Silly little kid
*Tussles CATZ hair around*
Those are the thermal values. Using those values to base anything off of other than the cooling loop is downright silly. No Soviet reactor generated more than 50k SHP, and no serious American design was set any higher than 60K SHP, and those designs get really, really big - bigger than you're going to get on an 8000 ton destroyer.
Is that suppose to upset me? lol@u.
A turbine is only as efficient as it's boiler. Thermodynamics.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BM-40A_reactor
"The BM-40A reactor is the nuclear fission reactor used to power four of the seven boats of the Soviet Navy's Project 705 Лира (Lira or Alfa in NATO designation) fourth generation submarines. It is a liquid metal cooled reactor (LMR), using highly enriched uranium-235 fuel to produce 155 MWt of power."
Produce 155 MWt of power. I'm aware it's megawatt thermal, Tim. What do you think it's using to create steam in the first place? That's right. Heat. Duh. But oh that's right, you were just trying to get one up on me. And failed miserably. :: plays the world's smallest violin ::
Enjoy the serenade.
Since we can't really specify that exact efficiency, it's just easiest to dictate a specific output.
The Alfa class had a turbine rated at 40,000 hp connected to the shaft. That's 30 MW right there. Only reason you wouldn't use a high power turbine is because they probably didn't want it going faster (design limits) or didn't have enough space for a bigger turbine. Either way, even if you tried to maintain your argument, the ship is a lot bigger than the sub, thus you'd add another reactor if need be. But of course there's a problem with your cherry picking argument there which I detail below.
Of course, the Sierra class doesn't list it as MWt (megawatt thermal). Simply lists 190 MW. The Akula II class's OK-650 is the same way. With the Alfa classes 155 MWt, it's hard to discern the intrinsic losses in the system, so even you don't have a single clue as to what it's actual power output is since it wasn't stated and we don't know the listed efficiency for the plant setup.
For example, the Embalse Nuclear Plant produces 2,109 MW of thermal power, and of that, 648 MW of electricity. That's 30% efficiency. Construction began in 1974, so it's pretty close to the era of the ship. But of course, naval nuke plants tend to be a little less efficient. But overall, every setup is different. And also, that's a pressurized heavy water reactor. Liquid metal plants have higher energy densities and are lighter and smaller in size overall. Rather than bother with all that, it's ten times easier to say 180 MW and be done with it. Another problem with your statement, is that reactors don't tend to be huge. Most have a fuel load the size of a baseball. You don't need a huge reactor to house a lot of power. The cooling systems tend to take up all the space.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OK-650_reactor
So Tim, I suppose I'd simply reply with...what do you want me to do? I could specify more reactors, but that doesn't get us anywhere. We could say, alright, let's set it at 30% efficiency, and figure something from there. But that's a huge pain in the ass and requires a lot of assumptions. So I did it the easy way, and stated the desired electrical/hp output from the reactor and turbine setup. And the idea that you can't generate 180 MW on an 8,000 ton ship is downright silly.