USS Bonita (SSK-3)
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| Career | |
|---|---|
| Ordered: | |
| Laid down: | 19 May 1950 |
| Launched: | 21 June 1951 |
| Commissioned: | 11 January 1952 |
| Fate: | |
| Stricken: | |
| General Characteristics | |
| Displacement: | 765 tons surfaced, 1160 tons submerged |
| Length: | 196 feet 1 inches |
| Beam: | 24 feet 7 inches |
| Draft: | 14 feet 5 inches |
| Speed: | 13 knots surfaced, 6 knots submerged |
| Depth: | 400 feet |
| Complement: | four officers and 33 men |
| Armament: | four 21-inch torpedo tubes |
The three SSK boats, Barracuda (SSK-1), Bass (SSK-2), and Bonita (SSK-3), were built around the large BQR-4 bow-mounted sonar array as part of Project Kayo, which experimented the use of passive acoustics with low-frequency, bow sonar arrays. When the boat was rigged for silent running, these arrays gave greatly-improved convergence zone detection ranges against snorkeling submarines. The SSKs themselves were limited in their anti-submarine warfare abilities by their low speed and their need to snorkel periodically, but the advances in sonar technology they pioneered were invaluable to later nuclear-powered submarines.
K-3 joined Submarine Squadron 7 at Pearl Harbor on 15 May 1952 and performed experimental and normal submarine duties, making a cruise to Alaskan waters in August and September 1956. She was renamed Bonita 15 December 1955, decommissioned on 7 November 1958, and given hull classification symbol SS-552 on 15 August 1959.
See USS Bonita for other ships of the same name.
References
This article includes information collected from the Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.