Ssn-774 Virginia Class Submarine Parts

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Part Number
NSN
NIIN
2SU-14 Electrical Special Purpose Cable
012048939
C20C9SP Electrical Special Purpose Cable
007268863
LS2CS-6 Electrical Special Purpose Cable
012039466
LS2SU-14 Electrical Special Purpose Cable
012048939
LS2SWAU-10 Electrical Special Purpose Cable
012044872
LS2SWAU-14 Electrical Special Purpose Cable
012023537
M24640/15-02UN Electrical Special Purpose Cable
012252203
M24640/15-2XSAW-7 Electrical Special Purpose Cable
012252203
M24643/23-03UN Electrical Special Purpose Cable
012044872
M24643/31-04UN Electrical Special Purpose Cable
012048939
M24643/32-03UN Electrical Special Purpose Cable
012044872
M24643/32-04UN Electrical Special Purpose Cable
012023537
M24643/58-01UD Electrical Special Purpose Cable
012039466
M27072/98-K9 Electrical Special Purpose Cable
007268863
M27500-22MC4T08 Electrical Special Purpose Cable
010160757
M27500-22ML4T08 Electrical Special Purpose Cable
010160757
MIL-C-0024640/15 Electrical Special Purpose Cable
012252203
MIL-C-24643/31 Electrical Special Purpose Cable
012048939
MIL-C-24643/32 Electrical Special Purpose Cable
012023537
MIL-C-24643/32 Electrical Special Purpose Cable
012044872
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Virginia Class Submarine, Ssn-774

Picture of Ssn-774 Virginia Class Submarine

The Virginia class, also known as the SSN-774 class, is a class of nuclear-powered fast attack submarines (hull classification symbol SSN) in service with the United States Navy. The submarines are designed for a broad spectrum of open-ocean and littoral (shallow coastal water) missions. They were conceived as a less expensive alternative to the Seawolf-class attack submarines, designed during the Cold War era. They are replacing older Los Angeles-class submarines, many of which have already been decommissioned. Virginia-class submarines will be acquired through 2043, and are expected to remain in service past 2060.

The class was developed under the codename Centurion, renamed to New Attack Submarine (NAS) later on.

The Virginia class was intended in part as a less expensive alternative to the Seawolf-class submarines ($1.8 billion vs $2.8 billion), whose production run was stopped after just three boats had been completed. To reduce costs, the Virginia-class submarines use many "commercial off-the-shelf" (COTS) components, especially in their computers and data networks. In practice, they actually cost less than $1.8 billion (in fiscal year 2009 dollars) each, due to improvements in shipbuilding technology.

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