Important note: This was uploaded on Public Library internet. It was very low bandwidth public access internet during the COVID lockdown and required I reduce file size. This is why there are a lot of low resolution artifacts. Rural Internet in the United States needs to be addressed by Congress and funded as a utility.
Rural internet also sucks in Argentina haha. Cheers Jive, and still waiting for k 129 vid, with you telling us all gossips you can about the topic lol.
Aaron, I agree with you. The FTTH and decent QoS is a must nowdays for normal life, covid prooved this even more. But just for an illustration, in Germany, where I am from, there are still a lot of grey spots with only analog POTS and Adsl (not 2+), because the copper wires are 50+years old with a lot of unsymetry in impedance. They are constantly replacing the cables and building Outdoor DSL points, but in a not sufficient rate. It will take years to cover most of the state. Or as we say, eather you have a great view and pristine nature or you have decent Internet :)
You're not meant to be gaming on public utilities.. it'll be nice when it's there, but until then if it exists and functions, the need is fulfilled. All the same, thanks for all the content!
Aaron is to my Cold War/modern sub interest as Drachinifel has been to my naval history interest-it was fairly non-existent before I discovered their channels and now I watch basically every video with the joy of learning.
I don't mean to be that guy, but at 13:30, It says that the dry dock damage cost $1 billion rubles. Since it's in rubles, there should be no $ sign in front of the 1. ₽ would be the proper symbol to use for Russian rubles.
Splendid analysis sir! Regarding LosShark :-) ( that is actually quite funny)- it should be written as Lo-Sha-Rik - That is a cartoon character from a soviet cartoon with the same name- a horse made of balloons - that is why that submarine is called Losharik- it's pressure hall is made of spheres.
Just to mention - K-51 «Имени XXVI съезда КПСС», or "In the name of the 26th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union"...Rolles off the tongue, doesn't it? Imagine giving targets and missile launch authorization in the heat of an eventual nuclear war...This type of flamboyant names were the real nuclear deterrent. Anyway, pardon my "humor", later, in 1999 the now Russian Navy rename it - K-51 Verkhoturye (Верхотуре) after the historic town with the same name, as you mentioned. Cheers. Long time listener, first time caller. Your content is close to priceless and much enjoyed. To this day I don't know why post-Soviet Russia, or even the countries of the former Warsaw Pact can't, won't or refuse to make documentaries of this kind. Even if we still have some weird pride of what our nations/armed forces were, in 5-10 years, even the hardcore past-timers will start to forget or be a laughing stock for the millenials. Sorry, I'm sliding down the memory lane, forgive me the chatter. To finally wrap it - the only video of "Shield 84", the Warsaw Pact excersise incuding 60 thousand soldiers from seven countries I was able to find...EVER, is uploaded by "VHÚ MOVIES". Only in Czech, but the video speaks of itself.
Yulian....G'Day Mate from the Land Downunder.....I would like to relate to you the story of the bravest thing I did during the Cold War.... Location The Skagerak [inbound to Copenhagen] A surfaced Australian Oberon Class Boat, the latest [and last] Oberon out of the British Dockyards....this one is HMAS OTAMA [Queensland Aboriginal Dialect meaning Dolphin] [p.s I am a Queenslander too]....anyway, there we were, a small group of us were standing up forward, near the Dome at the Bows, it was about 14:00 or so...pale blue sky and biting wind [to an Aussie].....So coming outbound from the Baltic in the outbound land no more than 120 meters away, is a small Russian Freighter, She's not very big probably only 10,000 tons or so.... but a surfaced Aussie Boat is rarely seen in those waters, so the OOW and Lookout and I think the Captain too, were all out on the Port Bridgewing with binoculars raised looking at us........We have a kind of weird thing we do.....[for instance, we would do this to an opposing football team from a different town]......but I dropped my trollies [pants] bent over and gave them a "browneye" [you know, where you pull the cheeks of yr bum apart].....they laughed out loud and waved to us God love em....that was August 1978. I fucking LIKE YOU Russians!!!!! Stay Safe. [and I Salute you Tovarich!] All the best from Queensland, Oz!
@@SurvivethePoleShift You, Sir have single handedly killed what for a while appeared to be a nice productive afternoon. First things first - I cannot stop chuckling at the mental picture you've put in my head. The clear blue sky, the dark steel of the hull, the white uniforms...and the brown eye... But to be sincere, from the perspective of a person, who got his first glimpse of Western culture from bootleg VHS tapes, still considering Mr. Mel Gibson as an Aussie, that would be THE most Australian thing imaginable. With all due resect. Second - Your "maritime incident" got my interest... But the 2nd, 3rd and so on hits on the search engine while asking about HMAS OTAMA, well, that definitely grabbed my attention. You, Sir, and I'm quoting a line from "Destroy the Kentucky", are one of the "scary men"... And I feel priviliged to comunicate with one of the actually acting....actors back in the days. And that is not just gaslighting bullcrap, because in my opinion the life of the grunt is forever and wherever the same...USA, USSR, Warsaw Pact, NATO, Western Alliance, Eastern Block, Moon Base, Mars Colonies...Its - get up, run, dig, shoot, eat, dig, sleep . Arty-boys - still the same - load, drive, fire, clean. And then there are "the scary men"... Some of them locked down in nuke silos, some of them covertly sparking an unrest in enemy state, some of them doing some secret spy-ops, across the seas, around the globe in one the best boats at the time... And now its for me and my imagination to fill the blanks between your hilarious encounter and the few articles and pictures of your service history. And in the end I must point something, not so important, but there are alaways comrades lurking to see if we do the right thing. I'm not Russian, still commie, tough. Bulgaria, or as we used to flatter ourselves - "Soviet Union's little brother". Kind of cringey. During the Cold War we've operated mainly in the Black Sea. the chance you had crossed a course with a bulgarian sub is...Well I do not know. Becaus "its classified", ain't it? :) Arround the time of your service (I assume) we operated four Romeo-class subs. Sizewise and crew-wise pretty close I think. And the point of me saying such a thing is that our last (last EVER unfortunatelly) sub - "Slava" had very similar fate post decommission as HMAS OTAMA. Our was saved by the heroic work done by members of the past crews... Long story short, С-84 "Слава" of the 8 Separate Submarine Division of Bulgarian Navy is now a museum . If, by chance, we survive the current events, and by another chance you happen to travel around Europe, the museum is near our "Black Sea Capital" - Varna, they've got a decent airport, decent sightseeing historic and other locations for the Wife, decent beaches for the kids, and relatively decent Cold War Era Romeo-class attack sub, that may or may not at some point got a passive signal by or from HMAS OTAMA...Who knows... I still haven't got the...opportunity to visit, but hey, there are plenty of army and air force museums in walking distance from me, and not 6 hours long drive on our glorious twisted hightways. If you search for "Bulgaria's Last Submarine "Slava" [Музей Подводница Слава]' - there is a..decent video about the museum, and its in English! Cheers, Sir. It was a good afternoon for me, not gonna lie. Thank you. Stay Safe.
@@OrataKopata Yulian when you strip away all the ideological bullshit they filled all Our Heads with, AND, given that the bastards who have led us all deserve to be coated in honey and thrown to the Lesbians, .....we were all really Brothers & Sisters the whole time....I'm 64, retired and my health is broken.... [I was TOO GOOD at being a Sailor lol]....but be that all as it may....if I could, I'd be on a Plane to Bulgaria tomorrow to say, G'Day in Person....I'll bring beer you bring Vodka......alas....we will have to await Our next lifetimes I fear....May you're lines be tight and you're rum spiced. [We would track Romeo's Whiskeys and Whiskey Longbins, along the East Coast of Australia everynow and then, it was exciting stuff [I was a Radio man]. Alas Submarining is a young Man's game and after six years in O Boats I was returned to Fleet Duties as my ears would no longer stand Barometric pressures related to Snorting in Diesel Boats....but they were great times...[p.s. We were heading into Copenhagen for a wild & wooly 6 days alongside....Holy Bowcaps Batman!!!!....what a bunch of Party animals those Danes are [were].....we had a gr8 time and when we left, headed down to Den Helder for a snappy 6 days there [Wow....Dutch Girls!!!!]....then across the moat and up the Thames for a final 7 days alongside, in London, as we prepared to sail OTAMA home across the Atlantic and a snappy 7 days in Halifax, [helping the Canadian Submarine Sqn celebrate it's Birthday...[pissed again].........as an interesting aside, we left Halifax and next had 5 days in Fort Lauderdale Florida, we sailed from there and headed for the Panama Canal [through the Bemuda Triangle]....Our Skipper Frank Wolff, needed to do a trim dive after Florida [as we had topped off Our fuel Tanks], sooo, as soon as we were into the Triangle, We dived and got our trim sorted and went to 600 feet...down there, we loudly flooded empty tanks [creating a huge BOOM when the sea water instantly floods them].....boom, boom, boom.....but no monsters....so six hours later we surfaced, shutoff from diving, and continued Our Surface transit to the Canal.......to celebrate being around those beautiful warm, blue seas, we had a beer issue and a BBQ on the Casing....we also shipped Our foreplanes inward [so that they were now raised and vertical to the horizontal deck]....and lashed our purpose built, homemade, swimming pool and pumped it full of sea water, so Steak, Beer and a swim. [Frank hove the Boat to put a Bloke with a rifle atop the Fin to watch for sharks and we had a swim in the Triangle [as well as the home made pool rigged between the foreplanes].....we knew how to have fun......God Bless Bulgaria, and may we stand and salute each other one day as the Brothers & Sisters we all are. All the best from Qld [Queensland] Australia.
I love your content! Would you please consider making a video on the Typhoon? I'm very curious about how the hulls are connected, how crew transits through the 5 hulls, what you suspect protocol was for sealing the hulls during battle stations, even what you suspect the diameter of each hull is as I suspect they are each actually narrower and less spacious per hull then a traditionally laid out SSBN considering the beam is 25m but there is a lot of space between hulls, etc. Very curious on your perspective! In any case, thanks for all the great content and thank you for your service!
Also there isn’t a lot of space between the hulls is missle silos and in the back there’s a third hull in the middle and they’re all touching side by side.
Feels like the first 'normal' video I've watched all week after being glued to live court coverage for days for hours on end! 👀 And it was worth watching! 😊 got to see a judge chew a prosecutor out harder and longer than a TV drama or film would ever have dared too. That poor guys video will be getting shown in law schools for years 🤣
@@Puchacz81 solely on what the jury will see? Self-defense on the major charges, he might catch a couple of minors though (much like one of the victims!) Having seen a wider slew of evidence than the jury will see? 100% innocent. The stitching together of the video timeline, rosenbaums state of mind, extra video.... I've not really seen *anything* to convince me otherwise, and I gave the prosecution a fair shake of the stick.... but they're acting so scummy 😣 hardly a advert for justice But who knows what a jury will do. Threats to the jury are widespread, people trying to take videos of them etc. The US Court system needs to find a way to square that circle 🤔
@@mor4y I was really dissapointed that Judge allow this grainy ass picture and video as a evidence. Without any corraboration and state could call Zeminski's to testify in court but they didn't. Just this fact blackpilled me heavily and such evidence should not be addmised in court. There is a limit with a technology and if your life hangs on the few pixels and interpretation of a rorschach picture we are heading in wrong direction. I hope that defense (coz they knew about this video before) have planted in the evidence direct rebuttal and this crap as a trap for a scum prosecutor to discredit him completly. But this is far fetch idea. Maybe pictures from Nathan Debruin? I personally also think that Kyle is fully innocent and i hope jury will see it as well and let him walk. Gun charge is out, Curfew as well so we will see.
Wonderful video! I am very impressed with the amount of information you have provided. The amount of your research effort is so very evident ! Thank you !! Great job !!!
Question... Referring to submarines. Is there a fine line between sensitive security information (SSI) and what would be considered classified vs top secret, etc? How do you know as times goes on. Like when a sub is retired, is that info accessible to the public or if a submarine is modernized, are the older components ok to talk about. Just curious on this topic since you aren't in the Navy anymore, how do you know what's ok to say and what's not.
Most vets default to what they could and couldnt talk about during their time in. Unless something government released comes to the public they dont talk about it if it was previously classified. For example, the uss nautilus museum (the ship itself welded to the pier) in groton ct doesnt permit visitors into the engineering spaces. This is to protect nnpi. (Naval Nuclear Propulsion Information) guarantee if you find an old nuc from that boat they still wouldnt open their mouth about it even though their ship is a museum now.
Thank you so much, big fan of your work and Thank you for your service, I love the ability of learning about these briefs. Did you make one on the Alfa/Lira fast attack submarine?
Yet another superb subbrief with a lot of informations. Thumbs up sir! @subbrief, please do cover in above the layer some general principe of wire guided torpedos how the wire and spools work with outter doors so that the wire is not cut. As I imagine there are two spools one on torpedo and other in the tube with different speeds.
Who would of guessed it was the quietest of their nuclear subs! The thing is the size of a helicopter carrier. Could you imagine driving a 50 story building under the water with nuclear weapons. I did the conversion of 167 meters to stories. I'd be stricken with anxiety the whole time.
Well you answered my question at the end of the video, that missile hump on a circular hull does not have adverse effects as far as detection or stealthyness, seems like an active sonar torpedo would hear the return off of that pretty much looking flat side where missile compartment is, maybe that would have been a better question, does active sonar see them better with the what looks to almost be 90⁰ curve on the top side? Great content along with the Naval News, as always, keep it up. Thanks 👍
it would make them have a higher target echo strength yes, but submarines very rarely go active and Deltas being bombers will trundle around very slowly so hydrodynamics doesn't matter as much as it would to an SSN
Looking at these photos... which are great by the way, I am struck by how BLEAK the landscape is up there. I can't imagine coming back from a patrol to that! Ugh. Thank you for the lecture. I thoroughly enjoyed it.
Hydrodynamicly does that missle hump on a otherwise circular hull hamper performance and stealthyness? Looks like putting an outboard on a Grand Banks trawler instead of a single or twin inboards, just looks off, hodgepodge if you will with that missile hump.
9000km range isn't absurd. The Trident II has been demonstrated in test flights with reduced payload (as it's deployed) out to 11,000km. The warheads (4x) for Shtil and Sineva are 800kt, not 100kt. Layner planned to use 10x 100kt warheads, but doesn't seem to have been put into service. Should add that along with that GLONASS upgrade in 1988, changes to the guidance package also allowed for depressed trajectories. The RV aeroshells were also upgraded to expand the reentry envelope for these shallower reentry angles. Last year, a Sineva, which is fundamentally the same missile as Shtil, demonstrated a 2,500km depressed flight from a Delta IV (Tula). This flight profile would allow the missiles to attack a significant portion of Europe from their port at Olenya Bay. The medium warheads are not the low yield warheads. The low yield warheads are referred to as light warheads. Neither of them are tactical. Regarding the low torpedo tube count, it's largely due to a shift through the 1980s of withdrawing SSBN patrols away from US coasts into more secure 'Bastions'; smaller areas of sea close to port (Barents and Laptev Seas, for the Delta IVs), defended by ASW destroyers. This doctrinal change was made possible by the R-29 series with its increased range.
Surely "CPSU" at 4:59 (КПСС) would be the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and also, the submarine at 14:36 K-64 Podmoskovye (Подмосковье) is actually named after the Moscow region (or oblast) - not after the city.
Very good, very informative as always, I feel I must question the Greyling repair in the Holy loch, you say she was repaired after the collision in 1993, erm, the Holy Loch U.S. base was shutdown in 1992, could they have gone to Faslane on the Gareloch for repairs?
Please do an analysis of "The Bloop"... There is actual hydrophone recordings of it on RUclips... To this day it's still a mystery of what caused it, but whatever it was traveled thousands of miles. Hope you read this...
[Off topic] Will you ever be doing a video about the K-129? I see most people doing videos about how was recovered and why but there's not much information about how it's sank in the first place and I feel like you would do a very detailed video about that?
Love, love your briefings! Very knowledgeable, to the point. What i am wondering: almost all of those Russian boats have one two or more mishaps: miscalculation of radar navigation, fire here, leakage there.. is this a Russian thing? Are they just incompetent or are those things that happen in other navies too? Over here in The Netherlands we never hear of incidents with our boats so i am wondering if the Russians are just incompetent (you would expect that, given the bungling during the Ukrainian war) any thoughts on this?
Are there standard procedures to follow after launching their nukes, or do they sail for the southern hemisphere and hope the locals where they land don't hold them responsible for just following orders?
Did that large boxy missile deck cause the submarine problems in regards it's stealth ability and acoustic signature? Did that extra drag and lack of hydrodynamic shape cause some sort of noisy vibrations etc as it forced it's not so coefficient shaped way through water far less gracefully compared to smooth round torpedo shaped sub? I can see they've smoothed it out and blended it in, took the sharp vertical angles off it as best as they could but I can't help but feel all those different angles and various widths where the conning tower, missile deck and hull all blend together in a very turbulent looking way could only make a very iconic sort of signature as it passed through water. Also, with such a large oversized looking box on the back I have to wonder if the Delta was a purposeful design or if they took an existing submarine already in service and heavily modified it to fill the purpose of carrying these missiles? It just looks like a small sub that was modified to quickly and temporarily fill the role of a large missile carrier as a stop gap while bigger subs were being built for purpose such as the Oscar and Typhoon class were being designed and built. By comparison, the Oscar/2 class is a very smooth and clean hydrodynamic shape without any blocky appendages, albeit a very massive submarine.
Correct me if I am wrong, but didnt you say in the Delta III Sub Brief that BS-136 Orenburg was the mothership that docked with AS-31 Losharik after the fire? I have seen conflicting reports on other military news websites wether it was BS-136 Orenburg (Delta III Stretch) or BS-64 Podmodkovje (Delta IV Stretch), since they do look very similar to people who arent too knowledgable on this topic.
There is nothing surprising in 9300km+ range. Liquid-fueled engines have better Isp, and thus more economical and give you better range and payload for the same mass. That's why most modern space rockets are liquid fueled, with solid fueled are haveing the role of boosters at liftup stages.
Requin, Ballao, and Sea Lion ... all (re- designated) APSS's. Amberjack (Tac Sub) didn't have one either.⚓ Remeniscent of😅😞 COMKOOKLANT Opns.🎉out of Charlotte Amalie. 🎊("Don't Stop the Carnival").😢😂But those were Diesel Boats...😖dirty dirty😪⚓
Subs haven't had deck guns since WW2 era... No need for them anymore. If you expose the sub in any kind of modern engagement, it can't stand up to any kind of missile attacks or the fast attack deck guns of other naval ships. They'd only be good against merchant ships and tankers.
Might be means and methods, but if a sub was in a strong current, and the sub was stationary (ie using spinners) with the towed array being strung out behind it, would the towed array work?
Nice! I love your intelligent narrative. Is it possible for you to team up with Grim Reapers, who do simulations? They include all hardware, but have no subs? It makes their simulations somewhat unrealistic...They try their best, but we all know the "hidden" threat shadowing a fleet or coastline, is part of the game...Just a thought. They did a UK/US vs. China/Russia fleet battle...It was cool, and yes; Russia does get the first punch of a FULL anti-ship salvo...It looked cool in their simulator...It came down to Aegis to ensure termination, but some got through, and destroyed our newest ships? It came down to ramming, and 20, and 30 mm exploding shells...Crazy! I think your knowledge would help create a more realistic AI/human driven war game...
Hey Jive Turkey I've got a question for above the layer - Can you tell us why fires breaking out on subs are so dangerous?? Maybe that's a dumb question but hey I thought I'd ask!
Fires on submarines are dangerous because they don't have to spread very far to render the entire boat uninhabitable. Oxygen in the air is required for a fire to burn, and the atmosphere inside the boat is the only source of that element. Everybody on a sub is on the damage control team - everybody responds to a fire casualty in one way or another. Everyone's life depends on everyone doing their job.
Heyas Chief, may I recommend a Russian pronunciation course? My ears quiver everytime you attempt some of these names. Usually it is the simple ones that trip you up when you Anglicise them. Anyways thanks for doing these briefs, love them hearing your take and experience on them.
Interesting interrogative. Captain John P. 'Jones' went to work for the Queen of the Russias as an Admiral after running athwart the American Congress; with AMPLE Pay and Allowances, I may add.Continually Distinguished, and 'colorful', He was buried outside of Paris(at the time) until brought back by President Theodore Roosevelt aboard a Dreadnought & laid in a black marble sepulchre at Annapolis! with Full fanfare, and honors. Naval Service... Never been - a "job"; always been, a Vocation. TRADITION. SeaService. PRIDE. NAVY. Smpr IDEM. SmprFdls.
I can't imagine Russian Navy is allowed to employ a former US submariner, no matter how good. They'd rightfully suspect that his loyalty is first and forever to the USA.
Yeah) Looks like Losshark is now the agreed-upon name for Losharik :) Also, I'm sure Aaron would be surprised that Podmoskovye is not Moscow, but "Moscow Suburbs" :) That boat is Suburban, but underwater, you see.
@@vladimirdyuzhev Lay off mates, he's making an Attempt- the phonetic Cyrillic. He's IN the Arena . . .and doing a noteworthy effort for you Pelicans. BRAVO ZULU. Cheers (smile)
@subbrief You have quite a problem with spelling russian names lol. Sineva was tested to 11540km max range, 2500 more than Bulava , while having double the throw weight.And the liquid fuel is ampullated making for a safer operation
Could you imagine the indignation and uproar if Russian subs collided with ours off Kings Bay? Norfolk? San Diego? Credit to Russians for their patience
Is there any truth to the story (on an internet news channel, so take a pinch of salt) that the Norwegian Undersea Surveillance Network has had its cables cut . Location off the coast of Northern Norway.
Complete truth. And if you continue to disclose the existence of the top-secret Norwegian Undersea Surveillance Network, a Russian sub will cut the Internet cable to your house!
@@vladimirdyuzhev Thank you for admitting it was a hostile and covert act by the Russians. However for giving the west that information the FSB will cut off more than your internet Vladimir.
Verkhoturye (Верхоту́рье) would be pronounced more like "Vair-ko-tour-yeh", with the accent on the third syllable. (The "x" character is pronounced more like an aspirated hard "k"). My Russki is rusty, so I'd love to hear from any Russians in the comments as to how close I got. As I read it, the Layner would appear as 21 separate incoming warheads where there are actually nine live warheads and twelve decoys. "Bryansk" (Брянск) would be more like "Br-yahnsk" or "Brahnsk". I would imagine the Eastern Orthodox Church would take exception to being characterized as a "cult". Interesting history.
Pretty close, it goes as "Ver-ho-tour-ye". "Verh" means "Up", "Tura" is a river's name and "ye" is like a place indication, so it literally means "the Tura's (river) upper aria".
@@BloodyRedSquadron I did not know this! I would love the chance just to go on a modern one and maybe go for a ride. I play on going up to Cleveland Ohio in the summer they have a submarine there from like world war 2 and it had some repairs done, me and my girls are going to make a weekend of it and can’t wait!!
Important note: This was uploaded on Public Library internet. It was very low bandwidth public access internet during the COVID lockdown and required I reduce file size. This is why there are a lot of low resolution artifacts.
Rural Internet in the United States needs to be addressed by Congress and funded as a utility.
The Dems are too busy spending $200million on a fkng park for Pelosi.
Rural internet also sucks in Argentina haha. Cheers Jive, and still waiting for k 129 vid, with you telling us all gossips you can about the topic lol.
Aaron, I agree with you. The FTTH and decent QoS is a must nowdays for normal life, covid prooved this even more. But just for an illustration, in Germany, where I am from, there are still a lot of grey spots with only analog POTS and Adsl (not 2+), because the copper wires are 50+years old with a lot of unsymetry in impedance. They are constantly replacing the cables and building Outdoor DSL points, but in a not sufficient rate. It will take years to cover most of the state. Or as we say, eather you have a great view and pristine nature or you have decent Internet :)
Just wait for starlink and 5Ge in the next couple of years you should be fine
You're not meant to be gaming on public utilities.. it'll be nice when it's there, but until then if it exists and functions, the need is fulfilled.
All the same, thanks for all the content!
Aaron is to my Cold War/modern sub interest as Drachinifel has been to my naval history interest-it was fairly non-existent before I discovered their channels and now I watch basically every video with the joy of learning.
Same here BUT he is no hawk
Samesies fam
Same. I’m actually now pursing my degree in defense analysis because of these gentlemen
@@lafouche345 Hawk??
@@warhawk4494Hawk tuah!
I don't mean to be that guy, but at 13:30, It says that the dry dock damage cost $1 billion rubles. Since it's in rubles, there should be no $ sign in front of the 1. ₽ would be the proper symbol to use for Russian rubles.
Nice, feel the burn!
"Middle of the North Atlantic surrounded by thousands of tons of russian subs..." That's where I live.
Impeccable timing, just as I got done making myself some coffee.
I just made water 🤣. Sorry I couldn't resist.
I just got back from the beer store so I'm set too!
now im hungry
@@rockbutcher fire tubes 3 and 4
Cringe
Splendid analysis sir! Regarding LosShark :-) ( that is actually quite funny)- it should be written as Lo-Sha-Rik - That is a cartoon character from a soviet cartoon with the same name- a horse made of balloons - that is why that submarine is called Losharik- it's pressure hall is made of spheres.
Thank you Jive. Watch your lectures with great pleasure even though have nothing to do with subs
Just to mention - K-51 «Имени XXVI съезда КПСС», or "In the name of the 26th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union"...Rolles off the tongue, doesn't it? Imagine giving targets and missile launch authorization in the heat of an eventual nuclear war...This type of flamboyant names were the real nuclear deterrent. Anyway, pardon my "humor", later, in 1999 the now Russian Navy rename it - K-51 Verkhoturye (Верхотуре) after the historic town with the same name, as you mentioned.
Cheers. Long time listener, first time caller. Your content is close to priceless and much enjoyed. To this day I don't know why post-Soviet Russia, or even the countries of the former Warsaw Pact can't, won't or refuse to make documentaries of this kind. Even if we still have some weird pride of what our nations/armed forces were, in 5-10 years, even the hardcore past-timers will start to forget or be a laughing stock for the millenials. Sorry, I'm sliding down the memory lane, forgive me the chatter. To finally wrap it - the only video of "Shield 84", the Warsaw Pact excersise incuding 60 thousand soldiers from seven countries I was able to find...EVER, is uploaded by "VHÚ MOVIES". Only in Czech, but the video speaks of itself.
Yulian....G'Day Mate from the Land Downunder.....I would like to relate to you the story of the bravest thing I did during the Cold War....
Location The Skagerak [inbound to Copenhagen]
A surfaced Australian Oberon Class Boat, the latest [and last] Oberon out of the British Dockyards....this one is HMAS OTAMA [Queensland Aboriginal Dialect meaning Dolphin] [p.s I am a Queenslander too]....anyway, there we were, a small group of us were standing up forward, near the Dome at the Bows, it was about 14:00 or so...pale blue sky and biting wind [to an Aussie].....So coming outbound from the Baltic in the outbound land no more than 120 meters away, is a small Russian Freighter, She's not very big probably only 10,000 tons or so....
but a surfaced Aussie Boat is rarely seen in those waters, so the OOW and Lookout and I think the Captain too, were all out on the Port Bridgewing with binoculars raised looking at us........We have a kind of weird thing we do.....[for instance, we would do this to an opposing football team from a different town]......but I dropped my trollies [pants] bent over and gave them a "browneye" [you know, where you pull the cheeks of yr bum apart].....they laughed out loud and waved to us God love em....that was August 1978. I fucking LIKE YOU Russians!!!!! Stay Safe. [and I Salute you Tovarich!] All the best from Queensland, Oz!
@@SurvivethePoleShift You, Sir have single handedly killed what for a while appeared to be a nice productive afternoon. First things first - I cannot stop chuckling at the mental picture you've put in my head. The clear blue sky, the dark steel of the hull, the white uniforms...and the brown eye... But to be sincere, from the perspective of a person, who got his first glimpse of Western culture from bootleg VHS tapes, still considering Mr. Mel Gibson as an Aussie, that would be THE most Australian thing imaginable. With all due resect.
Second - Your "maritime incident" got my interest... But the 2nd, 3rd and so on hits on the search engine while asking about HMAS OTAMA, well, that definitely grabbed my attention.
You, Sir, and I'm quoting a line from "Destroy the Kentucky", are one of the "scary men"... And I feel priviliged to comunicate with one of the actually acting....actors back in the days. And that is not just gaslighting bullcrap, because in my opinion the life of the grunt is forever and wherever the same...USA, USSR, Warsaw Pact, NATO, Western Alliance, Eastern Block, Moon Base, Mars Colonies...Its - get up, run, dig, shoot, eat, dig, sleep . Arty-boys - still the same - load, drive, fire, clean. And then there are "the scary men"... Some of them locked down in nuke silos, some of them covertly sparking an unrest in enemy state, some of them doing some secret spy-ops, across the seas, around the globe in one the best boats at the time... And now its for me and my imagination to fill the blanks between your hilarious encounter and the few articles and pictures of your service history.
And in the end I must point something, not so important, but there are alaways comrades lurking to see if we do the right thing. I'm not Russian, still commie, tough. Bulgaria, or as we used to flatter ourselves - "Soviet Union's little brother". Kind of cringey. During the Cold War we've operated mainly in the Black Sea. the chance you had crossed a course with a bulgarian sub is...Well I do not know. Becaus "its classified", ain't it? :) Arround the time of your service (I assume) we operated four Romeo-class subs. Sizewise and crew-wise pretty close I think. And the point of me saying such a thing is that our last (last EVER unfortunatelly) sub - "Slava" had very similar fate post decommission as HMAS OTAMA. Our was saved by the heroic work done by members of the past crews... Long story short, С-84 "Слава" of the 8 Separate Submarine Division of Bulgarian Navy is now a museum . If, by chance, we survive the current events, and by another chance you happen to travel around Europe, the museum is near our "Black Sea Capital" - Varna, they've got a decent airport, decent sightseeing historic and other locations for the Wife, decent beaches for the kids, and relatively decent Cold War Era Romeo-class attack sub, that may or may not at some point got a passive signal by or from HMAS OTAMA...Who knows... I still haven't got the...opportunity to visit, but hey, there are plenty of army and air force museums in walking distance from me, and not 6 hours long drive on our glorious twisted hightways. If you search for "Bulgaria's Last Submarine "Slava" [Музей Подводница Слава]' - there is a..decent video about the museum, and its in English!
Cheers, Sir. It was a good afternoon for me, not gonna lie. Thank you. Stay Safe.
@@OrataKopata Yulian when you strip away all the ideological bullshit they filled all Our Heads with, AND, given that the bastards who have led us all deserve to be coated in honey and thrown to the Lesbians, .....we were all really Brothers & Sisters the whole time....I'm 64, retired and my health is broken....
[I was TOO GOOD at being a Sailor lol]....but be that all as it may....if I could, I'd be on a Plane to Bulgaria tomorrow to say, G'Day in Person....I'll bring beer you bring Vodka......alas....we will have to await Our next lifetimes I fear....May you're lines be tight and you're rum spiced. [We would track Romeo's Whiskeys and Whiskey Longbins, along the East Coast of Australia everynow and then, it was exciting stuff [I was a Radio man]. Alas Submarining is a young Man's game and after six years in O Boats I was returned to Fleet Duties as my ears would no longer stand Barometric pressures related to Snorting in Diesel Boats....but they were great times...[p.s. We were heading into Copenhagen for a wild & wooly 6 days alongside....Holy Bowcaps Batman!!!!....what a bunch of Party animals those Danes are [were].....we had a gr8 time and when we left, headed down to Den Helder for a snappy 6 days there [Wow....Dutch Girls!!!!]....then across the moat and up the Thames for a final 7 days alongside, in London, as we prepared to sail OTAMA home across the Atlantic and a snappy 7 days in Halifax, [helping the Canadian Submarine Sqn celebrate it's Birthday...[pissed again].........as an interesting aside, we left Halifax and next had 5 days in Fort Lauderdale Florida, we sailed from there and headed for the Panama Canal [through the Bemuda Triangle]....Our Skipper Frank Wolff, needed to do a trim dive after Florida [as we had topped off Our fuel Tanks], sooo, as soon as we were into the Triangle, We dived and got our trim sorted and went to 600 feet...down there, we loudly flooded empty tanks [creating a huge BOOM when the sea water instantly floods them].....boom, boom, boom.....but no monsters....so six hours later we surfaced, shutoff from diving, and continued Our Surface transit to the Canal.......to celebrate being around those beautiful warm, blue seas, we had a beer issue and a BBQ on the Casing....we also shipped Our foreplanes inward [so that they were now raised and vertical to the horizontal deck]....and lashed our purpose built, homemade, swimming pool and pumped it full of sea water, so Steak, Beer and a swim.
[Frank hove the Boat to put a Bloke with a rifle atop the Fin to watch for sharks and we had a swim in the Triangle [as well as the home made pool rigged between the foreplanes].....we knew how to have fun......God Bless Bulgaria, and may we stand and salute each other one day as the Brothers & Sisters we all are. All the best from Qld [Queensland] Australia.
P.S. The only thing missing on the Casing that afternoon off the Coast of Cuba was Dancing Girls....
21:10 I live in Bryansk. There is a model of the sub in the city hall :)
I love your content! Would you please consider making a video on the Typhoon? I'm very curious about how the hulls are connected, how crew transits through the 5 hulls, what you suspect protocol was for sealing the hulls during battle stations, even what you suspect the diameter of each hull is as I suspect they are each actually narrower and less spacious per hull then a traditionally laid out SSBN considering the beam is 25m but there is a lot of space between hulls, etc. Very curious on your perspective! In any case, thanks for all the great content and thank you for your service!
Also there isn’t a lot of space between the hulls is missle silos and in the back there’s a third hull in the middle and they’re all touching side by side.
29:57 God bless this SS-N-23 and a safe flight to all the warheads who travel in her.
Feels like the first 'normal' video I've watched all week after being glued to live court coverage for days for hours on end! 👀
And it was worth watching! 😊 got to see a judge chew a prosecutor out harder and longer than a TV drama or film would ever have dared too. That poor guys video will be getting shown in law schools for years 🤣
What is your guess about verdict? And what is your opinion about defendant? I may add that i watched about 90 hours of trial and coverage.
@@Puchacz81 solely on what the jury will see? Self-defense on the major charges, he might catch a couple of minors though (much like one of the victims!)
Having seen a wider slew of evidence than the jury will see? 100% innocent. The stitching together of the video timeline, rosenbaums state of mind, extra video.... I've not really seen *anything* to convince me otherwise, and I gave the prosecution a fair shake of the stick.... but they're acting so scummy 😣 hardly a advert for justice
But who knows what a jury will do. Threats to the jury are widespread, people trying to take videos of them etc. The US Court system needs to find a way to square that circle 🤔
@@mor4y I was really dissapointed that Judge allow this grainy ass picture and video as a evidence. Without any corraboration and state could call Zeminski's to testify in court but they didn't. Just this fact blackpilled me heavily and such evidence should not be addmised in court. There is a limit with a technology and if your life hangs on the few pixels and interpretation of a rorschach picture we are heading in wrong direction.
I hope that defense (coz they knew about this video before) have planted in the evidence direct rebuttal and this crap as a trap for a scum prosecutor to discredit him completly. But this is far fetch idea. Maybe pictures from Nathan Debruin?
I personally also think that Kyle is fully innocent and i hope jury will see it as well and let him walk.
Gun charge is out, Curfew as well so we will see.
Wonderful video! I am very impressed with the amount of information you have provided. The amount of your research effort is so very evident ! Thank you !! Great job !!!
Great upload, Aaron ! Thank you !
A+
Question... Referring to submarines. Is there a fine line between sensitive security information (SSI) and what would be considered classified vs top secret, etc? How do you know as times goes on. Like when a sub is retired, is that info accessible to the public or if a submarine is modernized, are the older components ok to talk about. Just curious on this topic since you aren't in the Navy anymore, how do you know what's ok to say and what's not.
Most vets default to what they could and couldnt talk about during their time in. Unless something government released comes to the public they dont talk about it if it was previously classified. For example, the uss nautilus museum (the ship itself welded to the pier) in groton ct doesnt permit visitors into the engineering spaces. This is to protect nnpi. (Naval Nuclear Propulsion Information) guarantee if you find an old nuc from that boat they still wouldnt open their mouth about it even though their ship is a museum now.
Most best defenses are based on deterrence ..as misies distraction and decoy to divert missiles etc
Your work is fascinating. Such interesting information.
Thank you again Aaron! Highest quality
Thank you so much, big fan of your work and Thank you for your service, I love the ability of learning about these briefs. Did you make one on the Alfa/Lira fast attack submarine?
Yet another superb subbrief with a lot of informations. Thumbs up sir! @subbrief, please do cover in above the layer some general principe of wire guided torpedos how the wire and spools work with outter doors so that the wire is not cut. As I imagine there are two spools one on torpedo and other in the tube with different speeds.
Who would of guessed it was the quietest of their nuclear subs! The thing is the size of a helicopter carrier. Could you imagine driving a 50 story building under the water with nuclear weapons. I did the conversion of 167 meters to stories. I'd be stricken with anxiety the whole time.
Well you answered my question at the end of the video, that missile hump on a circular hull does not have adverse effects as far as detection or stealthyness, seems like an active sonar torpedo would hear the return off of that pretty much looking flat side where missile compartment is, maybe that would have been a better question, does active sonar see them better with the what looks to almost be 90⁰ curve on the top side? Great content along with the Naval News, as always, keep it up. Thanks 👍
it would make them have a higher target echo strength yes, but submarines very rarely go active and Deltas being bombers will trundle around very slowly so hydrodynamics doesn't matter as much as it would to an SSN
Looking at these photos... which are great by the way, I am struck by how BLEAK the landscape is up there. I can't imagine coming back from a patrol to that! Ugh. Thank you for the lecture. I thoroughly enjoyed it.
Nevermind, they say the global warming is going to make those lands green. We can't wait.
Great way to start my day! Thanks Jive!
21:29 "Doctor, this is combat vessel of the Soviet Navy. We do not cancel operations because of accidents."
Hydrodynamicly does that missle hump on a otherwise circular hull hamper performance and stealthyness? Looks like putting an outboard on a Grand Banks trawler instead of a single or twin inboards, just looks off, hodgepodge if you will with that missile hump.
I didn't find a definitive answer, but folks say there is no difference at low speed, so why spend more metal?
As I said in an other reply, it doesn't matter so much on a bomber as they tend to move very slowly, its certainly a more important factor on an SSN
Yes. It will reduce speed due to more resistance. There may be more flow noise at higher speeds.
Another great vid
Thanks for the Sub Brief
My favourite day of the month. The day I get to geek out about naval history.
9000km range isn't absurd. The Trident II has been demonstrated in test flights with reduced payload (as it's deployed) out to 11,000km.
The warheads (4x) for Shtil and Sineva are 800kt, not 100kt.
Layner planned to use 10x 100kt warheads, but doesn't seem to have been put into service.
Should add that along with that GLONASS upgrade in 1988, changes to the guidance package also allowed for depressed trajectories. The RV aeroshells were also upgraded to expand the reentry envelope for these shallower reentry angles. Last year, a Sineva, which is fundamentally the same missile as Shtil, demonstrated a 2,500km depressed flight from a Delta IV (Tula). This flight profile would allow the missiles to attack a significant portion of Europe from their port at Olenya Bay.
The medium warheads are not the low yield warheads. The low yield warheads are referred to as light warheads. Neither of them are tactical.
Regarding the low torpedo tube count, it's largely due to a shift through the 1980s of withdrawing SSBN patrols away from US coasts into more secure 'Bastions'; smaller areas of sea close to port (Barents and Laptev Seas, for the Delta IVs), defended by ASW destroyers. This doctrinal change was made possible by the R-29 series with its increased range.
Can I question something what happened to the typhoon sub brief video?
22:00 The honorary title is "BRATSK" which means "fraternity" (brotherhood)
My брат
As always, a great story, we are waiting for Borey
Surely "CPSU" at 4:59 (КПСС) would be the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and also, the submarine at 14:36 K-64 Podmoskovye (Подмосковье) is actually named after the Moscow region (or oblast) - not after the city.
"Puty my man! It seems there has been like an issue on the submarine so no show for you today mmmmK?"
**angry fond gulag memory noises**
Very good, very informative as always, I feel I must question the Greyling repair in the Holy loch, you say she was repaired after the collision in 1993, erm, the Holy Loch U.S. base was shutdown in 1992, could they have gone to Faslane on the Gareloch for repairs?
Risa needs to maintain defense that maintains a sustainable conflict ...
Please do an analysis of "The Bloop"... There is actual hydrophone recordings of it on RUclips... To this day it's still a mystery of what caused it, but whatever it was traveled thousands of miles. Hope you read this...
11:40 Wow. If even the general public has photos like this you cannot tell me we don't have a soft kill solution for this thing.
[Off topic]
Will you ever be doing a video about the K-129?
I see most people doing videos about how was recovered and why but there's not much information about how it's sank in the first place and I feel like you would do a very detailed video about that?
If that movie is on line, I sure can’t find it!!
Same cant find it. Could be a typo in the name or something.
General question: Do any current subs use any form of FLIR, IRST, or any kind of visible light detection ? (Visible, infrared, etc)
Interesting comment about the quietness of the Delta iV. I had no idea. How does she compare to equivalent US boomers at that time?
Love, love your briefings! Very knowledgeable, to the point.
What i am wondering: almost all of those Russian boats have one two or more mishaps: miscalculation of radar navigation, fire here, leakage there.. is this a Russian thing? Are they just incompetent or are those things that happen in other navies too? Over here in The Netherlands we never hear of incidents with our boats so i am wondering if the Russians are just incompetent (you would expect that, given the bungling during the Ukrainian war) any thoughts on this?
Are there standard procedures to follow after launching their nukes, or do they sail for the southern hemisphere and hope the locals where they land don't hold them responsible for just following orders?
They meet an equally emptied US sub, board it and drink vodka and whiskey in turns until it all boils over.
It's Mon Nov 15th about 5pm est, still waiting on an Above the Layer episode for the week 😭😭😭
Nice brief, surprising to hear it’s so quiet. Is it quieter than their akula ssn too?
Did that large boxy missile deck cause the submarine problems in regards it's stealth ability and acoustic signature? Did that extra drag and lack of hydrodynamic shape cause some sort of noisy vibrations etc as it forced it's not so coefficient shaped way through water far less gracefully compared to smooth round torpedo shaped sub?
I can see they've smoothed it out and blended it in, took the sharp vertical angles off it as best as they could but I can't help but feel all those different angles and various widths where the conning tower, missile deck and hull all blend together in a very turbulent looking way could only make a very iconic sort of signature as it passed through water.
Also, with such a large oversized looking box on the back I have to wonder if the Delta was a purposeful design or if they took an existing submarine already in service and heavily modified it to fill the purpose of carrying these missiles? It just looks like a small sub that was modified to quickly and temporarily fill the role of a large missile carrier as a stop gap while bigger subs were being built for purpose such as the Oscar and Typhoon class were being designed and built. By comparison, the Oscar/2 class is a very smooth and clean hydrodynamic shape without any blocky appendages, albeit a very massive submarine.
I really like the camelback style of the Russian ballistic missile subs, the missile silos I meant.
Wow, coming up to 35+ years in service. Is the Losshark diesel electric or electric only, being charged by the mothership when attached.
Ibstikk think the best defet is when ione has firepower advantage Iver the other somehow and could manage a sustained conflict confrtably
Whats the bowtie like thing under the bridge windows Navigation light housing?
I love Sub Brief
It's range.... IT'S OVER 9000!
Correct me if I am wrong, but didnt you say in the Delta III Sub Brief that BS-136 Orenburg was the mothership that docked with AS-31 Losharik after the fire? I have seen conflicting reports on other military news websites wether it was BS-136 Orenburg (Delta III Stretch) or BS-64 Podmodkovje (Delta IV Stretch), since they do look very similar to people who arent too knowledgable on this topic.
It's been so long since I made this video, I don't remember.
Omg a new Sub Brief????
This was quieter than a Kilo?? Whoa!
With losShark down is it possible that there are reactors just left at the bottom? What happens to all the equipment they can’t even get to?
Sonar screaming at com: “please don’t turn I wanna keep listening 😭😭😭”
There is nothing surprising in 9300km+ range. Liquid-fueled engines have better Isp, and thus more economical and give you better range and payload for the same mass. That's why most modern space rockets are liquid fueled, with solid fueled are haveing the role of boosters at liftup stages.
also most rockets are liquid fuelled due to the ability to vary their throttle
Do these subs have any deck guns?
Requin, Ballao, and Sea Lion ...
all (re- designated) APSS's.
Amberjack (Tac Sub) didn't have one either.⚓ Remeniscent of😅😞 COMKOOKLANT Opns.🎉out of Charlotte Amalie. 🎊("Don't Stop the Carnival").😢😂But those were Diesel Boats...😖dirty dirty😪⚓
No guns. Air defence against small targets is done by Igla (Niddle) shoulder launcher.
Subs haven't had deck guns since WW2 era... No need for them anymore. If you expose the sub in any kind of modern engagement, it can't stand up to any kind of missile attacks or the fast attack deck guns of other naval ships. They'd only be good against merchant ships and tankers.
Might be means and methods, but if a sub was in a strong current, and the sub was stationary (ie using spinners) with the towed array being strung out behind it, would the towed array work?
I doubt you will receive an answer to that question.
Movie - Journey to the Depth. Cannot find anything on this movie, K-51's involvement, or Polygon Studion. Does anyone have links?
If you don’t think we are in a spiritual battle right now for civilization, good luck to you.
Wow thats a big boat!
Nice! I love your intelligent narrative. Is it possible for you to team up with Grim Reapers, who do simulations? They include all hardware, but have no subs? It makes their simulations somewhat unrealistic...They try their best, but we all know the "hidden" threat shadowing a fleet or coastline, is part of the game...Just a thought. They did a UK/US vs. China/Russia fleet battle...It was cool, and yes; Russia does get the first punch of a FULL anti-ship salvo...It looked cool in their simulator...It came down to Aegis to ensure termination, but some got through, and destroyed our newest ships? It came down to ramming, and 20, and 30 mm exploding shells...Crazy! I think your knowledge would help create a more realistic AI/human driven war game...
Submarine launch platform vs Missile launch platform.
vs Submarine(-based) missile launch platform.
How does it work here with English?
I wonder what the TNT-equivalent of those 2 ton conventional warheads is.
Guess 160 (16 x 10) of those could still ruin a lot of Peoples day.
Given that they come down at a sub-orbital velocity, I estimated ~10 metric tonnes of TNT just for the kinetic energy + the warhead itself.
Hey Jive Turkey I've got a question for above the layer - Can you tell us why fires breaking out on subs are so dangerous?? Maybe that's a dumb question but hey I thought I'd ask!
Fires on submarines are dangerous because they don't have to spread very far to render the entire boat uninhabitable. Oxygen in the air is required for a fire to burn, and the atmosphere inside the boat is the only source of that element. Everybody on a sub is on the damage control team - everybody responds to a fire casualty in one way or another. Everyone's life depends on everyone doing their job.
!!!!!! N-N-N-N-Nice!!!!!!
10:54 snieva acrualy in russian not sniva
Not sure if you can answer this question but when you say their mission is to go hide, do they do that by staying as still as possible?
Slow mo, a few knots.
There is a new technique where the newer subs stay just a few feet below the ice. I've heard the noise of the ice masks the sounds of the boat.
Can’t find the movie “Journey to the Depth” anywhere…
Anyone knows anything about it?
Thanks, all the best to everyone
Heyas Chief, may I recommend a Russian pronunciation course? My ears quiver everytime you attempt some of these names. Usually it is the simple ones that trip you up when you Anglicise them. Anyways thanks for doing these briefs, love them hearing your take and experience on them.
Is there a US law that would prohibit former submariners from serving in a foreign navy sub ?
Interesting interrogative. Captain John P. 'Jones' went to work for the Queen of the Russias as an Admiral after running athwart the American Congress; with AMPLE Pay and Allowances, I may add.Continually Distinguished, and 'colorful', He was buried outside of Paris(at the time)
until brought back by President Theodore Roosevelt aboard a Dreadnought & laid in a black marble sepulchre at Annapolis! with Full fanfare, and honors. Naval Service...
Never been - a "job"; always been, a Vocation. TRADITION. SeaService. PRIDE. NAVY.
Smpr IDEM. SmprFdls.
I can't imagine Russian Navy is allowed to employ a former US submariner, no matter how good.
They'd rightfully suspect that his loyalty is first and forever to the USA.
I've met ex USN submariners who had joined the Australian Navy and were serving on Collins class subs.
Russia doesn't accept foreign applications for either of their regular Army or Navy. I guess they'd make an exception for a designated "contractor."
love the deltas
14:28 Pod-Moskovye means Moscow region. And since Moscow is a federal city, it's not even part of it.
Think this guy was lurking around Norway recently? hmmm?
Information about submarines is nice but listen to Aaron mispronounce russian names is golden!
Yeah)
Looks like Losshark is now the agreed-upon name for Losharik :)
Also, I'm sure Aaron would be surprised that Podmoskovye is not Moscow, but "Moscow Suburbs" :) That boat is Suburban, but underwater, you see.
@@vladimirdyuzhev Lay off mates, he's making an Attempt- the phonetic Cyrillic.
He's IN the Arena . . .and doing a noteworthy effort for you Pelicans.
BRAVO ZULU. Cheers
(smile)
Pavel?
Nuke autonomous pod sounds like the beginning to a bad story
You need to do these on oldddd subs
@subbrief You have quite a problem with spelling russian names lol.
Sineva was tested to 11540km max range, 2500 more than Bulava , while having double the throw weight.And the liquid fuel is ampullated making for a safer operation
Could you imagine the indignation and uproar if Russian subs collided with ours off Kings Bay? Norfolk? San Diego? Credit to Russians for their patience
Can you please do the hotel sometime pretty please
Does Russia have enough defenses oersunbky sufficient firnutself ?
Is there any truth to the story (on an internet news channel, so take a pinch of salt) that the Norwegian Undersea Surveillance Network has had its cables cut . Location off the coast of Northern Norway.
Complete truth. And if you continue to disclose the existence of the top-secret Norwegian Undersea Surveillance Network, a Russian sub will cut the Internet cable to your house!
@@vladimirdyuzhev Thank you for admitting it was a hostile and covert act by the Russians. However for giving the west that information the FSB will cut off more than your internet Vladimir.
@@MultiNacnud Just keeping the dangerous toys away from kids.
As long as these bsubs are cruise missile capable as well am equiooedbwell with crusie missies sjiud be Cool
👍
Rus need to know current defense are Best on hie much of interceotoon of enemy attacks are imoekmented and nit how mucho firepower is orojected
Russian are starting the cult mechanical. praise the onmisissia! you can probably thank the Walkers for the Delta4 quietness
Verkhoturye (Верхоту́рье) would be pronounced more like "Vair-ko-tour-yeh", with the accent on the third syllable. (The "x" character is pronounced more like an aspirated hard "k"). My Russki is rusty, so I'd love to hear from any Russians in the comments as to how close I got.
As I read it, the Layner would appear as 21 separate incoming warheads where there are actually nine live warheads and twelve decoys.
"Bryansk" (Брянск) would be more like "Br-yahnsk" or "Brahnsk".
I would imagine the Eastern Orthodox Church would take exception to being characterized as a "cult".
Interesting history.
Pretty close, it goes as "Ver-ho-tour-ye".
"Verh" means "Up", "Tura" is a river's name and "ye" is like a place indication, so it literally means "the Tura's (river) upper aria".
this looks like the kosatka from GTA
I got one of these bad boiz in gta5, anyone else?
I think Russia needs mire Khai nbr cruises subsny and warships to match Us warships capabilities
Sub Brief! 🤘🤘🎧
Are there any females on subs that you know of? Or am I the only girl that is completely fascinated with this type of service?
I know that within the Royal Navy Sub service there are women onboard and more joining
In sweden females do serve on subs.
@MZ hmm 🤔 does don’t ask don’t tell apply to you? Lmao 😜
@@BloodyRedSquadron I did not know this! I would love the chance just to go on a modern one and maybe go for a ride. I play on going up to Cleveland Ohio in the summer they have a submarine there from like world war 2 and it had some repairs done, me and my girls are going to make a weekend of it and can’t wait!!
@@iBOOM interesting!!! Did not know this fact….. how do guys think of that I wonder?
Cam when Us nuke subs oark at the Mediterranean on Russia s face
'CINEVA' pronounced see-neva. Russian word for hazel bush.