Saturday, October 28, 2017

The Chinese Navy Is Testing An Experimental Magnetic Propulsion System For Its Submarines

Red October SSBN
The Red October, a fictionalized version of the Akula (NATO reporting name Typhoon) submarine, has two pumpjets built into its rear for silent propulsion (though implausibly stated to use a noisy magnetohydrodynamic drive in the movie). According to Chinese state media, the nation's new nuclear submarines will soon use a similarly silent, cutting-edge pumpjet. Paramount Pictures

Popular Mechanics: Chinese Navy Tests Experimental Magnetic Propulsion System

You know, like in The Hunt for Red October. Kinda.

Engineers and scientists in China have started up the first Chinese ship with a magnetohydrodynamic propulsion system. The system, which uses magnetic fields propel a ship through the water, promises to make quieter military submarines that are harder to detect. However, the technology is not new and has failed to catch on in the mainstream.

The report in China's official military news site and mentioned by China Defense Blog, says that a ship with a magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) propulsion system or "rim-driven pumpjet" drive was tested in southern China, on Hainan island. The ship, docked at the Chinese naval base at Sanya, was tested on October 18th and "then reached the designated speed."

Read more ....

WNU Editor: If this tech is possible .... it is decades before it will be deployed. But the science behind it is impressive.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

UHmm yeah that tech has been tested by Europe and America and Russia decades ago.. it gave rise to the plot in the movie "Hunt for Red October", remember? Chinese again coming very late to the game and then hyping it.. lol... also, the line "it reached its designated speed" tells you it wasn't a high speed, but likely low speed - the issue why US/Russia/Europe stopped investing in this technology decades ago

jac said...

The MHD use the most basic of electromagnetics' law. You put a magnetic field with a current at right angle on the line of salted water, and the water move. The problem is the technology for using it. Magnetic field and current need a big source of energy and the water is not as fluid as we think when the speed increase. May be the Chinese have found a good solution.

Jay Farquharson said...

It's not a "caterpillar" pump,

It's a shaftless electric propeller,

https://www.nextbigfuture.com/2017/07/china-all-electric-rim-driven-shaftless-ultraquiet-submarine-propulsion.html/amp