French nuclear submarine FS Suffren arrived at Faslane near Glasgow in Scotland this morning.

The visit, described as routine, isn’t the first time a French nuclear submarine has visited Scotland.

FS Suffren is the lead submarine of the six-strong Barracuda-class submarine fleet. The class displaces around 5,000 tonnes. The design is influenced by the preceding Triomphant-class boats that debuted in 1997 and incorporates the latest in acoustics dampening.

As designed, Suffren feature san overall length of 326 feet, a beam of 29 feet and a draught of 24 feet. The crew numbers sixty and includes twelve officer-level personnel. The boat’s profile is conventional with a mid-mounted sail, rounded bow and tapering stern. At the stern is an X-shaped plane arrangement and shrouded propeller unit.

Recently, nuclear submarines from France and the U.S. were recently berthed in HMNB Clyde at Faslane near Glasgow in Scotland.

French and American nuclear submarines visiting Scotland

The American submarine was of the Virginia class and the French submarine was of the Rubis class.

The Rubis Class

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George has a degree in Cyber Security from Glasgow Caledonian University and has a keen interest in naval and cyber security matters and has appeared on national radio and television to discuss current events. George is on Twitter at @geoallison
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Jim
Jim
1 year ago

Getting crowded in Faslane now. Great to see the base now operating as NATO premier submarine facility in the North Atlantic. Anything that can help to supplement our own reduced SSN numbers is very welcome.

Matt
Matt
1 year ago

This is the one named after the last French Admiral to defeat the RN 😮😀?

Good to see.

Mr Bell
Mr Bell
1 year ago
Reply to  Matt

Was that in 1066 then😃?

Damo
Damo
1 year ago
Reply to  Matt

I think it’s great that allies can pillock each other like this

FormerUSAF
FormerUSAF
1 year ago

Don’t remember any articles detailing USN/RN SSB/SSBN port calls to Toulon or Ile Longue. Presume visits occur occasionally; French may have different OpSec regs?

Deep32
Deep32
1 year ago
Reply to  FormerUSAF

We have had a SSBN visit Ile Longue a decade or so ago, but dont call in really. Toulon is far to far off the beaten track for our boats, usually Gib then head West further into the Med.

FormerUSAF
FormerUSAF
1 year ago
Reply to  Deep32

Thanks, understood.

Phylyp
Phylyp
1 year ago

FS Succotash tomorrow?

AlbertStarburst
AlbertStarburst
1 year ago

…and you know they will pop into Glasgow for a good fried British breakfast. 🙂

Monkey spanker
Monkey spanker
1 year ago

Croissants and marmalade served Glasgow style.
Nice to see the French boats out and about.
A crew of only 60 caught my attention. So the boat must be able to be run by less than 30 I presume (unless they have mastered not sleeping). Quite a bit less than the U.K. and USA boats for crew.

Jim
Jim
1 year ago

Better get them an English breakfast, the French can’t handle a Tatty Scone and haggis 😀

geoff
geoff
1 year ago
Reply to  Jim

..or an Ulster Fry-Taty bread,Wheaten and Soda with bacon,sausage and 2 fried eggs also known as the Pan pronounced Paaan! Throw in some butter milk and Irish country butter and Bobs your Uncle! Can also be served toward Midnight😂
For the health concious

AlbertStarburst
AlbertStarburst
1 year ago

…all regional variations of a British breakfast 🙂 sound good to me.

davetrousers
davetrousers
1 year ago

99.4m length
8.8m beam
7.3m draught

Monkey spanker
Monkey spanker
1 year ago
Reply to  davetrousers

Is that your trouser measurements🙈😂😂😂. Love the name

geoff
geoff
1 year ago
Reply to  Monkey spanker

😂

Jim
Jim
1 year ago

Very interesting article from Navy Look out, basic premise is that we have the wrong ratio of submarines to surface combatants. Been saying this for a while. Interesting ideas on how to boost numbers. They favour an SSK solution or XLUUV’s.

https://www.navylookout.com/the-royal-navy-to-examine-the-balance-between-investment-in-submarines-and-warships/

Last edited 1 year ago by Jim
AlexS
AlexS
1 year ago

Interesting nuclear technology propulsion, without being enriched it means it needs to refuel each 10 years but at same time it is much easier to do and less dangerous.

Jim
Jim
1 year ago
Reply to  AlexS

Yes and no, nuclear refueling itself is probably the most dangerous procedure. However it’s undoubtedly very difficult to do which is why only the US and UK have the technology to do it at the moment. For the AUKUS choice it was critical as setting up a refueling capability was considered a show stopper.

Esteban
Esteban
1 year ago
Reply to  Jim

The US has the technology… It has been shared.

Hermes
Hermes
1 year ago
Reply to  Jim

Not only the UK and the US, all nuclear power can do it…
The reason the French use LEU is because we no longer produce HEU, it is also easier to use the same fuel as the civilian industry, reactors for LEU are also easier to design.

While the UK uses HEU from the US… not theirs (since the UK has also stopped producing HEU)…

Mr Bell
Mr Bell
1 year ago

Interesting Suffren was the new Barracuda class SSN was it not? The type that the Chinese stole the blue prints for leading to a cancellation of the Australian order of its conventionally powered derivative. Australia did the right thing by the way cancelling the order. Why would you want an expensive sub that your enemy knows everything about and is likely in the near future to build a derivative of the Barracuda design themselves. I am willing to put a large sum of money on the fact that the next generation PLAN SSN will look very much alike to the… Read more »

Jim
Jim
1 year ago
Reply to  Mr Bell

If the PLAN can make anything like Barracuda we are in trouble. Stealing plans for an SSN won’t do much good. It’s the precision engineering and manufacturing they lack.

Mr Bell
Mr Bell
1 year ago
Reply to  Jim

I agree but it is the leg up via reverse engineering that the Chinese seem to be particularly apt at achieving. Why invent or design anything new when you can simply steal it?

Hermes
Hermes
1 year ago
Reply to  Mr Bell

The Suffren plan was never stolen…
The only important leak concerning French submarines concerns the confidential (not SD/Secret) documentation of the Scorpene class in India.

The documentation is not really difficult to obtain and does not give much information, the detailed plans are much more difficult to obtain…

Mr Bell
Mr Bell
1 year ago
Reply to  Hermes

Yeah it was. The Australians said so . Then quietly never mentioned it again (Custard on French faces and all that). DCNS even admitted that they had had a cyber security breach on their next generation nuclear attack sub programme. Then quietly shut up and never mentioned it again. You can bet your backside the Chinese know the Barracuda design inside and out.

Mr Bell
Mr Bell
1 year ago
Reply to  Mr Bell
Venom
Venom
1 year ago
Reply to  Mr Bell

These are the pages related to the propmotion of the scorpion which were leaked , rine more, this has already been denied, even by the Indians , there is only one English to see anything else there