Submarine Hull Structure Parts

(Page 4) End item NSN parts page 4 of 39
Part Number
NSN
NIIN
0210712 Annular Ball Bearing
001556727
0210726 Annular Ball Bearing
001556672
0210726-6 Annular Ball Bearing
001556672
0211418 Tapered Roller Bearing Cup
001000360
0211591 Tapered Roller Bearing Cup
001000501
0212575 Tapered Roller Cone And Rollers
001003555
02145373 Self-aligning Roller Bearing
008407915
0231291-6 Electrical Contact Brush
003378112
023700-HP1250 Flexible Metal Conduit
011658666
02378-00 Piston Ring Expander Spring
003403826
024-00102 Nonmetallic Bushing
008183402
0240382R00 Electronic Data Processing Tape
011934991
02539K Laboratory Beaker
013296487
0255947-4 Rotary Pump Parts Kit
010609581
0260724 Tapered Roller Bearing
001004402
02877 Tapered Roller Cone And Rollers
001003692
029266 Dial Indicating Pressure Gage
009193784
030-0038-1 Thallium Iodide Lamp
003973864
030-609 Ballast Resistor
011941023
030101 Sleeve Spacer
001420437
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Submarine Hull Structure

Picture of Submarine Hull Structure

A light hull (casing in British usage) of a submarine is the outer non-watertight hull which provides a hydrodynamically efficient shape. The pressure hull is the inner hull of a submarine; this holds the difference between outside and inside pressure.

Modern submarines are usually cigar-shaped. This design, already visible on very early submarines is called a "teardrop hull", and was patterned after the bodies of whales. It significantly reduces the hydrodynamic drag on the sub when submerged, but decreases the sea-keeping capabilities and increases the drag while surfaced.

The concept of an outer hydrodynamically streamlined light hull separated from the inner pressure hull was first introduced in the early pioneering submarine Ictineo I designed by the Catalan inventor Narcís Monturiol in 1859. However, when military submarines entered service in the early 1900s, the limitations of their propulsion systems forced them to operate on the surface most of the time; their hull designs were a compromise, with the outer hulls resembling a ship, allowing for good surface navigation, and a relatively streamlined superstructure to minimize drag under water. Because of the slow submerged speeds of these submarines, usually well below 10 knots (19 km/h), the increased drag for underwater travel by the conventional ship like outer hull was considered acceptable. Only late in World War II, when technology enhancements allowed faster and longer submerged operations and increased surveillance by enemy aircraft forced submarines to spend most of their times below the surface, did hull designs become teardrop shaped again, to reduce drag and noise. USS Albacore (AGSS-569) was a unique research submarine that pioneered the American version of the teardrop hull form (sometimes referred to as an "Albacore hull") of modern submarines. On modern military submarines the outer hull (and sometimes also the propeller) is covered with a thick layer of special sound-absorbing rubber, or anechoic plating, to make the submarine more difficult to detect by active and passive SONAR.

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