by Tom Dougherty » Fri Apr 25, 2025 11:43 am
Mike, The drawings look really good and I think reflect the correct bow shape for Tullibee. See the photo of Tullibee prior to launch. Tullibee pioneered the placement of the spherical sonar dome in the bow and the torpedo tubes angled out further back. I am not sure that the stern shape of the Mikromir kit is correct; I think it tapers too gradually. See poor resolution dry dock shot. The Tullibee had turbo-electric drive (as well as the only submarine with the S2C reactor) and may have needed more room aft for the big DC motor. The Glenard Lipscomb was another try at a DC turbo-electric drive and used a considerably lengthened Sturgeon hull to accommodate that set up. The concept behind turbo-electric drive was it was one potential solution to noise generation by the propulsion plant. Tullibee was slow, as the combination S2C with steam turbogenerators and DC drive yielded only 2500 SHP (in comparison, the S5W steam turbine plant was 15,000 SHP).
Tullibee was not particularly successful, not altogether surprising in an engineering prototype with so many new features. She spent so much time at Electric Boat that she was known as Building 597. The decision was made not to make dedicated SSKNs like Tullibee, but instead incorporate many features (bow sonar, angled torpedoes) into the more conventionally powered Thresher/Permit class. To reduce radiated noise, the 593 submarines featured rafted decks for the steam propulsion train.
The model is the Yankee ModelWorks version of Tullibee in resin. I used the "as built" smaller PUFFS on this rendition. This shows both the bow hemisphere and tapered stern, as well as the curved shape of the aft superstructure deck
Tullibee originally had 3 smaller PUFFS sonar installations, with one under the aft superstructure deck. It was later refitted with the much larger PUFFS "fins". The forward fin appears to be roughly the same height as the sail (see photos, which I have reduced in size to (maybe) fit the size limit. Last time I tried to post these the entire message disappeared. Also the second shot large PUFFS shows how close the rudder is to the rear deck, again suggesting a sharper stern taper.
I don't have an accurate set of calipers, but if someone else does, Tullibee's measurements were:
272' 9.5" length
23' 4" beam
Tom
EDIT: Geez, it posted!! The FIFTH time was the charm...
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Mike, The drawings look really good and I think reflect the correct bow shape for Tullibee. See the photo of Tullibee prior to launch. Tullibee pioneered the placement of the spherical sonar dome in the bow and the torpedo tubes angled out further back. I am not sure that the stern shape of the Mikromir kit is correct; I think it tapers too gradually. See poor resolution dry dock shot. The Tullibee had turbo-electric drive (as well as the only submarine with the S2C reactor) and may have needed more room aft for the big DC motor. The Glenard Lipscomb was another try at a DC turbo-electric drive and used a considerably lengthened Sturgeon hull to accommodate that set up. The concept behind turbo-electric drive was it was one potential solution to noise generation by the propulsion plant. Tullibee was slow, as the combination S2C with steam turbogenerators and DC drive yielded only 2500 SHP (in comparison, the S5W steam turbine plant was 15,000 SHP).
Tullibee was not particularly successful, not altogether surprising in an engineering prototype with so many new features. She spent so much time at Electric Boat that she was known as Building 597. The decision was made not to make dedicated SSKNs like Tullibee, but instead incorporate many features (bow sonar, angled torpedoes) into the more conventionally powered Thresher/Permit class. To reduce radiated noise, the 593 submarines featured rafted decks for the steam propulsion train.
The model is the Yankee ModelWorks version of Tullibee in resin. I used the "as built" smaller PUFFS on this rendition. This shows both the bow hemisphere and tapered stern, as well as the curved shape of the aft superstructure deck
Tullibee originally had 3 smaller PUFFS sonar installations, with one under the aft superstructure deck. It was later refitted with the much larger PUFFS "fins". The forward fin appears to be roughly the same height as the sail (see photos, which I have reduced in size to (maybe) fit the size limit. Last time I tried to post these the entire message disappeared. Also the second shot large PUFFS shows how close the rudder is to the rear deck, again suggesting a sharper stern taper.
I don't have an accurate set of calipers, but if someone else does, Tullibee's measurements were:
272' 9.5" length
23' 4" beam
Tom
EDIT: Geez, it posted!! The FIFTH time was the charm...