They are still in use as trainers for new personnel and certain jobs where they would find the radiation risk unreasonable. all of the deep-dive submarines with one major exception ( the atomic NR-l) are Diesel-electric. the Diesels are used only on the surface and to recharge the batteries- below the waves, we are running on the batteries alone!
The submarine you are thinking about was the USS Nautilus. It was the world's first nuclear powered submarine and commissioned into the US Navy in 1955
That would be the INS Arihant, -The Indian Navy's first nuclear submarine.
I can't remember his name. but he is a American. Anyway, he made submarine at the revolutionary war (USA to UK) to win. At that time UK had a very strong NAVY, So it was very unfavorable to America that's why he made a submarine to break the UK's navy
Yes
The USS Nautilus (SSN-571) was the US Navy's first nuclear powered submarine.
Submarine commander- or whatever his rank would be in the Navy- Commander Yamaha, for example- just making up the last name. There was no distinctive term for submarines in the Japanese navy but sometimes I-Boat was used . The identity code was the letter I- pronounced (Eye) and this meant submarine- in that sense like the German U-boat or Italian Sommergibili.
Krupps engineer Raimondo Lorenzo was the first man to take a submarine from the batch headed for Russia during the Russo-Japanese War in 1904 and adapt it meet the needs of the German Navy. Commissioning it as U1 into the Imperial German Navy in 1906.
HMS Andrew (P423) was a Royal Navy Amphion-class DE submarine, and the only RN submarine to bear that name. Her only use as a film set was in the 1959 movie "On the Beach". She was used because at the time, the U.S. Navy wouldn't allow the use of its own nuclear submarines for filming purposes.
A TRIDENT Submarine most likely refers to the US Navy's OHIO Class Submarines (18 of these were built) They often bear the name of TRIDENT because they were designed to carry Trident Missiles - a submarine launched intercontinental ballistic missile with nuclear warheads.
Techically, that would be the U.S. Navy's first submarine, USS S-1 (SS-105) , built by John Phillip Holland. Though the first submarine that was used in combat, David Bushnell's Turtle (Revolutionary War), the U.S. wasn't in fact a country at that time.The Confederate submarine H.L. Hunley was also not technically an American submarine, effectively being used by the Confederate Army (manned by Confederate sailors), but it was never a commissioned vessel in any navy.
They are in no ways related. They don't have the same last name, mother, birth state, residency, and have likely never met. "Diesel" is a stage name for both.
I don't think so. Vin Diesel is not his real name. His real last name is Vincent.