August 28, 2016
Introducing a recreation of the 175-meter-long, 23-meter-beam Nuclear Missile Submarine, code-named Typhoon by NATO. As of this writing, there are only two known Typhoons in active service. This is considered the biggest submarine to ever be built and used in service.
Picture of the bow of the Typhoon. This is the first half of the ship. You can see the 20 simulated missile doors on top, with a deck hatch behind them. Directly behind the hatch is the sail.
To simulate a submarine, there are no shields. There is a 100% Stop passive effective to simulate diving and maintaining a "depth" above a planet surface and 100% effective scanner system to simulate Sonar.
The thrust/mass ratio is a paltry 25%. This is a very slow ship, with no FTL drive and no overdrive effect.
The internal spaces are modeled after the movie "The Hunt For Red October".
Introducing a recreation of the 175-meter-long, 23-meter-beam Nuclear Missile Submarine, code-named Typhoon by NATO. As of this writing, there are only two known Typhoons in active service. This is considered the biggest submarine to ever be built and used in service.
Picture of the bow of the Typhoon. This is the first half of the ship. You can see the 20 simulated missile doors on top, with a deck hatch behind them. Directly behind the hatch is the sail.
To simulate a submarine, there are no shields. There is a 100% Stop passive effective to simulate diving and maintaining a "depth" above a planet surface and 100% effective scanner system to simulate Sonar.
The thrust/mass ratio is a paltry 25%. This is a very slow ship, with no FTL drive and no overdrive effect.
The internal spaces are modeled after the movie "The Hunt For Red October".