by Werner » Mon Nov 12, 2007 2:23 pm
Anonymous wrote:bengtsson wrote:Just had a thought as I was driving this morning. Remembering some time spent on the passive sonar of a submarine , the possibility that the Chinese sub was caught unaware by the approach of the Carrier task force and been where she was by mere chance is most unlikely.
The USN taskforce would have been heard by the Chinese passive sonar at great distance. Even more so if the USN escort vessels had their active sonars in operation. This would be heard a great distances and thus the Carrier Task Force could be avoided hours before it appeared on the horizon. I don't think chance was in play here.
Bob B.
Didn't say she was caught unaware. She may very well have been quite aware all along. But it is still possible that she simply sat silent as the US group approached, and really didn't do any active penetration. The key issue was did she penetrate the US ASW screen in a way that implies high likelihood of being able to repeat the performance in wartime.
That depends on whether the Kitty Hawk group had a war-time level of speed and ASW operation in action at the time, and weather the Chinese submarine actually intercepted the US group, or whether she was in the right place at the right time by luck. BTW, I say intercepted because I think it is highly unlikely a diesel submarine could actually "shadow" a surface group due to speed restriction and noise consideration during snorkle operation.
If you assume the USN force was moving at 19 knots and was detected two convergence zones away, that is 2 x 33km, and assuming the submarine can move 10 knots quietly, that means the sub had to be at the wide end of a cone not more than 35km either side of the carrier's course and 67km downrange in order to make this interception.
If the carrier changed course 30 degrees, the probability of interception is cut in half.
[quote="Anonymous"][quote="bengtsson"]Just had a thought as I was driving this morning. Remembering some time spent on the passive sonar of a submarine , the possibility that the Chinese sub was caught unaware by the approach of the Carrier task force and been where she was by mere chance is most unlikely.
The USN taskforce would have been heard by the Chinese passive sonar at great distance. Even more so if the USN escort vessels had their active sonars in operation. This would be heard a great distances and thus the Carrier Task Force could be avoided hours before it appeared on the horizon. I don't think chance was in play here.
Bob B.[/quote]
Didn't say she was caught unaware. She may very well have been quite aware all along. But it is still possible that she simply sat silent as the US group approached, and really didn't do any active penetration. The key issue was did she penetrate the US ASW screen in a way that implies high likelihood of being able to repeat the performance in wartime.
That depends on whether the Kitty Hawk group had a war-time level of speed and ASW operation in action at the time, and weather the Chinese submarine actually intercepted the US group, or whether she was in the right place at the right time by luck. BTW, I say intercepted because I think it is highly unlikely a diesel submarine could actually "shadow" a surface group due to speed restriction and noise consideration during snorkle operation.[/quote]
If you assume the USN force was moving at 19 knots and was detected two convergence zones away, that is 2 x 33km, and assuming the submarine can move 10 knots quietly, that means the sub had to be at the wide end of a cone not more than 35km either side of the carrier's course and 67km downrange in order to make this interception.
If the carrier changed course 30 degrees, the probability of interception is cut in half.