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stupid article to say the least.
Indian Navy Chief confirmed it. .
What has Mumbai overcrowd to do with the accident?
What were the new weapons these subs were to be outfitted with?
Safety rules' violation puts question mark on India's capacity to operate nuclear submarines
Sat, 17 Aug 2013
Quoting experts, Russian deputy prime minister Dmitry Rogozinhe said violation of safety regulations was the most probable cause of the accident
The nuclear watchdog, IAEA should be concerned about the quality of safety standards of Indian Navy while dealing with nuclear submarine and put it on monitoring and surveillance.
The Russian deputy PM was visibly upset on the incident. He said the blast had occurred in the section where storage batteries were being charged. This is the most dangerous work, which is connected with safety measures rather than with the producers of this equipment.
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INS Sindhurakshak tragedy: Russia says it will assist India in submarine explosion probe
Updated: August 17, 2013 08:52 IST
Moscow: Russian naval engineers will help the Indian Navy in its investigation into the explosion on INS Sindhurakshak, the submarine which sank at the naval dockyard in Mumbai on Wednesday, Russian Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin has said.
The 16-year-old vessel, which had suffered an accident in 2010, had recently returned from Russia after a two-and-a-half year upgrade of its electronic warfare and integrated weapons control systems.
Mr Rogozin told Russian news agency Ria Novosti that Russian specialists do not see any technical failure as the likely cause behind the explosion.
Mr Rogozin, who looks after the defence industry, also added that he has instructed the United Shipbuilding Corporation, a state-owned ship building company, to provide all necessary assistance to India.
"I have instructed the United Shipbuilding Corporation to send more specialists in agreement with the Indian side, to take part in the investigation of the tragedy and to provide all assistance necessary to our Indian friends," he said.
There were 18 crewmen on board INS Sindhurakshak when it sank at the naval dockyard in Mumbai on Wednesday after an explosion. The Indian Navy said yesterday that the bodies of five sailors have been found, but cautioned that it does not expect divers battling zero visibility in the dark muddied waters inside the sunken submarine to locate any of the others.
In August 2010, Sindhurakshak arrived at the Zvezdochka shipyard in Russia. The submarine was modernised, repaired and retrofitted under Project 08773, and after the upgrade the sea trials started in October 2012. The upgrades included improved electronic warfare systems, an integrated weapon control system and a new cooling systemand were expected to extend the service life of the submarine by ten years.The Club-S (3M54E1 anti-ship and 3M14E land attack) missiles, USHUS sonar, СCS-MK-2 radio communication systems and Porpoise radio-locating radar, and other safety-enhancing features were incorporated. The submarine was handed back to the Indian Navy on 27 January 2013, after which it sailed back to India, under Commander Rajesh Ramkumar. This was the first time an Indian submarine had navigated under ice.
Apparently something did go terribly wrong if the Sub even had uprated safety systems.
Yes; something apparently did. My guess is in the Oxygen propulsion system cylinders in one of the Torps.
Loading slip? Could a fall or perhaps static set them off?