vagli-750665.jpg

退役仪式