Is it possible you got NATO and russian code mixed up? Seems to me like the NATO akula, which is very different from the russian subs of that class name
The codename “Akula” was given by NATO for the Scuka class submarines. The Russians by the codename “Akula” describe a completely different submarine type - their almost 200 meter long “Typhoon” (again “Typhoon” is the NATOs codename). …but… One of the many Scuka-B submarines was given a "unique" name: “Akula”… Simple to understand, right? 😉
@@RCShipyard errr, so are we saying the same thing right now? I'm trying to say that the sub in the video is nót the russian giant submarine, project 941.
@@symenbrug1992 Not exactly... You asked me did I mixed up something and I just explained you why I didn't - as I'm using the NATO codenames. In the NATO codename this is the Akula. At the same time I'm not denying that Russian and NATO codenames don't match :) BTW. You can find the 941 project submarine model on my channel too :)
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Is it possible you got NATO and russian code mixed up? Seems to me like the NATO akula, which is very different from the russian subs of that class name
The codename “Akula” was given by NATO for the Scuka class submarines.
The Russians by the codename “Akula” describe a completely different submarine type - their almost 200 meter long “Typhoon” (again “Typhoon” is the NATOs codename).
…but…
One of the many Scuka-B submarines was given a "unique" name: “Akula”…
Simple to understand, right? 😉
@@RCShipyard errr, so are we saying the same thing right now? I'm trying to say that the sub in the video is nót the russian giant submarine, project 941.
@@symenbrug1992 Not exactly... You asked me did I mixed up something and I just explained you why I didn't - as I'm using the NATO codenames. In the NATO codename this is the Akula. At the same time I'm not denying that Russian and NATO codenames don't match :) BTW. You can find the 941 project submarine model on my channel too :)