What it’s really like to operate a nuclear submarine

Image Credits: UnsplashImage Credits: Unsplash

Most people think nuclear submarines are all about weapons. In reality, they’re about precision. Everything—from the way the crew sleeps to the way steam flows through turbines—must function within exact tolerances, 24/7, for months at a time, under water, under pressure, under radio silence. And while Hollywood loves dramatic missile launches, a former submarine commander tells a different story: one of integration, control, and protocols so deeply drilled into memory they become instinct.

Nuclear submarines are designed to disappear. That’s their strength. But what goes on inside one isn’t magic. It’s systems thinking applied at an extreme. Propulsion, life support, power generation, navigation, silence, and survival—all running on an enclosed loop. Unlike almost every other military vehicle, subs are isolated ecosystems. They don’t just operate independently; they live independently. Understanding how they work means understanding how human bodies and machine systems interact under conditions that leave no room for error.

At the core of every nuclear submarine is a small but powerful pressurized water reactor. It doesn’t burn fuel. It splits atoms. The heat generated by fission is used to convert water into high-pressure steam, which drives turbines that power the propulsion shaft and generate electricity for the sub’s entire system. No oxygen is required for combustion. No refueling is needed for years. A single uranium core can power a submarine for over a decade. That’s not exaggeration. That’s engineering.

What this means is that a nuclear sub can remain submerged for months at a time. Not days. Not weeks. Months. Theoretically, the only thing limiting the submarine’s endurance underwater is food. And even that is optimized. Food storage compartments are stacked floor-to-ceiling in every available space. In the beginning of a deployment, sailors will literally sleep on top of food pallets. As supplies dwindle, they regain space. But the systems remain stable. Because the reactor never sleeps.

That reactor is housed in a shielded compartment accessible only to trained engineering officers and enlisted nuclear specialists. Reactor control isn’t casual. It’s managed with layers of redundancy and oversight. If something goes wrong, the submarine is built to respond instantly. Automatic scram protocols shut down the reactor and switch to emergency cooling systems. And the crew trains for it constantly. One former commander said he drilled reactor accident scenarios so often that he could recite emergency protocols in his sleep. That’s not dramatization—it’s a survival requirement.

But a reactor isn’t enough. Life under the surface requires air, water, and quiet. Air doesn’t come from outside. It’s manufactured. Electrolysis units split seawater into hydrogen and oxygen, feeding breathable air back into the vessel. Carbon dioxide scrubbers remove the CO₂ exhaled by crew members using either lithium hydroxide canisters or amine systems. These are checked daily, calibrated hourly. Sensors monitor trace gases in the air, including any off-gassing from plastics, lubricants, or equipment. If anything drifts outside normal parameters, an alarm goes off. The sub is always watching itself.

Fresh water is produced by distillation or reverse osmosis using the reactor’s heat. This water is used for drinking, hygiene, and reactor system needs. Showers exist, but they’re fast. There are no long baths in a steel tube where every gallon of water must be accounted for. A crew member’s average daily allotment is carefully calculated. This isn’t about deprivation—it’s about predictability.

Aboard a US Navy or Royal Navy nuclear submarine, the crew numbers between 130 and 150, depending on the vessel class. They rotate through three shifts: red, blue, and gold. Each shift is six hours on duty, 12 hours off. During that off time, you eat, sleep, study, exercise—if there’s space—and complete qualifications. New sailors work through a “Qual Card,” a massive checklist that covers every system on the submarine. You don’t move freely until you’ve proven you can operate, troubleshoot, and survive with every major subsystem. That includes electrical, hydraulics, navigation, sonar, reactor, damage control. If there’s a fire, you need to know exactly which bulkheads seal off that compartment, which extinguishers to use, and where to vent heat—without creating noise detectable from thousands of miles away.

Noise is everything. The silent running of a nuclear submarine is its core tactic. Every mechanical system is designed with acoustic discretion in mind. Pumps are isolated. Machinery is suspended on sound-dampening mounts. Even footfalls are trained to be quiet. Crew are taught how to close hatches without clangs. Conversation volumes are monitored. Toilets are flushed differently depending on the vessel’s depth to reduce the chance of acoustic signatures escaping into the water.

The sub’s outer hull is coated in anechoic tiles—rubbery materials that absorb sonar pulses rather than reflect them. Propellers are precision-shaped to avoid cavitation, the formation of vapor bubbles that produce tell-tale noise. Even the number of blades is classified. To a surface ship, noise is an operational byproduct. To a submarine, it’s a liability.

That’s because submarines rarely fight. They hide. They listen. They follow. And if ordered, they strike with precision. But only when absolutely necessary. The real power of a submarine lies in what it doesn’t do. A Trident-armed submarine might carry 16 ballistic missiles with multiple independently targetable warheads. But it’s unlikely to fire one unless deterrence has failed. Attack submarines can launch cruise missiles and torpedoes, but their most valuable missions involve shadowing foreign submarines, conducting surveillance, and inserting special operations forces. Their utility comes from ambiguity.

Inside the control room—often called the Conn—you won’t find a movie-style joystick. You’ll find sonar displays, fire control computers, chart tables, and vertical launch system controls. The periscope—now often replaced by a photonic mast—offers a quick view when needed, but most of the time, the sub operates blind to the surface. Navigation is handled by inertial systems that use accelerometers and gyroscopes to track movement from a known starting point. But drift accumulates. That’s why the submarine will occasionally rise to periscope depth, receive GPS updates, and reset its position. Each surfacing is calculated to avoid detection.

The crew’s working environment is tight, regimented, and psychologically demanding. Imagine living for months without daylight. No phone calls. No internet. Limited email, heavily censored. Birthdays, holidays, even deaths back home often go unacknowledged until return. The mission doesn’t pause for grief. The submarine functions because its people hold the system together.

Morale is protected through routine. Meals are served on a strict schedule. Drills are held regularly—not just for emergencies like flooding or fire, but for sonar tracking, missile loading simulations, and reactor control shifts. These drills are never announced. A fire drill might begin at 0300. Everyone must respond immediately, in full gear, sealing compartments, establishing communications, and managing casualties. If a drill is failed, it’s run again. And again. The goal isn’t perfection. It’s reflex.

One of the most sobering realities aboard a submarine is that the crew must be able to function while compartmentalizing existential risks. A ballistic missile submarine is a strategic nuclear platform. Its orders might someday include launching weapons that could change the world. Yet for the officers and crew, the mission is structured into executable steps—open code envelope, validate authentication, enter launch sequence, confirm targeting. At every point, systems are in place to prevent accidental or unauthorized launch. But the system is also built to ensure that, if ordered, the launch can be executed.

The psychological weight of this potential isn’t discussed openly. It’s managed structurally—through strict discipline, clear hierarchy, and a focus on readiness, not theory. For the average crew member, the mission is technical. Operate the system. Maintain the parameters. Prevent failure. That’s the culture.

When asked what makes a nuclear submarine work, the former commander gave a three-word answer: “Integration and discipline.” He elaborated: “You can’t isolate one system. The reactor powers the air plant, which controls the atmosphere, which protects the crew, who must be mentally sharp to operate sonar, which keeps us from running aground or being detected, which keeps the mission intact. It’s all connected. You pull one thread, the whole thing starts to fray.”

This is why every recruit is taught the submarine’s systems as a whole. Not just their assigned station. Not just their bunk area. From the lowest-ranking sailor to the commanding officer, understanding how every valve, cable, and process contributes to survival and success is foundational. Unlike surface ships, there’s no space for compartmentalized ignorance. Everyone is cross-trained. Everyone is expected to respond under pressure.

And that pressure isn’t just metaphorical. Submarines operate at depths where hull integrity is a daily concern. While exact crush depths are classified, modern nuclear submarines can operate safely at hundreds of meters below the surface. The hull is made of high-strength steel or titanium alloys, built in a pressure-resistant cylindrical shape. Each dive tests the system. Each ascent confirms its resilience.

Yet what might be most impressive isn’t the steel, the reactor, or the weapons. It’s the idea that 140 people can live together for months in a 400-foot-long steel tube with no escape, no privacy, and no off days—and not fall apart. That’s the real protocol. The human system. The one that makes everything else possible.

The commander’s closing remark landed without bravado: “We don’t win by firing first. We win by never being found.”

Because at the end of the day, the most powerful part of a nuclear submarine isn’t its weaponry. It’s the silence. And everything that goes into keeping it that way.


Read More

Financial Planning Malaysia
Image Credits: Unsplash
Financial PlanningAugust 1, 2025 at 4:00:00 PM

If you could ask a mega-millionaire one question about money, what would it be?

If you had five minutes face-to-face with someone worth $50 million or more, what would you ask them about money? Not just about...

Relationships Malaysia
Image Credits: Unsplash
RelationshipsAugust 1, 2025 at 4:00:00 PM

Why more young Malaysians are choosing offline dating over apps

In my early founder years, I used to think friction was the enemy. That every system, from a sales pipeline to a social...

Health & Wellness Malaysia
Image Credits: Unsplash
Health & WellnessAugust 1, 2025 at 3:30:00 PM

What protein powder actually does to your muscles

Walk into any gym locker room, smoothie bar, or online fitness forum, and you’ll see it—the omnipresent scoop of protein powder. It’s in...

Startup Malaysia
Image Credits: Unsplash
StartupAugust 1, 2025 at 3:30:00 PM

Why startups break without hierarchy

Startups love to talk about how flat they are. It’s become a badge of honor—an antidote to big company bureaucracy, a signal that...

Relationships Malaysia
Image Credits: Unsplash
RelationshipsAugust 1, 2025 at 3:30:00 PM

How the 2025 tariffs impact baby products and what parents can do

In a quiet sunlit nursery somewhere in the suburbs, a parent adjusts a mobile over a crib and clicks the buckle on a...

Self Improvement Malaysia
Image Credits: Unsplash
Self ImprovementAugust 1, 2025 at 3:30:00 PM

How high performers actually manage their time

Time management isn’t about finishing more tasks. It’s about building a repeatable rhythm that protects your attention. Most people start with to-do lists....

Insurance Malaysia
Image Credits: Unsplash
InsuranceAugust 1, 2025 at 3:30:00 PM

The hidden costs and clauses in Singapore car insurance plans

For many Singaporeans, buying car insurance feels like a formality. It's something you do when you're handed the keys to a new vehicle—often...

Economy Malaysia
Image Credits: Unsplash
EconomyAugust 1, 2025 at 3:00:00 PM

Asia must harness AI for natural disaster management

Wednesday’s tsunami warnings triggered by a deep-sea earthquake off Russia’s Kamchatka Peninsula were not just seismological events. They were institutional ones. As alerts...

Mortgages Malaysia
Image Credits: Unsplash
MortgagesAugust 1, 2025 at 3:00:00 PM

Senate Bill proposes six months of mortgage relief for natural disaster victims

When disaster strikes, the damage isn’t just physical—it’s financial. In the wake of deadly wildfires in California and devastating floods in Texas, a...

Leadership Malaysia
Image Credits: Unsplash
LeadershipAugust 1, 2025 at 3:00:00 PM

Overcoming leadership fatigue to build a more aligned team

There’s a moment that arrives for many founders when the adrenaline wears off, the mission stops feeling energizing, and every decision starts to...

Economy Malaysia
Image Credits: Unsplash
EconomyAugust 1, 2025 at 1:00:00 PM

What it will take for Hong Kong to lead in shipping again

The Development Bureau’s proposal to reclaim 301 hectares—145 near Lung Kwu Tan and 45 in Tuen Mun West—for a “smart and green industrial...

Economy Malaysia
Image Credits: Unsplash
EconomyAugust 1, 2025 at 1:00:00 PM

Taiwan welcomes reduced 20% US tariff—but faces growing pressure to offer deeper concessions

Taiwan has just been handed a partial reprieve: the United States will impose a 20% tariff on its exports instead of the previously...

Load More