On Navantia website. "Main electric motor installed on board S-81 "Isaac Peral" February 15, 2012 when all was still well.
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Both Raytheon and Lockheed Martinhave been selected to compete to be the Combat System Integrator (CSI) for Australia’s Future Submarine. Severe problems discovered in 2013 in Spain’s build of the S-80 Isaac Peral class provide a cautionary tale of what can go wrong with overall program management and presumably CSI.
Submarine Matter’s sitemeter indicated there was a lot of Australian Government interest in 2010 with Spain’s S-80.
The S-80’s construction was progressing rapidly and smoothly:
“SPAIN’S S-80: THE SEA 1000 DARK HORSE?” Asia Pacific Defence Reporter, September 30, 2010 http://www.asiapacificdefencereporter.com/articles/90/Spain-s-S-80-the-SEA-1000-dark-horse indicated:
“The weapons payload [of the proposed S-80] includes not only [Atlas Elektonik] DMA4 torpedoes and sub-Harpoons but potentially Tactical Land Attack Missiles such as Tomahawk – something that will be of great interest for Australia.
The S-80 seems to be the first completely indigenously designed Spanish submarine for quite some time and the company has drawn on a huge amount of previous experience to come up with a leading edge product.
…A critical part of a submarine is its combat system and sensors. For this Navantia have turned to Lockheed Martin and what seems to be a version of their Submarine Integrated Combat System (SUBICS). Lockheed Martin say that this product has been derived from the company’s experience with the USN and use a form of words suggesting that it is very similar to the combat system on the ‘Virginia’ Class nuclear submarines.”
But by 2013 major problems, unforeseen by Navantia, such as the weight of what looks like the Combat System, including weapons, emerged.
Jose Matos, in “GROWING PAINS HIT SPAIN’S SUB FORCE, WARSHIPS International Fleet Review April 2016 edition, (hardcopy, paywalled) page 37 reported:
“…In May 2013 the first major production flaw was revealed: Technicians discovered that the submarine’s weight was [up to 100 tons] greater than originally designed and unevenly distributed.
The initial calculations were much lower than the final figures since the original figures did not account for the weight of the weapons and electronics suite [sounds like the Combat System], or features later introduced in the crew berthing areas….
[Navantia would need to] reduce the submarine’s total weight or increase its length, to more optimally distribute the excess weight. They opted to do the latter and increased the length by nearly ten per cent, from 71 to 78 metres.”
As the US AN/BYG-1 Combat System to be integrated into the Shortfin will likely be heavier than the SUBTICS? Combat System for Barracuda SSN, special care will be needed on weight and balance.
Pete