Marine

Dutch Super Sub is fast enough to run with "cruising" dolphins

Dutch Super Sub is fast enough to run with "cruising" dolphins
Tuna will have no trouble leaving the Super Sub behind if they want to
Tuna will have no trouble leaving the Super Sub behind if they want to
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U-Boat Worx has announced its fastest personal sub ever, the Super Sub
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U-Boat Worx has announced its fastest personal sub ever, the Super Sub
Handheld remote control makes it even simpler to drive from the front seats
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Handheld remote control makes it even simpler to drive from the front seats
A three-seat personal submarine that can run with a Manta Ray
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A three-seat personal submarine that can run with a Manta Ray
Tuna will have no trouble leaving the Super Sub behind if they want to
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Tuna will have no trouble leaving the Super Sub behind if they want to
Hydrodynamic bullet shape with a bubble cabin and hydrofoils at the rear
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Hydrodynamic bullet shape with a bubble cabin and hydrofoils at the rear
The first Super Sub is set for delivery in 2023
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The first Super Sub is set for delivery in 2023
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U-Boat Worx has released an electric sports submarine with the speed and zippy handling to run alongside large marine life. The bubble-cabin Super Sub, originally a custom commission, is nearly three times as fast as the average luxury submersible.

Pushing through water is hard work – just ask David Hasselhoff – and as a result, most private electric submarines are relatively sedate experiences. The Triton 3300/6, for example, moseys along at just 3 knots (3.45-mph/5.5-km/h), and even the super-sleek DeepFlight Dragon, with its F1-car looks, can only manage 4 knots (4.6 mph, 7.4 km/h).

What's more, unless you're in super-clear water near a shipwreck or a coral reef or some other interesting underwater attraction, there's often not a whole lot to look at under the surface. There's the magnificence of ocean wildlife, if it presents itself, but then when a big fish decides it's going to nick off on you, there's not much you can do about it.

With this in mind, U-Boat Worx has designed a new Super Sub capable of 8 knots (9.2 mph, 14.8 km/h). The company says this is "two knots faster than the top cruising speed of a bottlenose dolphin." Seaworld, for the record, says it's clocked bottlenoses going twice that fast, but perhaps they weren't cruising at the time.

U-Boat Worx has announced its fastest personal sub ever, the Super Sub
U-Boat Worx has announced its fastest personal sub ever, the Super Sub

Look, let's not pretend 8 knots is going to make you an apex predator down there. Great white sharks may overtake you at up to three times that speed, and the real hooligan of the underwater world – the Sailfish – will be telling you to eat bubbles as it rockets past, improbably keeping up with fast-lane highway traffic on the surface. But it does give you a better chance than most of hanging with the odd fish down there, and you'll give a Manta Ray a run for its money.

Other than the 60-kW (80-hp) propulsion system and hydrodynamic design, the Super Sub ticks many of the typical private sub boxes; its three-seat cabin puts two people right in the middle of a clear acrylic bubble for panoramic views. There's auto-heading hold and auto-depth hold. Its "SHARC" controller doesn't just handle thrust and the motion of the hydrofoils at the back, it also causes a movable trim weight to move from the front of the vehicle to the back, so you can plunge-dive nose-down and head for the surface nose-up.

Hydrodynamic bullet shape with a bubble cabin and hydrofoils at the rear
Hydrodynamic bullet shape with a bubble cabin and hydrofoils at the rear

The Super Sub's 62-kWh battery has enough juice to last up to eight hours underwater between charges – and if something goes very wrong, there's life support for a minimum of 96 hours. One limiting factor here is depth – the Super Sub is only rated for depths of 300 m (984 ft), so even if you blast past your fellow billionaire in his Triton, you're gonna have to sit through his slideshow if you want to see what the bottom looks like in many places.

U-Boat Worx says it'll be delivering the original Super Sub commission in 2023, and that this model will "form a core part of the company's general range of submersibles," with several derivative models to follow. No pricing is available, but we imagine it'll be a reasonably significant line item on the total price of your next superyacht.

Source: U-Boat Worx

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8 comments
8 comments
paul314
How fast can it stop? If you're doing 8 knots in mediocre visibility, you really want good anticollision sensors.
Trylon
Super Sub is a terrible name. With its transparent nose and cruciform tail, they should have called it the Seaview.
Nelson Hyde Chick
I wonder if the dolphins will be thinking to themselves, "I wish these humans turds would not invade our space!"
DSA
Trylon you're right, Seaview would have been a really good name for this sub.
paul314 now that question about how long it takes to stop is going to bug me. Great question.
christopher
@DSA with 60kw of reverse-thrust available, stopping fast looks easy.
ljaques
Zimply GAWDJUS! Guys, I'll take the sleek blue one for Christmas, please. And THANKS!
Paul, I think you'd want to steer to the side and blow ballast for a quick avoidance.
Trylon, there is already a much larger, copyrighted ship called the Seaview. Walter Pidgeon fired a nuke from it at the Van Allen Belt, which was on fire in space.
Nobody
"two knots faster than the top cruising speed of a bottlenose dolphin." I don't think so. After years of boating with dolphins, I found that dolphins prefer 12-16 mph or they won't swim along side of your boat. Stay in that range and they will follow you for miles. Diving to 984 feet would get a little hairy. Not much sunlight penetrates that deep and it would require powerful energy consuming flood lights to see what's down there. Especially, if you want to see things in color in that dark gray world.
RJB
It is illegal to feed or harass wild marine mammals including dolphins, porpoises, whales, seals, sea lions, and manatees. For the health and well-being of these animals and for your safety, please do not feed, swim with, or harass these marine animals. We encourage you to observe them from a distance of at least 50 yards (150 feet).

NOAA Fisheries.