I'll freely admit that I am not remotely close to being an expert in Arctic Sovereignty or submarines, but a silent and small submarine would be a perfect fit for the role of a stealthy patrol vehicle in the north.
So here is my choice for a submarine that could fill the need to not only replace our current aging submarines: the German Type 212 class and the Italian Todaro class (a joint project).
Propulsion:
To get to point A to point B you have the diesel engine, in the need of silent the submarine uses 11 fuel cells and a electric engine.
Armament:
6 forward facing torpedo tubes, a retractable 30mm auto-cannon is being considered, and short range missiles are being developed for the torpedo tubes.
General characteristics of the 212:
Displacement: 1,450 tonnes surfaced
1,830 tonnes submerged
Length: 56 m (183.7 ft)
57.2 m (187.66 ft) (2nd batch)
Beam: 7 m (22.96 ft)
Draft: 6 m (19.68 ft)
Propulsion: 1 MTU 16V 396 diesel-engine[1]
9 HDW/Siemens PEM fuel cells, 30-40 kW each (U31)
2 HDW/Siemens PEM fuel cells each with 120 kW (U32, U33, U34)
1 Siemens Permasyn electric motor 1700 kW, driving a single seven-bladed skewback propeller
Speed: 20 knots (37 km/h) submerged, 12 knots surfaced[2]
Range:
8,000 nm (14'800 km, or 9'196 miles) at 8 knots (15 km/h) surfaced
3 weeks without snorkeling, 12 weeks overall
Test depth: over 700 m (2,296 ft)[3]
Complement: 5 officers, 22 men
Armament: 6 x 533 mm torpedo tubes (in 2 forward pointing groups of 3) with 12 DM2A4, A184 Mod.3, BlackShark torpedoes, IDAS missiles and 24 external naval mines (optional)
So here is my choice for a submarine that could fill the need to not only replace our current aging submarines: the German Type 212 class and the Italian Todaro class (a joint project).
Propulsion:
To get to point A to point B you have the diesel engine, in the need of silent the submarine uses 11 fuel cells and a electric engine.
Armament:
6 forward facing torpedo tubes, a retractable 30mm auto-cannon is being considered, and short range missiles are being developed for the torpedo tubes.
General characteristics of the 212:
Displacement: 1,450 tonnes surfaced
1,830 tonnes submerged
Length: 56 m (183.7 ft)
57.2 m (187.66 ft) (2nd batch)
Beam: 7 m (22.96 ft)
Draft: 6 m (19.68 ft)
Propulsion: 1 MTU 16V 396 diesel-engine[1]
9 HDW/Siemens PEM fuel cells, 30-40 kW each (U31)
2 HDW/Siemens PEM fuel cells each with 120 kW (U32, U33, U34)
1 Siemens Permasyn electric motor 1700 kW, driving a single seven-bladed skewback propeller
Speed: 20 knots (37 km/h) submerged, 12 knots surfaced[2]
Range:
8,000 nm (14'800 km, or 9'196 miles) at 8 knots (15 km/h) surfaced
3 weeks without snorkeling, 12 weeks overall
Test depth: over 700 m (2,296 ft)[3]
Complement: 5 officers, 22 men
Armament: 6 x 533 mm torpedo tubes (in 2 forward pointing groups of 3) with 12 DM2A4, A184 Mod.3, BlackShark torpedoes, IDAS missiles and 24 external naval mines (optional)