Displacement: 12,500 tons full displacement
Length: 138 meters
Armament: x 8 660mm torpedo tubes
X 18 660mm single-use torpedo chambers
X18 Vertical Launch Tubes for anti-ship missiles
X16 Sail-mounted VLS for short-range Netfire missiles
Crew:15 officers, 120 enlisted
Top speed: 26 knots
Power Source: Advanced Submarine Reactor (made by subcontractors)
Endurance: It’s a nuclear submarine.
Price: $7.5 billion
DPR: $7.5 trillion
General overview: The success of the Navaja-class submarine has allowed the Eirin Maritime Shipyards of Snogohsia to invest money in the purchase of shipyards in Allanea and Reichskamphen, as well as solicit the help of Allanean designers in the construction of a far more lethal, far more advanced submarine. This submarine was the Stiletto,
The Stiletto has been designed with the most advanced requirements of submarine warfare in mind. For this purpose it has utilized a modern blended sail and fully recessed fully-integrated pumpjet for maximizing stealth performance (flush with money, Eirin Maritime Shipyards has commissioned a substantial hydrodynamic study carried out using Allanean supercomputers to test the new blended sail). In addition, additional maneuvering devices have been fitted along the fore and aft of the submarine to maximize precision of its movement, especially in complex seafloor environments.
In addition, the Stiletto has been substantially lengthened compared to previous Eirin Maritime Shipyards offerings, enabling a Multi-Mission Compartment to house a choice of craft (UUVs, SDVs, or a midget submarine). This MMC can also be used as a work room to repair underwater cables or attach monitoring devices to them.
In addition ,the submarine can deploy ROVs controlled by cable for special operations purposes.
Armament: The Stiletto is the most impressively-armed SSN submarine of any seen in Snogohsian, Allanean, or Greater Prussian service. It is armed with 18 vertical launch tubes for cruise or anti-ship missiles (up to 56 cm in caliber) as well as 8 660mm torpedo tubes, enabling it to fire the powerful Mark 48 torpedo or, for those nations with better diplomatic connections, the Dragonfish heavyweight torpedoes.
Moreover, the Stiletto is armed with 18 sealed torpedo launchers within its hull sides, in three triple-tube launchers per side recessed into the space between the dual hulls. Those are armed at harbor and cannot be accessed by the crew during operations, however they can be used to deploy mines, fire torpedoes, or missiles that have been placed there, with the usual adaptations necessary to fire cruise missiles from torpedo hulls.
Electronic Surveillance and Acoustic Countermeasures: As a special operations submarine, the Stiletto is equipped with an electronic warfare support system mounted in the sail, for recording and classification of RADAR and electronic emissions (this, obviously, is mostly of use when the submarine is surfaced or at periscope depth, although not only), as well as equipped with a counter-torpedo system that launches small-sized torpedo decoys.
Furthermore, when surfaced, the Stiletto is capable of operating its SN/R-13 Submarine Radar, an AESA radar capable of tracking low-flying aircraft, missiles, helicopters, and surface vessels. The submarine is also equipped with a blue-green laser receiver to receive communications from satellites while submerged.
Sensor systems: As all Eirin Maritime Shipyards submarines, the Stiletto is equipped with both a conformal active/passive sonar and a towed sonar array, as well as having the capability to use UUVs and ROVs for reconnaissance. It is equipped with an Argus-E supercomputer for signal processing.
The Stiletto has been designed with the most advanced requirements of submarine warfare in mind. For this purpose it has utilized a modern blended sail and fully recessed fully-integrated pumpjet for maximizing stealth performance (flush with money, Eirin Maritime Shipyards has commissioned a substantial hydrodynamic study carried out using Allanean supercomputers to test the new blended sail). In addition, additional maneuvering devices have been fitted along the fore and aft of the submarine to maximize precision of its movement, especially in complex seafloor environments.
In addition, the Stiletto has been substantially lengthened compared to previous Eirin Maritime Shipyards offerings, enabling a Multi-Mission Compartment to house a choice of craft (UUVs, SDVs, or a midget submarine). This MMC can also be used as a work room to repair underwater cables or attach monitoring devices to them.
In addition ,the submarine can deploy ROVs controlled by cable for special operations purposes.
Armament: The Stiletto is the most impressively-armed SSN submarine of any seen in Snogohsian, Allanean, or Greater Prussian service. It is armed with 18 vertical launch tubes for cruise or anti-ship missiles (up to 56 cm in caliber) as well as 8 660mm torpedo tubes, enabling it to fire the powerful Mark 48 torpedo or, for those nations with better diplomatic connections, the Dragonfish heavyweight torpedoes.
Moreover, the Stiletto is armed with 18 sealed torpedo launchers within its hull sides, in three triple-tube launchers per side recessed into the space between the dual hulls. Those are armed at harbor and cannot be accessed by the crew during operations, however they can be used to deploy mines, fire torpedoes, or missiles that have been placed there, with the usual adaptations necessary to fire cruise missiles from torpedo hulls.
Electronic Surveillance and Acoustic Countermeasures: As a special operations submarine, the Stiletto is equipped with an electronic warfare support system mounted in the sail, for recording and classification of RADAR and electronic emissions (this, obviously, is mostly of use when the submarine is surfaced or at periscope depth, although not only), as well as equipped with a counter-torpedo system that launches small-sized torpedo decoys.
Furthermore, when surfaced, the Stiletto is capable of operating its SN/R-13 Submarine Radar, an AESA radar capable of tracking low-flying aircraft, missiles, helicopters, and surface vessels. The submarine is also equipped with a blue-green laser receiver to receive communications from satellites while submerged.
Sensor systems: As all Eirin Maritime Shipyards submarines, the Stiletto is equipped with both a conformal active/passive sonar and a towed sonar array, as well as having the capability to use UUVs and ROVs for reconnaissance. It is equipped with an Argus-E supercomputer for signal processing.
OOC:
Additional assistance was provided by Lamoni