Ranking Every Submarine on Earth (that we know about)

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  • čas přidán 9. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 3,2K

  • @johnnyharris
    @johnnyharris  Před měsícem +166

    🌏 Get Exclusive NordVPN deal + 4 months extra here → nordvpn.com/johnnyharris It’s risk-free with Nord’s 30-day money-back guarantee! ✌

    • @Levitationable
      @Levitationable Před měsícem +6

      bro actually preuploaded this 2 days prior 😂

    • @hrgunit
      @hrgunit Před měsícem +4

      Fishing attacks are horrible, if you in a submarine.

    • @okuhtttf
      @okuhtttf Před měsícem +2

      maybe no...

    • @DrRimantas
      @DrRimantas Před měsícem

      And what you like today about.. Elon and orange man bad reporter 🤣

    • @PoiSonSonic
      @PoiSonSonic Před měsícem

      What is up with the mixed FPS? 05:00

  • @smaza2
    @smaza2 Před měsícem +12414

    very polite of all the countries to line up their submarines for this video

    • @johnnyharris
      @johnnyharris  Před měsícem +1133

      😆

    • @desamster
      @desamster Před měsícem +292

      For documenting purposes obviously 🙄🙃

    • @tyrabjurman3584
      @tyrabjurman3584 Před měsícem +292

      For sure, a lot of negotiations was required to accomplish this feat.

    • @1112viggo
      @1112viggo Před měsícem +380

      And a special thanks to the ocean for remaining completely calm the entire time!😆

    • @MegaSaq1
      @MegaSaq1 Před měsícem +62

      They only lined up for those we know about. You have to listen.

  • @alext.5033
    @alext.5033 Před měsícem +3700

    The country with the largest number of Subway restaurants per million people worldwide in 2014 was Canada. I don’t know if this is relevant, since we’re talking about submarines.

    • @Gurumeierhans
      @Gurumeierhans Před měsícem +303

      Subway makes a lot more Subs than any other country.
      This is relevant context for your statement

    • @HotSTeh
      @HotSTeh Před měsícem +86

      @@Gurumeierhans without further context, Subway is a sub superpower lol

    • @desamster
      @desamster Před měsícem +17

      Yes. Yes it is.

    • @Jabzor
      @Jabzor Před měsícem +10

      Subway is disgusting

    • @derrekvanee4567
      @derrekvanee4567 Před měsícem +5

      @@Jabzorterayaki! *Speak it son?* Sorry.

  • @jimalbi
    @jimalbi Před 27 dny +554

    Spain once had the biggest fleet of warship on Earth.
    Today they have 1 sub.

    • @harshit22941
      @harshit22941 Před 25 dny +9

      Americans and British.

    • @scbond
      @scbond Před 25 dny +4

      @@harshit22941 What about them?

    • @ibairementeria
      @ibairementeria Před 25 dny +9

      We got more than one, the ones that got released last year it’s the most advanced in the world

    • @GeneParmesan69
      @GeneParmesan69 Před 25 dny +30

      @@ibairementeriathey’re great subs, but certainly not the most advanced in the world… they use diesel engines and the program has been plagued with issues

    • @Sr._Rubio
      @Sr._Rubio Před 25 dny +12

      @@GeneParmesan69He means the most advanced non nuclear probably

  • @knpark2025
    @knpark2025 Před měsícem +2821

    South Korea: has the sixth biggest submarine fleet in the world
    Also South Korea: *their submarine fleet is the smallest in its neighborhood*

    • @London755
      @London755 Před měsícem +74

      DPRK navy has abysmal state of readiness.

    • @noname1148
      @noname1148 Před měsícem +123

      The DPRK submarines are utterly outdated and would be all but useless in anything other than shallow water coastal defense, they also make great use of “midget submarines” which again is utterly useless in an all out war with any modern navy such as the South Korean Navy. They only have two newer submarines that was home built in 2014, only these would be capable of offensive capabilities. Their readiness level is also extremely questionable.

    • @methal0-111
      @methal0-111 Před měsícem +18

      We have a very high density of submarines in Asian waters.

    • @mohitpatil8237
      @mohitpatil8237 Před měsícem +2

      Perspective really sneaks up on ya doesn't it *surprised pokemon*

    • @bholdr----0
      @bholdr----0 Před měsícem +11

      And the comparison between the ROK and Japan kinda implied they're allies, even if their interests generally align and they are both strong US allies...
      And Greece and Türkiye are both in NATO... (Which is NOT why they have a rough parity in subs!)

  • @alexbaxter3730
    @alexbaxter3730 Před měsícem +1176

    Some people like to rearrange their furniture, clean their Legos, or just read a book. Johnny likes to rank submarines 😂 my kinda guy

    • @jaredt.murphy8257
      @jaredt.murphy8257 Před měsícem +14

      I was just thinking of that. There are "trains" guys - I guess Johnny is a sub guy - submarines, that is

    • @Tarquin2718
      @Tarquin2718 Před 29 dny +7

      @@jaredt.murphy8257 No he is a map guy. Today he mapped subs 🙂

    • @ukhawaja
      @ukhawaja Před 18 dny +2

      It's funny to see that Spain, which used to have the biggest navy, hence the Spanish Armada, only has one lonely submarine. Only one, Spain? How far ye hath fallen!
      Spain needs to step up its game.

  • @thealvatar6181
    @thealvatar6181 Před měsícem +122

    “Australia will SOON have nuclear submarines”
    My children will be in University before the first one is commissioned… (I have no children yet)

    • @DrPhilGoode
      @DrPhilGoode Před 17 dny +5

      Like your children have a shot to get into university. 😁

    • @pulsepix_
      @pulsepix_ Před 17 dny +1

      ​@@DrPhilGoode💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀

    • @danielleoliver1734
      @danielleoliver1734 Před 16 dny

      It would have been started if we stuck with the British contract, but American must interfere with everyone

    • @moustarboygamingandreplay4340
      @moustarboygamingandreplay4340 Před 16 dny +3

      @@DrPhilGoode For real, we're in deep trouble!

    • @Dr.Kraig_Ren
      @Dr.Kraig_Ren Před 13 dny

      ​@@DrPhilGoodelmao

  • @scottl9660
    @scottl9660 Před měsícem +966

    Just remember two things.
    1/3 of all navy vessels are in dock for maintenance at any one time. 1/3 are transiting to or from a station, so only 1/3 are patrolling at any one time.
    The second thing is…the oceans are really big.

    • @0o0ification
      @0o0ification Před měsícem +100

      JIC I went and looked at the ocean. Can confirm that it’s real big 👍

    • @deathdrone6988
      @deathdrone6988 Před měsícem +19

      Don't forget refueling (especially for the nuclear ones since refueling can take up to a whole year) and retrofitting/upgrades.

    • @erenyea5660
      @erenyea5660 Před měsícem

      Radar technology has brought navies into the modern age, theres no part of one ocean a modern surface or underwater vessel cannot observe.

    • @actualyoungsoo
      @actualyoungsoo Před měsícem +32

      Because it’s not a war time. It’s much cheaper and better for the life span of a submarine when it’s docked on shore instead of sailing all the time.

    • @concinnus
      @concinnus Před měsícem +13

      Nuke subs spend a lot less time transiting unless they're getting retasked all the time. And the Russian navy is probably well over 1/3 time in dock these days, lol.

  • @noeman88
    @noeman88 Před měsícem +1017

    "Whoever rules the waves, rule the world"
    Mongolians: Hold my beer

  • @jadenstigman9831
    @jadenstigman9831 Před 26 dny +55

    13:51 Minor correction. The replacements for the US ballistic subs (Ohio Class) are going to begin entering service in 2031 (Columbia class). The first sub will be SSBN-826 USS District of Columbia. The SSN(X) program replacing current US Attack subs (Virginia Class) are projected to enter service in 2042 with builds starting in 2034. Thanks for the informative video.

  • @alexmann152
    @alexmann152 Před měsícem +282

    I'd like to see a similar video comparing air strength and tank strength.
    1. It's very interesting to see how each NATO nation has its own special application- like how Greece has a massive tank force and how France has expeditionary capability
    2. Its also fascinating to see how Air forces are advancing. Who is using the most modern gen 5 aircraft? How many bombers does each nation have?

    • @Alex-hu5eg
      @Alex-hu5eg Před měsícem +9

      Massive tank force with 42 Leopards. Russians lose more on a random afternoon in the donbas

    • @bricksquad9552
      @bricksquad9552 Před měsícem +12

      USA takes the cake in every category, to no surprise lol.

    • @alexmann152
      @alexmann152 Před měsícem +1

      @@Alex-hu5eg You're right- I meant Greece. Hungary has a different specialization though I cannot remember what it was

    • @Tarquin2718
      @Tarquin2718 Před 29 dny

      And a Navy version.

    • @coltonadams6936
      @coltonadams6936 Před 29 dny

      It would be pretty cool you’re right

  • @camatat1329
    @camatat1329 Před měsícem +429

    As a romanian, I can say that we have a submarine too. It wasn't used for the past years, currently undergoin repairs, but I think it still counts as one submarine.

    • @buddyrd
      @buddyrd Před měsícem +23

      Correct, the Delfinul, a kilo-class sub, has a captain and crew, but will never be seaworthy again unless it gets a new set of batteries. Maybe why it didn't make this list?

    • @duducarblog
      @duducarblog Před měsícem +16

      lol its been out of service for more than 3 decades haha.

    • @jamesmiller4184
      @jamesmiller4184 Před měsícem +6

      Really now!
      It should be renamed 'The Vlad" as in Tepes.

    • @rachelb7228
      @rachelb7228 Před měsícem +8

      Aww how cute. Here’s a ⭐️ for your effort 😂

    • @shafquatsadman5191
      @shafquatsadman5191 Před měsícem +4

      I'm from Bangladesh & we have two used & old submarines which were gifted by China😅

  • @scbond
    @scbond Před 25 dny +136

    Very odd that you mention both France and the UK having nuclear powered subs and then you move on and say "this is where you'll see nuclear weaponised subs". Both the French and the UK have nuclear weaponised subs.

    • @TheeBritishGuy
      @TheeBritishGuy Před 23 dny +3

      We always have one with a nuke on patrol so we can always strike back i'm sore

    • @Moon_dance27
      @Moon_dance27 Před 19 dny +4

      @@TheeBritishGuy yes, it is called Trident and it’s our nuclear deterrent

    • @Accal1a
      @Accal1a Před 18 dny +1

      I was just coming here to mention Trident

    • @spongebota.i.selfawarepant4780
      @spongebota.i.selfawarepant4780 Před 17 dny +7

      yeah its funny because french and British submarines are far more capable than many of the nations put after them. quality is a quantity of its own.

    • @mathebg65
      @mathebg65 Před 11 dny +3

      ​​@@TheeBritishGuySame routine for us frenchmen. Strange indeed to mention nuclear missiles only later in the video

  • @just_mdd4
    @just_mdd4 Před měsícem +474

    Shoutout to the cameraman; they chose a great day to shoot this video! 😝💯

    • @Ben-lf7sv
      @Ben-lf7sv Před měsícem +1

      Cant you expect with AI 😂😂😂

  • @LiiMuRi
    @LiiMuRi Před měsícem +467

    It's crazy to think that today there are less than 500 submarines World-wide, whereas during WW2, Germany alone built over 1100

    • @banellie
      @banellie Před měsícem +246

      And just to add to your point, the difference is that one submarine today has far more destructive power than all of Germany's WW2 submarines combined. I think that's the truly crazy part.

    • @1999NIRUPAM
      @1999NIRUPAM Před měsícem +83

      Quality > Quantity
      Countries simply don’t require that many anymore to patrol, survey and deter their enemies with their more capable smaller fleets

    • @abdiganiaden
      @abdiganiaden Před měsícem +57

      @@banellieone ballistic submarine today has more firepower than ALL energy expended during WW2

    • @MichaelMac-u3z
      @MichaelMac-u3z Před měsícem +15

      But they never had more than 159 in active service at any one time....

    • @marcusbowerstv713
      @marcusbowerstv713 Před měsícem +2

      Aircraft Carriers 🗣️🇺🇸

  • @LtRyanPYT
    @LtRyanPYT Před měsícem +116

    Production value on this video goes crazyyyy. Big props to the editors for this one

  • @YoshimiMilk
    @YoshimiMilk Před měsícem +283

    "...That we atleast know" is such a powerful and scary fact at the same time

    • @rahulnishadxd
      @rahulnishadxd Před 28 dny +2

      Yea right, And the thing is that I can guarantee that many of them are somewhere in places like Arctic and Antarctica hiding in the depths

  • @ryanlee3950
    @ryanlee3950 Před měsícem +605

    It's crazy how a small country like Singapore has 8 subs

    • @lifevest1
      @lifevest1 Před měsícem +29

      I thought Canada had atleast 10!

    • @paulsteaven
      @paulsteaven Před měsícem +28

      North Korea: *Pathetic*

    • @dbz9393
      @dbz9393 Před měsícem

      Singapore is a small country, but they are heavily militarised due to China. Their reasoning is that they want to make it so impossible for another nation to sustain warefare with them that they don't even bother seeking them out as a target. They want to make any would be aggressor regret ever attacking them.

    • @ravikiran6281
      @ravikiran6281 Před měsícem +86

      But don't they need that considering their economy is heavily dependent on the malaca strait?

    • @Ptolemy336VV
      @Ptolemy336VV Před měsícem +37

      Yeah, Singapore only lies at the Malaka straight, the busiest straight on earth with 100.00 container ships passing by annually. Versus 18.000 in Suez canal of Egypt and 12.000 of Panama canal. So yeah. Singapore has like a humongous GDP and just for 5+ million people. So yes. If Singapore wanted it could build a Submarine in front of every McDonalds as a joke on land.

  • @HM-mw7cg
    @HM-mw7cg Před měsícem +104

    This was such a great way of presenting this info. Imagine if schools taught geopolitics like this. Hopefully they do nowadays

    • @SooDamGood
      @SooDamGood Před 26 dny +7

      I’ve never heard of a school that teaches geopolitics

    • @HM-mw7cg
      @HM-mw7cg Před 25 dny +5

      @@SooDamGood well it comes up in history, and plenty of schools teach politics. But maybe you’re a poor American who only got 5 star athletic facilities and active shooter drills

    • @dzambicmarko
      @dzambicmarko Před 23 dny +3

      Actually it would be pretty bad since this video is not objective at all even though it presents itself as objective. Storytelling and editing are quite manipulative…

    • @laziojohnny79
      @laziojohnny79 Před 23 dny +2

      Yeah 1 min in and already the numbers are wrong, the NL's has 4 not 3 and stating electro-diesel subs are inferior to nuclear powered subs is reductive to say the least; several times have Dutch, Swedish, Australian and German electro-diesel subs sunk many US vessels, ships, frigattes, destroyers, cruisers and yes even aircraft carriers. All in friendly naval exercises of course, but still. So no, this channel get's it's facts wrong almost every time and the narrator is all but objective...

    • @Silvar1618
      @Silvar1618 Před 20 dny

      @@laziojohnny79 can you provide me reliable sources that says the facts of this video are wrong?

  • @johnjon5448
    @johnjon5448 Před měsícem +354

    You missed the 4 British Vanguard subs that carry nuclear warheads as a deterrent. French have something similar as well.

    • @BoxStudioExecutive
      @BoxStudioExecutive Před měsícem +83

      Odd choice to skip over that, but talk about it for Israeli, Russian and American subs

    • @royo_uki4761
      @royo_uki4761 Před měsícem +28

      True glad i m not the only one who noticed

    • @danLTa1
      @danLTa1 Před měsícem +17

      I think Johnny knows Britain trident 2s cannot be launched without US permission

    • @bentrafford6592
      @bentrafford6592 Před měsícem +77

      They can be launched without US permission though lol

    • @lukebrodin631
      @lukebrodin631 Před měsícem +23

      Bizarre to gloss over countries who actually have nuclear missiles 😊

  • @hibob841
    @hibob841 Před měsícem +165

    It's worth noting that diesel-electric subs aren't entirely inferior; there are good reasons to run them aside from economy or lack of technology. The biggest advantage is that they can be effectively 100% silent if they are stationary, whereas a nuclear boat will always make _some_ amount of noise because it has to run pumps to cool the reactor. The latest U.S. and Russian nuclear boats _may_ be quiet enough to render this distinction almost academic, but it's still there.
    There's also some minimum practical size and weight for a naval reactor, which dictates a minimum displacement for nuclear boats. The larger the hull, the less effectively it can operate in shallower waters and the larger target it makes for active sonar.
    Of course, a diesel-electric boat's underwater endurance is such that your adversaries will generally know where they are within a certain radius; everyone knows where the boat is when it's surfaced. You can think of diesel-electric submarines somewhat like a mobile minefield. Air-independent propulsion (AIP) closes that gap significantly; these boats are potentially just as quiet as standard diesel boats, but have enough underwater endurance to make them difficult to track. During multiple NATO exercises, the Swedish 'Gotland' class has famously been able to penetrate U.S. carrier groups multiple times, undetected. This is somewhat terrifying since these boats, though technologically advanced, are quite cheap-on the order of $100M, or a bit less than an F-35.

    • @julius43461
      @julius43461 Před měsícem +7

      Yup, those cheap subs are the drones of the ocean. They are to carriers what drones are to tanks.

    • @MrHvleeuwen
      @MrHvleeuwen Před měsícem +6

      I was gonna type all of this in a less organised and constructive manner. So thanks for your proficiency in writing haha. Seems like Johny has some basic surface level (hehe) knowledge, without even diving (hehe) into mild specifics..

    • @pandaruhs9465
      @pandaruhs9465 Před měsícem

      Exactly what I was going to write 😄

    • @user-ur8pi9ob5b
      @user-ur8pi9ob5b Před měsícem

      China will be trying to steal all the technology it can from the US for its subs.
      The Russian Navy, including it's submarines are famous for lack of maintenance but still a threat, including their own crews.

    • @tamaica7770
      @tamaica7770 Před měsícem +2

      why bother come closer while you can attack them from far away?

  • @MoneyLounge1
    @MoneyLounge1 Před 27 dny +10

    Alternate title: why the US doesn’t have universal healthcare

    • @jasper5902
      @jasper5902 Před 8 dny +1

      But it does have the best universal unhealthcare in the world!

  • @dhruvjain4015
    @dhruvjain4015 Před měsícem +244

    Its always a good day when johnny harris uploads

  • @desertninja__galactic
    @desertninja__galactic Před měsícem +209

    High quality content and decently short waiting times? Am I dreaming?

    • @DaTrainMan
      @DaTrainMan Před měsícem +3

      Are we both dreaming?

    • @Friday4
      @Friday4 Před měsícem +2

      @@DaTrainMan I think we are dreaming

    • @951sht
      @951sht Před měsícem +1

      🎶 Is there more like us? Got me feeling. 🎶

  • @arvil8571
    @arvil8571 Před 23 dny +8

    Meanwhile me who's watching this from a landlocked nation and has never seen an ocean before 😢

  • @ryan.hanthorn
    @ryan.hanthorn Před měsícem +46

    I love the *"known"* submarine cavate. The new unmanned drone "Manta Ray Submarines" sounds like a paradigm shift worth their own deep-dive!

    • @pin65371
      @pin65371 Před měsícem

      That thing is pretty badass. It can produce its own power. I was watching a video on how it produces power but it was well above my understanding. It seemed like witchcraft.

    • @justinpetersen5273
      @justinpetersen5273 Před měsícem

      @@pin65371yea it really is!!! Crazy!!

    • @Tarquin2718
      @Tarquin2718 Před 29 dny

      I think at the moment it is still to much in development to have real impact on the main stage. But if all predictions are true than it might be a game changer, espec in narrow places like around China. Tough titiies for China 🙂

  • @imsomewhatcertain1024
    @imsomewhatcertain1024 Před měsícem +193

    All of these submarines are impressive, but can they win against the Kingdom of Atlantis?

    • @sebastianashbury2478
      @sebastianashbury2478 Před měsícem +8

      Not if the Reptoids, Catholic Church, Illuminati, Cognito Inc., or Juggalos have anything to say about it :P

    • @billmiller8945
      @billmiller8945 Před měsícem +10

      That one with the 100 MegaTon warhead sure would get their attention.

  • @MarkNealon
    @MarkNealon Před měsícem +52

    Interesting video, but starting the talk about ICBMs at India makes it seem like French and British subs aren't armed with ICBMs

    • @ion8264
      @ion8264 Před 26 dny +8

      Uk isn't relevant

    • @niceguy5772
      @niceguy5772 Před 26 dny +4

      @@ion8264 how ? , one of the richest and most powerful countries on earth

    • @ion8264
      @ion8264 Před 26 dny +9

      @@niceguy5772 good cope

    • @niceguy5772
      @niceguy5772 Před 26 dny +6

      @@ion8264 bruh , ur from the USA , we're literally ur ally 🤣 . why u hating on us ?

    • @jakemidgley7988
      @jakemidgley7988 Před 25 dny +4

      ​@@ion8264why is there so much hate towards the UK?

  • @bandobandit353
    @bandobandit353 Před měsícem +177

    South Africa’s submarines aren’t ‘anywhere’. They’re permanently broken and docked at Simon’s town

  • @Chrispymedia
    @Chrispymedia Před měsícem +272

    0:05 yeah bud bet there’s A LOT we don’t know about lol

    • @kyleblankenship6657
      @kyleblankenship6657 Před měsícem +14

      Especially when it comes to the fishies

    • @nicklas400
      @nicklas400 Před měsícem +9

      That's why he said KNOWN submarines 🤯

    • @Chrispymedia
      @Chrispymedia Před měsícem +3

      @@nicklas400 that’s… that’s why I commented what I did lol. WOOOOSH

    • @nicklas400
      @nicklas400 Před měsícem +14

      @@Chrispymedia you seemed kind of passive aggresive with the "bud", thats not a woosh thing lol

    • @TheInvisibleMan420
      @TheInvisibleMan420 Před měsícem +4

      thank you for condescendingly stating the obvious

  • @SakibulHaqueTanmoy
    @SakibulHaqueTanmoy Před 27 dny +8

    Need this type of video for fighter jets

  • @miskolinaccc
    @miskolinaccc Před měsícem +17

    Slovenia's only submarine is in a museum and nobody expects a missile strike from there 😂

    • @rustix3
      @rustix3 Před měsícem

      Finland also has at least one, outside in the wild, but as museum exhibit.

  • @alexandrevalentin8587
    @alexandrevalentin8587 Před měsícem +48

    I find it odd not to mention France's submarines equipped with the latest M51 ICBM, aswell as their industry capabilities since they were tasked to build the Australian subs at first.

    • @soulsphere9242
      @soulsphere9242 Před měsícem +4

      They were to be French designed but built in Australia. The whole program was a disaster, but it wasn't just Frances's fault, the design should never have been chosen in the first place. The initial preference was the Japanese Soyru class to be built in Japan but that ran into diplomatic and industrial issues. The AUKUS subs will be much too late. We should have just built a follow-on update to our existing design.

    • @Tarquin2718
      @Tarquin2718 Před 29 dny

      It is weird how France is not mentioned a lot and way way more because they the world leaders in Nuclear development. But for some reason nobody is interested.

    • @DW_25
      @DW_25 Před 29 dny +5

      ​@@soulsphere9242 it wasn't France's fault at all lmao, the design requirements was literally "hey can you make a diesel electric sub that has all the advantages of nuclear" which the French somehow managed to get close. They literally offered to transfer us the technology to build nuclear subs and reactors to fuel them but we refused.

    • @soulsphere9242
      @soulsphere9242 Před 29 dny

      @@DW_25 You shouldn't accept requirements that you cannot deliver on. Not enough had been worked out by either side before the program was committed to. That said I will accept that the root of the issue was the bad decision by Australia to choose this path. We should not have embarked on building what essentially was a clean-sheet design. The decision should have been made sometime in 2007-2012 to build the so-called Son-of-Collins.

    • @DW_25
      @DW_25 Před 29 dny +3

      @@soulsphere9242 they delivered on most of the requirements and it didn't help that scope creep meant the requirements kept on changing. We should've accepted the offer by the French for nuclear submarines+nuclear reactors and the associated technological transfer. That would make us truly independent instead of reliant on the US and UK on a project that is extremely delayed. The first sub isn't even projected to be delivered to Australia until the 2030s.

  • @TheLankdaddy
    @TheLankdaddy Před 26 dny +43

    13:31 this map just looks like Earth is being held at gunpoint by a supervillain 🇺🇸

    • @optionalcoast7478
      @optionalcoast7478 Před 23 dny

      😎 🇺🇸

    • @johnbaker7102
      @johnbaker7102 Před 23 dny +2

      Superhero* like Superman patrolling

    • @tayar3797
      @tayar3797 Před 20 dny +3

      ​@@johnbaker7102 even as a us citizen... I feel the overwhelming power is far more supervillian than superhero

    • @fofopads4450
      @fofopads4450 Před 19 dny +1

      @@johnbaker7102 With the power to pulverize you and your neighbors, the whole planet?
      That's no superhero.
      Warmongering is the US biggest business.

    • @abdallahh9158
      @abdallahh9158 Před 12 dny

      @@johnbaker7102more like Homelander.

  • @tayzonday
    @tayzonday Před měsícem +88

    How did some sandwiches become called “submarines?”

    • @Jobe-13
      @Jobe-13 Před měsícem

      I always wondered that too

    • @jamesmiller4184
      @jamesmiller4184 Před měsícem

      Answer: Johnny Harris's parents were responsible.

    • @jaredt.murphy8257
      @jaredt.murphy8257 Před měsícem +12

      Cause it looks like a submarine.

    • @sarahwatts7152
      @sarahwatts7152 Před měsícem +1

      I looked it up real quick, and it seems to be down to looking like a submarine, but also maybe (maybe) because one of the first shops selling them was right next to a submarine base in Connecticut during WWII - though apparently the term was used in Delaware before that

    • @douggaudiosi14
      @douggaudiosi14 Před měsícem

      Just look at them

  • @chattw6885
    @chattw6885 Před měsícem +22

    I think its important to point out that there is gigantic differences in submarines and their efficiency. For submarines (especially attack submarines) stealth is the absolut most important thing and with modern advancements in sonar technology its even more important.
    You could send a hundred north korean submarines to try and attack an US carrier and they would probably fail because they are loud af and easy to spot compared to new ones. On the other hand you have the most modern submarines which are so stealthy and hard to spot that there have been Nato exercises where a german submarine was able to sneak up right next to a US carrier without anyone noticing. Thats the scary stuff

    • @chuckkottke
      @chuckkottke Před měsícem

      I wonder if we need to develop a scanning long range metal detector? With a powerful enough and narrow magnetic field that can spin like a radar to create an image of large metal objects within the vicinity. Sonar seems to be fading in usefulness.

    • @soulsphere9242
      @soulsphere9242 Před měsícem

      @@chuckkottke Magnetic Anomaly Detectors were actually commonly used for sub hunting in the past. Many sub-hunting aircraft had them in a long tail boom.

    • @Daniel-d7h3i
      @Daniel-d7h3i Před měsícem +1

      @@soulsphere9242 MADs are not terribly effective in submarine warfare. Sonobuoys are okay, but just like aircraft fitted with MADs, they can only patrol a small space compared to the operating area of a sub. Plus, submarines can dive deep and avoid both given the local subsurface acoustic profile.

  • @chrysik.5755
    @chrysik.5755 Před 28 dny +87

    I like how the music when describing Russia's submarines is ominous but when describing the USA's is sweet and calm.

    • @ilovethefreezespell6531
      @ilovethefreezespell6531 Před 26 dny +30

      Because we are the good guys 😎

    • @onurturhal6814
      @onurturhal6814 Před 25 dny +9

      FUCK YEAH

    • @haydarkavak7582
      @haydarkavak7582 Před 25 dny +46

      @@ilovethefreezespell6531 Good to whom? You actually are the most diabolical people ever.

    • @NeputuniaNepp
      @NeputuniaNepp Před 25 dny +13

      @@haydarkavak7582Good to Europe, Asia, Africa, the rest of the world.
      We provide so much foreign aid that we over shadow the next ten countries combined.

    • @vladalexeev8529
      @vladalexeev8529 Před 25 dny +21

      Because US never attacked any country. Oh wait..

  • @zumabbar
    @zumabbar Před měsícem +29

    i have a feeling this guy is obsessed with submarine. wendover underwater.

    • @n0tawhale902
      @n0tawhale902 Před měsícem +5

      He did say in his first sub video that his Father-in-law was a captain on a boomer(SSBN)!

    • @larsstougaard7097
      @larsstougaard7097 Před měsícem +2

      He loves diving deep into every subject 🪼

  • @dsong2006
    @dsong2006 Před měsícem +5

    China's diesel submarines are not "older", majority are Yuan class build in the 2010s and use air independence propulsion(similarly to latest European or japanese diesels) which makes them have longer endurance then older diesels. They are extremely quiet and hard to track and play a crucial role in access denial

  • @msvishwas5606
    @msvishwas5606 Před 9 dny +6

    Countries with nuclear subs 1) 🇺🇸 2) Russian🇷🇺 3) 🇨🇳 4) India🇮🇳 5) France🇫🇷 6) British🇬🇧💂

    • @picklesoda879
      @picklesoda879 Před 4 dny +2

      You spelled that wrong correction: bri'ish

  • @LuisEduardodeSouza
    @LuisEduardodeSouza Před měsícem +37

    Yep, i guess you missed Brazil, we currently have a fleet of seven submarines:
    Four Tupi-class submarines: Modified German Type 209 submarines.
    One Tikuna-class submarine: An improved version of the Tupi class.
    Two Riachuelo-class submarines: The first two of a planned series of four conventional submarines being built as part of the Submarine Development Program (PROSUB).
    It's important to note that Brazil is also developing its first nuclear-powered submarine as part of the PROSUB project.

    • @jamesmiller4184
      @jamesmiller4184 Před měsícem +3

      I say reestablish your Kingdom!

    • @alinafoerster
      @alinafoerster Před měsícem +2

      check the sources they are in there, just not specifically mentioned in the video

    • @LuisEduardodeSouza
      @LuisEduardodeSouza Před měsícem +1

      @@alinafoerster I did, and it does mention it on paper, but in this case i was talking specifically about the image in the video.

    • @joshiifive
      @joshiifive Před měsícem

      Hahahaha 😂 riachuelo, boa.

    • @thomasbeltman8918
      @thomasbeltman8918 Před měsícem +2

      Brazil can be seen at 2:00. Though only 4 submarines are shown

  • @87MasterJ
    @87MasterJ Před měsícem +11

    Great video 👍
    A couple of things to add up a little:
    - The modern attack-submarines like the Los Angeles class can easily shoot nukes, too. All it needs is a modified warhead from the Tomahawk cruise missle
    - The same applies for the Russian, Cinese, UK, French submarines with their (Russian) Kalibr cruise missle etc.
    - The Poseidon nuclear torpedo is just propaganda. Just do the basic physics on that and you will realise that an nuke can`t move enough water for an Tsunami. The deeper it detonates, the more pressure it needs to overcome. So calm down, don`t get caught by your fears of it 😉

    • @colossalgainz8235
      @colossalgainz8235 Před měsícem +2

      a nuke can't move enough water for a tsunami? u gotta be kidding lol
      even the bikini tests with far less powerful nukes indicate the opposite and we're talking 100 mt here 🤷🏻‍♂️

  • @A10Thunderbolt22
    @A10Thunderbolt22 Před 3 dny

    The words “that we know about” says a ton about the secrets that the military has

  • @adriann2649
    @adriann2649 Před měsícem +62

    *Saying that non-nuclear submarines are noisy and need to surface is outdated* . Spain has fully modern submarines with an AIP system that runs on bioethanol and batteries without need for oxygen. It's a silent system with a 3-week apnea (this system is desired by countries such as Canada, Australia and India). Edit: S80+ class of submarines, in case anyone doubts my words

    • @samstromberg5593
      @samstromberg5593 Před měsícem +10

      My buddy he specifically said something different about Spain

    • @dsolis7532
      @dsolis7532 Před měsícem +7

      He said that

    • @nhandinh7404
      @nhandinh7404 Před měsícem +18

      There was a small asterisk at the bottom of the video outing Spain and Sweden as the exceptions. Your comment is still well regarded though!

    • @bobg5362
      @bobg5362 Před měsícem +5

      Yay. "Up to" three weeks without surfacing. Nuke boats regularly remain submerged for ninety days. As stated in the video, the only reason they have to surface is when food starts to run low.

    • @pin65371
      @pin65371 Před měsícem +1

      @@bobg5362 a nuclear reactor is loud though and its a unique sound. Sensors would pick that up. A diesel sub just needs to surface like a mile away from a cargo ship and night and nobody would know its there. They would just blend in. I bet that is how they move around for the most part. Just follow ships till they get close to their target and then they can do what they need to do for a couple of weeks.

  • @siggelilliehook7332
    @siggelilliehook7332 Před měsícem +35

    3:35 didn’t a Swedish sub beat the US navy recently?

    • @jojosworlds1208
      @jojosworlds1208 Před měsícem +29

      Yes, the HSwMS Gotland was leased by the US government to test the ASW capabilities of a carrier strike group. The Gotland successfully evaded the US subs and sonars and took some photos of the hull of the USS Ronald Reagan, a aircraft carrier, which counted as sinking it. This was between 2005-2006. The German Uboot U24 did the "sink" the carrier USS Enterprise in 2001. But it has to be noted, that you can't easily sink an aircraft carrier and both cases where by friendly forces, so the US Navy has probably improved their ASW capabilities.

    • @soulsphere9242
      @soulsphere9242 Před měsícem +3

      20 or so years ago.

    • @jamesthomas1967
      @jamesthomas1967 Před měsícem +9

      Too many DEI hires.

    • @jojosworlds1208
      @jojosworlds1208 Před měsícem

      @@jamesthomas1967 What?

    • @JamesZeroSix
      @JamesZeroSix Před měsícem +14

      @@jamesthomas1967 must be tough constantly fighting your culture war. take a break. lets talk sub-fucking-marines for a second.

  • @mtbewan5632
    @mtbewan5632 Před 20 dny +1

    I doubt these numbers are too accurate but I love the amount of dedication of searching and sources found to make this video. Also a bizarre thing, it was abnormally easy to get a job having to do with the new submarines the us is building for “2042” as they are such massive projects

  • @bholdr----0
    @bholdr----0 Před měsícem +9

    If my post below IS TLDR- Here's the gist of it:
    This vid is inaccurate, inconsistent, lacks nuance, and may do more harm than good towards understanding how subs work, the various doctrines behind their use, various nation's capabilities, and why such is so critically important.
    Nice graphic though!

    • @MacrosFTW
      @MacrosFTW Před 26 dny

      I always don't trust videos on complicated topics that can be covered in such a short amount of time.
      War games would last a few hours if they used such lazy metrics of comparison between countries.

  • @alaint
    @alaint Před měsícem +125

    You kinda forgot France also has 4 ICBM equipped nuclear powered subs

    • @zks82mdu3b
      @zks82mdu3b Před měsícem +1

      Did you refer to his source?

    • @spacechannelfiver
      @spacechannelfiver Před měsícem +38

      same deal with the UK, which has 4

    • @karisvenner3892
      @karisvenner3892 Před měsícem

      Or that Australia literally demanded France to deliver non-nuclear subs when they were more than happy to build Australia brand new nuclear-powered subs. So presenting the AUKUS deal as "the US trying to arm their Pacific allies against China" is absolutely hilarious. It's just Australia proving once again that they only exist as the US lapdog and will literally torpedo (pun intended) their own submarine plans just to please Uncle Sam.
      To be fair I only clicked this video out of morbid curiosity, and Johnny Harris never disappoints (in that he always does). He really is a dumb person's idea of a smart journalist.

    • @alexandrevalentin8587
      @alexandrevalentin8587 Před měsícem +1

      Indeed, it is only mentioned in the sources that you can find in the video description.

    • @moonshot9056
      @moonshot9056 Před měsícem

      @@spacechannelfiver I was thinking this.

  • @rustix3
    @rustix3 Před měsícem +5

    14:03 Alongside other questions that I asked, it would be interesting to know logistics of getting the submarines. For example Iran, I doubt they produce the submarines. So they need to buy them, but submarines them selves can't come that long was. Also Iran needs to somehow transport submarine over the land to Caspian Sea, how they do this? Or the submarine comes in part and assembled on the spot? How the submarine can be transported to another shore quickly in the case of attack on another shore? Same goes to Israel, how they transfer submarines between their 2 sea accesses, do they send them under the Suez canal or over the land? Also Russia, I assume the main submarine fleet is next to Pacific Ocean which is miles away from probably the place subs get produced.

  • @aj897
    @aj897 Před měsícem +10

    The total number is irrelevant if the submarine is outdated or inferior, newer ones can’t be detected as easily and will eliminate most of the older/louder subs in combat.

    • @riderchallenge4250
      @riderchallenge4250 Před měsícem +1

      also experience china may have numbers but no experience of naval battles. in actual war India Japan can actually defeat china bcz of their naval battle experiences.

    • @sayple109
      @sayple109 Před měsícem

      @@riderchallenge4250 Indeed, but the quality of experience has certainly become very diminished in recent years. The whole new suite of tech found on the naval arsenals today are untested as no major naval conflict has happened in decades. With submarine warfare essentially last playing out in WWII. In that regard, everyone is on a similar playing field.

    • @ElizabethII-1952
      @ElizabethII-1952 Před měsícem

      @@sayple109 HMS Conqueror?

    • @riderchallenge4250
      @riderchallenge4250 Před 29 dny

      @@sayple109 you need experience your subs and ships are not gonna do their work without humans. USA can control oceans due to their experience of naval battles all the time.

    • @sayple109
      @sayple109 Před 29 dny

      @@riderchallenge4250 I didn't deny the value of experience, just qualified it to the modern context. Where USA obviously leads in experience, their infrastructure, investment, and dominating lead in technical innovations are among the many reasons it remains the only naval superpower of today. Regardless, a naval battle today is going to look very different from one decades ago, it is yet to see how much of an advantage experience is. But hopefully, this won't be tested for the sake of amateur military observers like us. Cheers

  • @Puttrich
    @Puttrich Před měsícem +8

    Image not talking about the Gotland class when making a video about submarines

  • @AmandaHugnKiss-g4x
    @AmandaHugnKiss-g4x Před měsícem +1

    When I was a kid I hot air ballooned with the Navy Commander that test launched the first Polaris missile. Pretty sure it was the stock footage used in the video. He had a framed picture of the missile launch in his home office, amongst others. Really cool guy.

  • @Baby_TheRealityRevealers
    @Baby_TheRealityRevealers Před měsícem +4

    Incredible breakdown, Johnny! 🌊 Submarines are such a crucial part of naval power. Your detailed analysis and visuals made this complex topic so engaging. Can't wait to see more of your deep dives into global military capabilities!

  • @jean-pierre5221
    @jean-pierre5221 Před měsícem +61

    You skipped over the UK's nuclear arms capabilities and went straight to India. The UK also has nuclear weapons on their submarines like Trident.

  • @rjeption
    @rjeption Před dnem

    This graphic was so satisfying

  • @HeisenbergFam
    @HeisenbergFam Před měsícem +34

    "whoever rules the waves rules the world" one of the most accurate sentences said in history

    • @TheWebstaff
      @TheWebstaff Před měsícem +1

      Until we have large space forces.
      Then that will all be all over with a few rods from god.

    • @iimcrandomgamer711
      @iimcrandomgamer711 Před měsícem

      ​​@@TheWebstaff
      Bro we don't need space base rods we already have countries with capabilities to built and already built delivery systems that capable of targetin anywhere in the glob.
      If we talk about putting space based rods from gods, then they are also the same countries that capable of do that to the certain degrees.

  • @syedmakbul8414
    @syedmakbul8414 Před měsícem +23

    Would love to see a breakdown of this type of the strongest militaries

    • @junbun3642
      @junbun3642 Před měsícem +1

      There are literally dozens of great military channels that give factual "breakdowns"

    • @origami83
      @origami83 Před měsícem +4

      Spoiler; the US is always on top.

  • @Matt-bp5vy
    @Matt-bp5vy Před 26 dny +20

    0:39 Poland number one! 💪

  • @extinnocence
    @extinnocence Před měsícem +4

    I love how much you love submarines.

  • @mitthrawnuruodo7517
    @mitthrawnuruodo7517 Před měsícem +35

    You forgot to mention that the very modern German submarines have also AIP.
    And you could have explained that AIP usually or actually always means that pure oxygen is carried in pressure vessels and converted into electricity with a fuel in a very quiet process (for the Sweden with a Stirling engine that runs on diesel and for the Germans with a hydrogen fuel cell). So it's independent from air not oxygen, that's what the A in AIP stands for.
    But besides this minute technical details it was once again a wonderful video, which I enjoyed watching.

    • @superpintotube
      @superpintotube Před měsícem +4

      The portuguese and greek navy, also have German made submarines with AIP

    • @perrablerra
      @perrablerra Před 28 dny +1

      @@superpintotube Swedish submarines also have AIP. In 2004, America borrowed one of them to practice against that type of submarine, but the Swedish submarine always managed to fool the shirt of the Americans and managed to sink both submarines and aircraft carriers (simulated attacks, of course). So these are definitely to be reckoned with.
      czcams.com/video/aoMj1TjNTFw/video.html

    • @neelabhraj9080
      @neelabhraj9080 Před 14 dny

      India also have proven AIP now..Developed by Drdo

  • @serpente3550
    @serpente3550 Před měsícem +36

    What about swedens submarine? The Gotland class is one of the best stealth submarines in the world

  • @aleong.9566
    @aleong.9566 Před měsícem +8

    hypothetically speaking you even dont need any other nuclear weapon except the ones within the submarines. They are by far the most dangerous ones which are almost impossible to track.

    • @jojosworlds1208
      @jojosworlds1208 Před měsícem +4

      It's always better to have different options. Hell even with all that fancy submarine launched ICBMs the US as has aircraft dropped atom bombs stationed in Germany.

    • @julius43461
      @julius43461 Před měsícem +1

      @@jojosworlds1208 Yup, the triad is needed in case some of them fail. Subs are the quickest and best, then ICBM's, and then of course air dropped as a last resort, but those will probably never be used as they are easiest to take down. Russia also has nukes on rails and those mobile ones riding on trucks in Siberia.

    • @ryankline1164
      @ryankline1164 Před měsícem

      Those nuclear armed stealth bombers are also kind of a threat...

    • @IndigoSierra
      @IndigoSierra Před měsícem

      ​@@ryankline1164They are, but they will take quite some time to arrive at their target, at which point the target in question will be on full alert and likely have fighter coverage of any important assets. It is much easier to shoot down a bomber than ballistic and cruise missiles.

    • @krashd
      @krashd Před 28 dny +1

      @@julius43461 China also has the great subterannean wall (or is it subterranean great wall?) whereby they've built a large underground network along their east coast to hide ICBM launchers and they routinely reposition them. Similar to Russia's mobile launchers but observers have to guess where in the country they are since the only visible parts of the great subterranean wall are the various entry and exit points.

  • @alexandrefranca8621
    @alexandrefranca8621 Před 4 hodinami

    Verry good this video, congratulations! Best Regards from a Chief Petty Officer - Brazilian Navy Chief. Rio - Brasil.

  • @adnastu
    @adnastu Před měsícem +61

    HERE WE GO!

  • @on__off2923
    @on__off2923 Před měsícem +4

    Johnny STRIKES again !!!

  • @MsTribus
    @MsTribus Před 28 dny +9

    in short: we're all cooked

  • @Julianna.Domina
    @Julianna.Domina Před měsícem +11

    Johnny- Rockets are a propulsion method/unguided weapon, missiles are guided and use either a rocket engine or a jet engine.
    The definitions of all these military terms can get a bit tough to keep track of, but it's very important to keep them straight. I've heard journalists refer to the M2 Bradley as a tank, when it very, very much isn't. A bradley doesn't stand a chance against basically any tank ever made, it's made to stop up to .50 cal weapons, shrapnel, maybe small mortar rounds, and it has a 25mm autocannon. The M1 Abrahams CAN stand up to a lot of tank guns, anti-tank missiles, etc

    • @GiveBackAll
      @GiveBackAll Před 29 dny

      Just curious- how do you define a tank? The Bradley is as much a tank as the first vehicles that earned the name in WW1.

    • @Julianna.Domina
      @Julianna.Domina Před 28 dny

      @@GiveBackAll A tank is a tracked vehicle with heavy armor and a single-firing, large caliber gun, made for direct fire engagements against other armored vehicles or in defense of infantry. The Bradley is tracked and is meant for direct fire engagements, but it has an automatic firing small caliber cannon, and it cannot be relied on to take out anything with any real level of armor. Its primary purpose is also to carry infantry into combat, whereas a tank is meant to just come in and blow you things that need a big gun.

    • @naders1771
      @naders1771 Před 28 dny

      *Abrams

    • @GiveBackAll
      @GiveBackAll Před 28 dny

      @@Julianna.Domina I was never in armor, but I have fired both the Bradley and the M1 and I have studied military history. The original definition of a tank was something that was impervious to small arms fire. Tanks have never been able to withstand artillery, and the primary purpose of a tank is to be superior to unarmored infantry or vehicles. For taking out tanks the US Military relies mostly on artillery and missiles, not just tanks. So I don't know where you are getting your definition from.

  • @sez5435
    @sez5435 Před měsícem +4

    Welcome to watchmojo. Today we will be ranking the top 10 submarine arsenals

  • @gabrielperezmurillo3583

    This video is the definition of manufacturing consent !

  • @kratos_wish
    @kratos_wish Před 12 dny +10

    7:00 mf show the correct map of india

  • @Galaxyeyez
    @Galaxyeyez Před měsícem +9

    1:12 Ngl Im South African and I didn't really know we had subs lol. Hell I'll be surprised if we even have tanks🤣🤣

    • @khumbelobele6674
      @khumbelobele6674 Před měsícem +2

      All I know we got is GNU with Gayton... The sub never crossed my mind. 😂😂😂

    • @darrenrodgers6425
      @darrenrodgers6425 Před měsícem +4

      I’m an ex SAN submariner. We have them, and they have a different role to what nuclear submarines are. This is info you can get off Google.. they just didn’t Google enough I guess. But diesel electric are quiet and meant for patrols and insertion of special forces, small, slow, quiet. Nuclear is big, fast, and loud.. meant to be firing platforms for ICBMs, like a mobile island, and they usually have a number of diesel electric subs around them that no one knows about.

    • @edhikurniawan
      @edhikurniawan Před měsícem

      But you have tanks on Wargame Red Dragon. The Olifant or something. What idk is if they're still operational.

    • @Galaxyeyez
      @Galaxyeyez Před měsícem

      @@darrenrodgers6425 Are they still operational and or currently in use?

    • @blazer9547
      @blazer9547 Před 23 dny

      You even had nukes.

  • @yoavbarnea1005
    @yoavbarnea1005 Před 29 dny

    Questions:
    - why does actually take so long to build them?
    - are their special materials that would at a certain point disappear or wont be available in the world anymore and could cause a problem producing submarines?
    - in which depth are they mostly run?
    - where did the most accidents / wars happend with submarines along history?
    Cool topic!

  • @julianchee2894
    @julianchee2894 Před měsícem +21

    It’s not the largest. It’s who improves the fastest.

    • @ChickenPlayz4
      @ChickenPlayz4 Před měsícem +3

      which is the U.S.? Whom also has the largest?

    • @dm3280
      @dm3280 Před měsícem

      Still the US. You would think they will fall behind in technology, specially militarywise? Then you are underestimating the real Godzilla of the ocean who keeps evolving.

    • @julianchee2894
      @julianchee2894 Před měsícem

      Yes, to all triggered, it’s still America

  • @rustoo3823
    @rustoo3823 Před měsícem +25

    14:01 @johnnyharris : Please cover the future of submarines. How it will evolve in the next 10, 50, 100 and 200 years, esp with the advent of AI and robotics.

  • @jfbaezv
    @jfbaezv Před 24 dny +1

    Se nota que sabes español, elegiste muy buena voz para el doblaje. Muchísimo mejor que la de otros en CZcams. Es muy disfrutable y de altísima calidad. Gracias!

  • @ChaoticTruthLive
    @ChaoticTruthLive Před měsícem +4

    Awesome video, insanely informative!

  • @fardvpn
    @fardvpn Před měsícem +25

    one of your more statistical videos

  • @Z34_aidan
    @Z34_aidan Před 5 dny

    The most surprising part of this video is that it takes 20 years to build the new US submarines

  • @H.P206
    @H.P206 Před 28 dny +12

    1:31 what about German submarines? They have fuel cells that don't need oxygen and they are a lot more quiet then nuclear powered subs because of the water pumps for the cooling water for the nuclear reactors

  • @theninjanolan8160
    @theninjanolan8160 Před měsícem +4

    8:36 two of those North Korean Subs look disturbingly like Apple pencils…

  • @1-lil_nico
    @1-lil_nico Před 27 dny

    it's basically a "we're doomed" situation if they launch it simultaneously

  • @BeeRory
    @BeeRory Před měsícem +14

    I know im late in typing this, and the source is "trust me" but i can say with confidence that the United Kingdom has at least 16 submarines, not 10. 12 of the 16 are nuclear powered, and nuclear armed.
    This comment will be lost down below anyways.

    • @JamesField
      @JamesField Před 29 dny

      Is your source a locality to Faslane? There are six or seven visible on Google Maps, including the five in port and one or two semi-submerged in the firth.

    • @ciaranReal
      @ciaranReal Před 27 dny +1

      ​@@JamesFieldrosyth, Portsmouth and Plymouth

  • @H.P206
    @H.P206 Před 28 dny +5

    German subs are AIR INDEPENDANT TOO

  • @mohammedirfan802
    @mohammedirfan802 Před 29 dny

    I love how the bgm for russiia is dark and villain intro type and then for america it changes to hopeful superhero intro type

  • @AdityaSingh-fy5vv
    @AdityaSingh-fy5vv Před měsícem +5

    Hey, One thing you might've forgotten to say about diesel electric submarines is that Since they use residual fuel for lighting, they actually are quieter than the average nuclear submarine. It's a weird thing but it's true that diesel subs are quieter and slower than nuclear ones. Except the seawolf class of subs.

    • @pin65371
      @pin65371 Před měsícem +1

      Exactly... the problem with nuclear subs is that reactors are pretty loud and its a unique sound which is easy to detect. The diesel electric subs are louder when the diesel engine is running but when they are on any missions they are quiet since its just electric at that point. They could just cruise along at night around large cargo ships to charge up and nobody would know they are there. Its pretty easy to blend in.

  • @JalilTheBourne
    @JalilTheBourne Před měsícem +7

    YOU ARE WRONG ABOUT ALGERIA: Algeria has a total of 8 submarines: 2X Kilo-class (Project 877) 4X Improved Kilo-class (Project 636) and 2 more Kilo-class submarines

  • @disazndoe5778
    @disazndoe5778 Před 27 dny +1

    Should do a video about military strength (tanks, planes, etc.) by country. Would be interesting to see

  • @trey3905
    @trey3905 Před měsícem +3

    i highly doubt Russia has a sub with a 100 megaton torpedo, considering the biggest ever detonated was 50 and the size of that bomb was insane. other than that really great and fun video.

    • @sharknot9011
      @sharknot9011 Před 27 dny +1

      Tsar bomba was 26 feet in length and 6.9 feet in diameter and had a weight of 27 tons. FYI the torpedo they are talking about is 65 feet long and 6,5 feet wide, unknown weight but lets imagine it is times three of Tsar bombas and is like 90 tons. Compared to modern sized submarines and their capabilities of carrying several THOUSANDS tons worth of weight thats not even that big of a deal. I also dont understand the comparison of the amount of megatons of the biggest explosion test in 1960s done by plane and todays weapons that are meant to be exploded and carried underwater. Even rockets USSR made in 1970s were able to carry 20 megatons worth of explosives by AIR on their own. I suggest for you to do some research on your own - you will be amazed by todays technology and power some countries have.

    • @trey3905
      @trey3905 Před 27 dny +2

      @@sharknot9011I think you just made my point that it would be too big to be 100megatons…

    • @sharknot9011
      @sharknot9011 Před 27 dny +1

      @@trey3905 Please elaborate on that, since I cannot see how would you come to such a conclusion after reading my comment. In my understanding and according to my previous comment: all data indicates that with some logic and calculations we can come to a conclusion that it is not only possible but highly likely that such weapon exists and can be transported and used without issue underwater. Also Tsar bomba was initially set to be at 100 megatons but soviets were worried that it would be too powerful and decided to cap it at 50 megatons (and it still turned out to be way more powerful than expected). So if production of 50mt and a 100mt bomb in 1960s wasnt an issue why would it be nowadays?

    • @trey3905
      @trey3905 Před 27 dny +2

      @@sharknot9011 it's well documented how insanely huge and heavy that bomb was, they had to remove parts of the plane. now this was decades ago so obv technology is better but still a 100megaton torpedo is too big and doesn't exist. edited to say that also it's stupid and unnecessary. it's exactly something Russia would make up because they think it sounds scary and cool but you can do plenty of bad with the much smaller nukes that actually do exist.

  • @shishiragrahari7126
    @shishiragrahari7126 Před měsícem +7

    @Johnny Harris 6:59 Map of India is not complete. Kindly put the complete map. Jammu and Kashmir is part of India.

  • @JamesBaylockJr
    @JamesBaylockJr Před 4 dny +1

    Sooo interesting! Amazing video!!! Would love to see/hear more about submarines!!!!!

  • @SgtCake101
    @SgtCake101 Před měsícem +4

    11:37 Mediterranean ocean?

    • @McCarthy911
      @McCarthy911 Před 16 dny +1

      Apparently, it's an ocean now 😅

  • @MAR_10-x5w
    @MAR_10-x5w Před měsícem +4

    here goes the tax money, i was wondering where it was going...

    • @CristianKlein
      @CristianKlein Před měsícem

      "Imagine all those people, Living in harmony iiiiii ihhhiii".

  • @user-hq1ct7ox1h
    @user-hq1ct7ox1h Před 29 dny +4

    I know it's a bit crazy but I kind of want to see this cool subs get used in actual battle 💀

  • @Ankityadav-670
    @Ankityadav-670 Před měsícem +13

    7:03 please use the correct map of #india ..for more details refer to Indian govt official website or UN

  • @ibrahimchelanga6109
    @ibrahimchelanga6109 Před 20 dny

    🙌👏👏👏 thanks for the class I’m 15 mins smarter about the world than I could have imagined. Great documentary

  • @freja9398
    @freja9398 Před měsícem +6

    Sweden is the only country who has sank a US aircraft carrier with our subs (with Stirling engines) in a military practice with US (obviously not with live ammunition). You should have talked more about Swedens very special submarines with Stirling engines, they are independent of oxygen despite not being nuclear powered!

    • @scottl9660
      @scottl9660 Před měsícem

      USS Wasp and USS Yorktown have left the chat.
      Don’t get so caught up in national chest thumping that you ignore facts.
      The only two countries that have sunk US carriers are Japan and the US.

    • @soulsphere9242
      @soulsphere9242 Před měsícem

      Sweden isn't the only county to have Air Independant Propulsion subs, even though they were the first. They are also not really fully independent of oxygen as they carry liquid oxygen onboard and can only travel at very slow speeds if their batteries are drained. A nuclear submarine can steam for months at 30 knots.

    • @freja9398
      @freja9398 Před měsícem +1

      @@soulsphere9242 All these submarines are built in Sweden. They are much more silent than nuclear submarines. No nuclear submarine has sunk an US aircraft carrier in a military practice.

  • @OZOZOZ968
    @OZOZOZ968 Před 29 dny +6

    Australia’s ‘new’ submarines will being over 20 years away so not sure why you say soon

    • @EpicFrenzy
      @EpicFrenzy Před 27 dny

      20 years is quite soon when you look at military capability.

    • @jkc3738
      @jkc3738 Před 26 dny +2

      It took China 20 years to build from nothing..🤣

  • @zachking5138
    @zachking5138 Před 29 dny +2

    Enough firepower to destroy Earth 1,000 times over.... And they're still making more!

  • @hydra70
    @hydra70 Před měsícem +10

    Fun fact, once Australia acquires a nuclear powered submarine, they will become the only county that does not have nuclear weapons to also operate nuclear submarines. This is especially interesting because submarine reactors are powered by essentially weapons-grade Uranium to make up for their small size. So once Australia has that submarine, they could at any time remove it's fuel to build a small number of Uranium gun-type bombs in a matter of weeks if they wanted to.

    • @Adan11961
      @Adan11961 Před měsícem

      I dont know the science or logistics or their capacity to do so in secret. But if this is truly doable and in secret this is actually bad news to Australia.
      Because this makes Australia a de facto nuclear state and therefore a target for preemptive nuclear strike in a widespread nuclear exchange. So they’re essentially a nuclear deterrent first strike target without a deterrent of its own.

    • @SL89999
      @SL89999 Před měsícem

      The USA has CIA monitoring bases on Australian soil. Australia could never do anything in secret from the US. So this isn’t a risk.

    • @FFContent
      @FFContent Před měsícem

      @@Adan11961 Theres many nations who are first strike targets who don't even operate nuclear subs let alone nuclear weapons

    • @tonysisemore958
      @tonysisemore958 Před měsícem +3

      There is a Wikipedia article about nuclear capable countries. Meaning countries that can make nuclear weapons if wanted to. They only don't because of the nonproliferation of nuclear weapons agreement, which is signed by most countries.

    • @SBSanChill
      @SBSanChill Před měsícem

      @@Adan11961pretty sure America is our nuclear deterrent our older brothers are the uk and the USA 😂

  • @cgmax7
    @cgmax7 Před měsícem +19

    6:45 India 🕉🕉

    • @george.l2593
      @george.l2593 Před měsícem

      Ya man used to spread the smell of masala everywhere 👏. Soon scam call centers will sprout all over the world from the masala. And then the deodorant market will boom~`!!!🤯🤯🤯

    • @I_hu85ghjo
      @I_hu85ghjo Před měsícem

      do the submarines contain functional toilets though?

    • @aaradhyarawat7589
      @aaradhyarawat7589 Před 27 dny +5

      ​@@I_hu85ghjoThey don't operate on Californian water of USA.

    • @aaradhyarawat7589
      @aaradhyarawat7589 Před 27 dny

      What's "🕉️", a hindu chant for universal peace have to do with this?