US Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
EMALS dead weight sled test completed successfully and she is looking good folks! She is preparing to be delivered to the US Navy (not commissioned, just delivered for naval trials) in March 2016...folks, that's only seven months away.

Can't wait to see her plowing the waves. As it is, right now she is looking good.

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Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
Another new class and cutting edge technology vessel being prepared is the USS Zumwalt. As of mid-July she was 96% complete and is scheduled for dock trials in November, and initial sea trials in December of this year. That's four months away fro sea trials.

As it is, she too is looking very good. Can't wait for her to plow the waves.

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...and the second, USS Michael Monsoor, DDG-1001, is coming along right behind her.

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Equation

Lieutenant General
LDUUV.png

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According to the Navy's ISR Capabilities Division, LDUUV will reach initial operating capability as a squadron by 2020 and full rate production by 2025.

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1) “intelligence, scouting, and reconnaissance” underwater, which means the combined jobs of watching an area for potential threats and then sending back useful information to people on shore.

2. “Intelligence Preparation of the Operational Environment.” Observing a battlefield and evaluating enemy options in war, to (in peacetime) exploring potential threats and courses of action.

The LDUUV as an underwater scout and spy, a submarine whose sensors will collect data to help build a better understanding of what future naval wars could look like.

Future robot subs will be used as
* underwater minesweepers
* launch flying scout drones that scan above the surface of the sea
* “deploy payloads” such as shooting torpedoes or missiles.

The LDUUV can be launched from drydocks, Virginia-class submarines, and the Littoral Combat Ship.

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Lockhheed's Shunk Works are apparently working on a U-2 successor. ...
... related:
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Lockheed Martin is exploring building a stealthy successor to
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to Northrop Grumman’s
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and the U-2’s impending retirement.

Why a stealthy reconnaissance aircraft? Neither the U-2 nor Global Hawk can operate for long in what the military calls contested airspace. Ever since Gary Powers was shot down over the Soviet Union in 1960, the U-2 has been at risk even though it flies at least 70,000 feet high.

The U-2 is already slated for retirement in 2019, to be replaced by the unmanned Global Hawk. If the US wants to operate in contested airspace, will it be able to afford one aircraft that is essentially used in peacetime — Global Hawk — and one for war? The Air Force’s decisions on the U-2 and
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that unlikely, at least for a while, So perhaps we would skip forward.

“So one of the things we are looking at is something that essentially could do both,” Scott Winstead, strategic development manager for the U-2 and a former U-2 pilot told a small clutch of reporters. It could be manned or unmanned. It would probably use the existing GE F-118 engine, which produces plenty of power and would not need redesigning, he added. It’s interesting to consider what the airplane would look like, given that it would presumably fly at least at the U-2’s unclassified height of 70,000 feet. How do you make a plane fly at that kind of altitude and still be stealthy?

Of course, if the Air Force says the plane must fly much higher, then it would need a new engine, Winstead said. This new aircraft would not supersede the proposed hypersonic SR-72, because that would still be needed in situations where speed was of the essence.

The U-2, though it might look as if it’s stealthy, isn’t. That’s just black paint, Melani Austin, U-2 program director, told us, though there were experiments done covering the U-2 in Radar Absorbing Materials (RAM).

I got the impression from Winstead that, while Skunk Works definitely has done substantial design work for this aircraft — RQ-X? — this is in the we-could-do-it-if-they-ask-us-to box. He told me there is no requirement for it nor has there been great interest expressed by the Air Force.

Should the Air Force decide it does need this new plane, Skunk Works could deliver it quickly IF the requirement is clear and does not change, Austin told us.

“One of the reasons that it was so easy to get that first (U-2) aircraft built was because we had a real simple, clear requirement, and it didn’t change or shift,” Austin said. “If that environment was reproduced today, and we had a really clear set of requirements that don’t change, that would really help any company get to the end of the development phase quickly and more cost effectively.”

I’m skeptical an RQ-X will happen any time soon, but there may well be things going on that reporters just don’t know.
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navyreco

Senior Member
U.S. Navy Started LRASM Anti-Ship Missile Integration Tests on F/A-18E/F Super Hornet
MYPPfbj.jpg

The U.S. Navy began initial integration testing of its Long-Range Anti-Ship Missile (LRASM) onto the F/A-18E/F Super Hornet Aug. 12 at Patuxent River’s Air Test and Evaluation Squadron (VX) 23 facility.

A Long Range Anti-Ship Missile (LRASM) integrated on F/A-18E/F Super Hornet Aug. 12 at NAS Patuxent River, Md. The program's flight test team is conducting initial testing to ensure proper loading, unloading and handling of the LRASM on the F/A-18 E/F. (U.S. Navy photo)
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Joint Land Attack Cruise Missile Defense Elevated Netted Sensor news:
Second airship launched in test of missile defense system
The U.S. military has launched the second of two helium-filled airships near Baltimore to test an East Coast missile defense system.

The confirmed launch Wednesday at the Army's Aberdeen Proving Ground completes the aeronautical part of the Joint Land Attack Cruise Missile Defense Elevated Netted Sensor System, or JLENS.

The radar-equipped aerostats are tethered to concrete pads 4 miles apart. They're designed to float unmanned at 10,000 feet.

During the three-year test, one balloon will continuously scan 360 degrees from upstate New York to North Carolina's Outer Banks, and as far west as central Ohio. The other carries precision radar to help the military on the ground pinpoint targets.

The aerostats don't carry weapons. Enemy missiles would be destroyed by weapons launched from the air, the sea or the ground.
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...
Just think, the US Navy could have those three babies sitting there in San Diego...and have three more just like them sitting in two other places in the world, and then have another left over for change.

is it true there's only one aircraft carrier deployed right now? (I might misunderstood the most recent posts in
Today's US Navy Photos & Videos
... that's why I'm asking)
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
According to the official US Navy page (
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), two are underway right now:

USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN 71) - 5th Fleet
USS John C. Stennis (CVN 74) - Pacific

I believe Roosevelt is over in the Mid-east supporting strikes against ISIL.

Stennis is apparently underway in the Pacific, having either recently completed its COMPTUEX workup exercises, or about to complete them.

Anyhow, that's what the US Navy page says.
 
According to the official US Navy page (
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), two are underway right now:

USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN 71) - 5th Fleet
USS John C. Stennis (CVN 74) - Pacific

...

... let me just add:
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and the most fresh info is on their Facebook:
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:)
 
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