Can anyone confirm this apparently Ma WeiMing stated in 2017 that iep on a submarine was being developed and tested and in 2025 he a shaftless pump jet propulsor was being developed
Time stamp= 11:50
Yes and No, Ma Weiming only gave one public interview in 2017, his student did mention their application for a national award for IPES, not just IEPCan anyone confirm this apparently Ma WeiMing stated in 2017 that iep on a submarine was being developed and tested and in 2025 he a shaftless pump jet propulsor was being developedTime stamp= 11:50
Can anyone confirm this apparently Ma WeiMing stated in 2017 that iep on a submarine was being developed and tested and in 2025 he a shaftless pump jet propulsor was being developedTime stamp= 11:50
I noticed this last time with the Zhongda 79.Ma did state back then that IEPS would be utilized on a future nuclear submarine.
There was nothing about a shaftless pumpjet.
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Anyway, based on the video (and other past videos) it's pretty clear that Binkov (or their writers/researchers) follow this forum or follow some relevant people on twitter.
Pretty interesting seeing the comment section, the current cope moved from "Chinese platforms are less advanced" to "China may have the technology but have worse/no doctrine".
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Speaking on the subject of propulsion, while shaftless drives are definitely out of the question. I what feel like is within the possibility is a short shaft system, unlike conventional submarines with a typically long shaft between the turbine and the propulsor, with electric drive you could have the motor at the stern with a short shaft connecting it to the propulsor. Shorter shaft could mean less noise due to less shaft vibration in of itself while being easier to isolate the vibrations from the rest of the ship.
Rim driven systems will probably stay experimental for a long time. At least outside small UUVs... I don't expect one on the 09VA. I believe most of their noise benefits are achievable with normal pumpjets too. For example German submarines and some civilian ships famously have hub devices to greatly reduce hub cavitation. Tip vortices can be eliminated by having the tips connected. When you look at the US SECNAV budget documents, you see that the Virginia had more than one propulsor over its various blocks. And the latest ones are likely to have connected tips because they call them "hybrid propulsors" on the documents. The US previously used connected-tip propellers on late-block Los Angeles classes.Pretty interesting seeing the comment section, the current cope moved from "Chinese platforms are less advanced" to "China may have the technology but have worse/no doctrine".
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Speaking on the subject of propulsion, while shaftless drives are definitely out of the question. I what feel like is within the possibility is a short shaft system, unlike conventional submarines with a typically long shaft between the turbine and the propulsor, with electric drive you could have the motor at the stern with a short shaft connecting it to the propulsor. Shorter shaft could mean less noise due to less shaft vibration in of itself while being easier to isolate the vibrations from the rest of the ship.


Yes, like this one:Yes and no, flow noise over the hull is a major contributor at high speeds which is why even if you have a pumpjet and perfectly silent ship, going above mid to high 20 kn still will be noisy due to flow around the hull becoming turbulent and detachments at the stern or control surfaces. You could probably use some clever hydrodynamic trick to delay this but it is impossible to fully avoid.



From a 2020 paperPretty interesting seeing the comment section, the current cope moved from "Chinese platforms are less advanced" to "China may have the technology but have worse/no doctrine".
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Speaking on the subject of propulsion, while shaftless drives are definitely out of the question. I what feel like is within the possibility is a short shaft system, unlike conventional submarines with a typically long shaft between the turbine and the propulsor, with electric drive you could have the motor at the stern with a short shaft connecting it to the propulsor. Shorter shaft could mean less noise due to less shaft vibration in of itself while being easier to isolate the vibrations from the rest of the ship.


