Téméraire
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Class overview | |
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Name: | Triomphant class |
Builders: | DCNS |
Operators: | French Navy |
Preceded by: | Redoutable class |
Cost: | €17.1 billion(2009) in total, €3.1 billion (2009) for Terrible |
Planned: | 4 |
Completed: | 4 |
Active: | 4 |
General characteristics | |
Type: | Ballistic missile submarine |
Displacement: |
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Length: | 138 m (453 ft) |
Beam: | 12.50 m (41.0 ft) |
Draught: | 10.60 m (34.8 ft) |
Propulsion: |
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Speed: | over 25 kn (46 km/h) |
Range: | Unlimited distance; 20–25 years |
Test depth: | Over 400 m (1,300 ft) |
Complement: |
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Sensors and processing systems: |
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Electronic warfare & decoys: |
ARUR 13 |
Armament: |
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The Triomphant class of ballistic missile submarines of the French Navy is the active class of four boats that entered service in 1997, 1999, 2004, and 2010. These four supersede the older Redoutable class, and they provide the ocean-based component (the Force océanique stratégique) of France's nuclear deterrent strike force, the Force de Frappe. These ships are the most expensive submarines ever produced costing more than €4 billion. Their home port is Île Longue, Brest, Western Brittany.
The first three boats are all armed with the French-produced and armed M45 intermediate-range missile, and the fourth vessel, Terrible, has tested and is equipped with the more advanced M51 missile. Each of the first three boats are to be retrofitted to the M51 missile standard, starting with Vigilant in 2010, then Triomphant and ending with Téméraire in 2018.
In French, these are called Sous-Marin Nucléaire Lanceur d'Engins de Nouvelle Génération (English: "Next Generation Device-Launching Nuclear Submarine"), abbreviated as SNLE-NG. They have replaced all of the Redoutable-class boats, with the last of those six boats being decommissioned in 2008. These submarines carry 16 submarine-launched ballistic missile launching tubes apiece.
This class reportedly produces approximately 1/1000 of the detectable noise of the Redoutable-class boats (submarines), and they are ten times more sensitive in detecting other submarines. Initially armed with the M45 missile, they are designed to carry the new M51 missile, which entered active service in 2010. As of October 2010[update], an M51 has been test-fired from one of these submarines across the Atlantic Ocean from near France to the west, and is equipped on Terrible.