Ohio Class Ssbn (trident) Parts

End item NSN parts
Filter By: O-rings
page 1 of 2
Part Number
NSN
NIIN
00442 O-ring
003520327
0065244.53.60 O-ring
010633798
012E515-8 O-ring
006896480
01873 O-ring
010817401
02195-5701-40 O-ring
007203228
028-09365 O-ring
011201452
028-15424-000 O-ring
011201452
10-590 ITEM 9 O-ring
010584012
10129587 O-ring
011852569
10319124 O-ring
003520327
10V60-141-279 O-ring
002150319
1793-279 O-ring
002150319
1KK531 O-ring
004486753
2-012E540-8 O-ring
006896480
2-013C557-70 O-ring
003520327
2-111N674-70 O-ring
010494102
2-159 N674-7 O-ring
010311332
2-159N674-70 O-ring
010311332
2-163 N506-65 O-ring
000580054
2-205V0747-75 O-ring
010050518
Page: 1

Ohio Class Ssbn (trident)

Picture of Ohio Class Ssbn (trident)

The Ohio class is a class of nuclear-powered submarines currently used by the United States Navy. The navy has 18 Ohio-class submarines: 14 ballistic missile submarines (SSBN) and four that were later converted to guided missile submarines (SSGN).

The Ohio class was named after the lead submarine of this class, USS Ohio. The 14 Trident II SSBNs together carry approximately fifty percent of the total US active inventory of strategic thermonuclear warheads. Although the Trident missiles have no pre-set targets when the submarines go on patrol, the warships are capable of quickly being targeted using secure and constant radio communications links, including very low frequency (VLF) systems. All the Ohio-class submarines, except for USS Henry M. Jackson, are named for U.S. states, which until that point was a tradition reserved for battleships and cruisers.

The Ohio-class submarines are the largest submarines ever built for the U.S. Navy. Two classes of the Russian Navy's submarines have larger total displacements: the Soviet-designed Typhoon-class submarines have more than twice the total displacement, and Russia's Borei-class submarines have roughly 25 percent greater displacement, but the Ohio-class boats carry more missiles than either: 24 Trident missiles per boat, versus 16 missiles for the Borei class (20 for the Borei II) and 20 for the Typhoon class.

Compare Now »
Clear | Hide