The new class kept the proven
S5W reactor plant from the immediately preceding s, but were a radical change in many other ways. The
Threshers had the large
bow-mounted
sonar sphere and angled, amidships
torpedo tubes used in the concurrently-built . This placed the sonar sphere in the optimum position for detection of targets at long range.
Tullibee was an alternate design optimized for
anti-submarine warfare, much smaller and slower than the
Threshers and with a quiet
turbo-electric propulsion system. Although they used the same
HY-80 steel (
yield strength ) as the
Skipjacks, the
Threshers
pressure hulls were made using an improved design that extended test depth to . The engineering spaces were also redesigned, with the turbines supported on "rafts" that were suspended from the hull on isolation mounts for
acoustic quieting. Drag was reduced, with external fittings kept to a minimum and the
sail greatly reduced in size. However, the small sail had disadvantages as well, including room for only one
periscope and a reduced number of electronics masts, less convenient surfaced operation in rough seas, and an increased possibility of "broaching" (inadvertent surfacing) at
periscope depth in rough seas. Only
Thresher was fitted with a five-bladed symmetric
screw, very similar to the ones originally fitted to the
Skipjacks, which allowed her to reach this speed. During
trials of the
Skipjack class, it was found that the propeller produced noise below
cavitation depth. It was determined that the source of this noise, called blade-rate, was the blades of the screw vibrating when they hit the wake of the sail and control surfaces. This produced a noise that could carry for many miles and could be used by an enemy submarine to set up a firing solution because the frequency of blade-rate was directly related to the speed of the submarine (the RPM of the screw). The solution was to either make the screw smaller so it did not hit the wakes of the sail and control surfaces, which would cavitate more easily because of its increased speed, or have a large screw that gently interacted with these areas of disturbed water. The latter solution was chosen for all subsequent American SSNs.
Permit and later submarines of this class had seven-bladed skewback screws, which reduced the problem of blade-rate, but reduced the submarines' top speed to .
Jack was designed with counter-rotating screws, each of which were smaller than the standard seven-bladed screw, as an alternative solution to the blade-rate problem. The class received mid-life upgrades in the late 1970s and 1980s, including the sonar suite with a retractable
towed array, Mk 117 torpedo fire control equipment, and other electronics upgrades. ==Armament==