US Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
The third follow-on test, conducted in April 2015, assessed the EPF’s deployment of a SEAL Delivery Vehicle (SDV) using the EPF’s stern-mounted crane. Gilmore noted in his report that the SDV could be successfully launched in up to Sea State 3 conditions, though he noted some safety concerns exist, such as SEALs exposure to the EPF’s engine exhaust, as well as excessive swinging during crane operations. Gilmore recommends that the Navy evaluate these safety concerns and investigate solutions.

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Members of SEAL Delivery Vehicle Team Two (SDVT-2) prepare to launch one of the team’s SEAL Delivery Vehicles (SDV) from the back of the Los Angeles-class attack submarine USS Philadelphia (SSN 690) on a training exercise in May 2005. US Navy photo.

While the SDV deployment in Sea State 3 was a success, Gilmore notes in his report that the SEALs would also have to use support surface craft to help the divers get going in the underwater SDV. Those support boats are similar to small craft tested during IOT&E, and those craft could only be launched in Sea State 2 – potentially limiting the utility of the EPF for the Special Operations Forces community.

Finally, the report notes some concerns regarding the operational availability of the ship class, both in regards to its ability to operate in high sea states as well as mechanical problems that have plagued the ship class.

“The main drivers of ship unavailability were the Ship Service Diesel Generators, waterjets, and the Ride Control System (RCS),” according to the report, which noted that demonstrated availability dropped from 98 percent during IOT&E to 87 percent after the follow-on testing – still above the 80 percent requirement, though.

“The RCS failures are a symptom of a more serious problem with the JHSV bow structure related to the ship’s Safe Operating Envelope (SOE), which is designed to limit wave impact loads on the bow structure. The Navy accepted compromises in the bow structure, presumably to save weight, during the building of these ships. Multiple ships of the class have suffered damage to the bow structure, and repairs/reinforcements are in progress class-wide,” Gilmore wrote.
“The reinforcement of the bow structure does not expand the SOE but should allow full use of the ship, within the original SOE, without risk of damage.”

The report includes images of damaged bows and notes that the first four ships in the class have already been repaired and reinforced. That effort, though, adds 1,736 pounds to the ship, which means the fuel tanks cannot be completely filled if the ship were also fully outfitted with troops and their gear. Overall, Gilmore writes that the extra weight equates to a loss of 250 gallons of fuel, or 854 nautical miles in range.

Regarding the generators, Gilmore wrote that “the ship’s electric power is supplied by Fincantieri-manufactured SSDGs, which are failing at a much greater rate than predicted. There are two SSDG’s per catamaran hull for a total of four. At least one must be operational in each hull to avoid an operational mission failure. The SSDGs were singled out in the IOT&E report because of their high failure rate, demonstrating a Mean Time Between Failure (MTBF) of 208 hours.”

Gilmore recommends that the Navy “continue aggressively determining the root cause of ship service diesel generator casualties and fixing them fleet-wide.”

More broadly, the report repeats its concerns about the EPF operating in heavy wave and wind conditions. In discussing the ship’s capability and operational portfolio, the report notes that “the operational restriction of the SOE (Safe Operating Envelope) is a major limitation of the ship class that must be accounted for in all missions. To utilize the speed capability of the ship, seas must not exceed Sea State 3 (significant wave height up to 1.25 meters). At Sea State 4 (significant wave height up to 2.5 meters) the ship must slow to 15 knots. At Sea State 5 (significant wave height up to 4 meters) the ship must slow to 5 knots. Above Sea State 5, the ship can only hold position and await calmer seas. The necessity of avoiding high sea states while transiting is an operational limitation that could be significant.”

Despite these limitations, the fleet has used the new ship class extensively this year. USNSSpearhead (T-EPF-1) participated in Africa Partnership Station earlier this year, then transited to the U.S. Southern Command area of operations in support of Southern Partnership Station, Navy spokesman Lt. Cmdr. Tim Hawkins told USNI News.

USNS Choctaw County (T-EPF-2) conducted an intra-theater lift of Marine Corps personnel and equipment for Southern Partnership Station in June and recently departed for Bahrain to participate in Middle East operations, Hawkins said. And Millinocket
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in August and has since remained in the Pacific to participate in other partnership building exercises.

During these international engagements, the ships transited the Atlantic and Pacific oceans unescorted and had no mishaps during transit or once in theater due to high sea states, Military Sealift Command spokesman Nathan Potter told USNI News.

“There have been no mishaps, however, as with any new class of ships there are unforeseen issues that arise and need to be addressed as we learn more about these capable ships,” Potter said. “For example, the need to reduce transit speeds or navigating around adverse sea/weather conditions – in order to avoid higher sea states – could be an operational limitation to consider, especially in an extremis situation.”

Potter added that sea states are a concern for all ship types but that the concern in the case of the EPF is mitigated by the ships’ intended operating environment.

“Note that the EPF ship class is intended to operate closer to shore in austere ports (i.e., littorals) and not in blue water operations,” he said, though open ocean transit issues could delay the ship’s arrival to that austere port.

The DOT&E report does not place any limitations on EPF operations and notes that it is considered operationally effective at its primary mission – intra-theater troop and cargo transfer – but makes recommendations to add to the utility of the ship in secondary mission sets.

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Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
DOT&E: JHSV Effective At Intra-Theater Transport But Challenged In Other Missions
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October 16, 2015 1:50 PM • Updated: October 16, 2015 2:16 PM
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The Military Sealift Command joint high speed vessel USNS Millinocket (JHSV 3) arrives in Vietnam on Aug. 17, 2015. US Navy photo.

The Joint High Speed Vessel faces several challenges in high sea states that led to difficulty transferring cargo at sea, deploying SEAL Delivery Vehicles and maintaining high ship availability,
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from September.
.
I think the money quote in this article is:

Article said:
The Navy was already aware of the ramp’s sea state limitations and has devoted science and technology resources to developing a ramp for operations in Sea States 3 and 4.

The article punctuates the fact that the existing Ramp cannot operate effectively or reliably at sea above Sea State 1. but the Navy knew this going in and that particular issue is already being worked on to get a ramp on the vessels that will operate in Sea States 3 and 4.

I believe they will be successful.

The JHSV is a new ship design, and these types of fixes to one degree or another are always necessary on new designs.

we will see similar things on the Zumwalts, the Fords, etc. as they are initially tested. And there will be elements that will trump these things as if though the design is therefore a failure somehow.

But these things do not mean they are a failure. Short of some fatal structural flaw, these things are just a part of making a new design fit in all conditions for naval use at sea.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
I totally agree Jeff. Remember that the now EPF was adopted by the Navy not designed specifically for it. It was originally the two Hawaii Super Ferries leftover from when a private company tried to open Ferry service across all the main Hawaiian islands but was run out of business by the EPA.

These ships were built to transport cars and people from island to island over a comparatively calm conditions.

When the Navy picked them up they came as a established design, a design that has proven itself very effective in a number of missions that relate to its core function of a roll on roll off vehicle and personal transport system from port to port.

Now the Navy is getting ambitious with the project goals. So they have to go back to the drawing board to adapt it to there mission wants. The ramp was designed for rolling off vehicles in a port, the Marines want to be able to deploy amphibious landing vehicles into the sea that demands a new ramp and the navy has known that for a while.

The power plant was designed for a civilian passage, a short trip back and forth between the same two points the navy doesn't operate like that so changes will be made.

That's just the way it is, but this is already a very successful program and the platform is already proving more flexible than anyone could have thought.
 
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strehl

Junior Member
Registered Member
I was under the impression the MLP (or whatever they call it now) was designed to offload large navy T-AKE and RO-RO ships so the cargo could be distributed to beach transport craft like LCAC or helicopters. Wasn't the JHSV originally operated by the US Army and later transferred to the Navy? The fact they are now trying to use the MLP with the JHSV means they are pushing the MLP concept onto different/smaller ship classes.

 

strehl

Junior Member
Registered Member
Hmm. Should have done some more searching first.

"The Interface Ramp Technologies project is a Future Naval Capability product developed by the Office of Naval Research. The ramp is intended to enable the transfer of vehicles between a Joint High Speed Vessel (JHSV) and a Mobile Landing Platform (MLP), as well as the Improved Navy Lighterage System (INLS). It is designed to work in conditions up to Sea State 3 (waves up to 4 feet, 1 inch) by flexing in response to ship motions-a significant improvement over current JHSV ramp capabilities. The ramp would allow transfers without the need for a pier or protected port. By providing this ability to interoperate and exchange materials, personnel and equipment between the JHSV, MLP and INLS, the flexibility and speed of the JHSV could be more fully realized. A full-scale land based demonstration of the developed technologies has been conducted using a high performance motion platform."


This video was posted in July 2014. I would guess it is still in development.
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
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Milwaulkee-01.jpg

Naval Today said:
The US Navy accepted delivery of the future littoral combat ship, USS Milwaukee (LCS 5) during a ceremony at the Marinette Marine Corporation shipyard Oct. 16.

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, USS Milwaukee is the sixth littoral combat ship to be delivered to the Navy and the third of the Freedom variant to join the fleet.

Delivery marks the official transfer of LCS 5 from a Lockheed Martin-led team to the Navy. It is the final milestone prior to commissioning, which is planned for Nov. 21 in its namesake city.

Following commissioning, Milwaukee will be homeported in San Diego with sister ships USS Freedom (LCS 1), USS Independence (LCS 2), USS Fort Worth (LCS 3), USS Coronado (LCS 4) and the future USS Jackson (LCS 6).

LCS is a modular, reconfigurable ship, with three types of mission packages including surface warfare, mine countermeasures, and anti-submarine warfare.
 

GreenestGDP

Junior Member
FA-18 Hornet fighter crashes
near RAF Lakenheath
Pilot dies

The fighter went down in farmland north west of
the base as it was returning to the US via Britain from Middle East



FA-18C--crash--1.jpg


FA-18C--crash--1a.jpg


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Rest In Peace.
 
... and updating again:
USAF in ‘Final Closing Phase’ of Bomber Contract

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... and again:
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Where, oh, where has
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? Where, oh, where can it be?

The Pentagon has scheduled a briefing with Air Force acquisition head Bill LaPlante for tomorrow, but that doesn’t mean the bomber contract is going to be announced any time soon.

Soon is the operative word. Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee James used it at last month’s annual Air Force Association conference. The announcement would come “soon,” she said. To keep reporters happy — who kept pestering her and Laplante for more information about the program — she promised to hold some sort of briefing for us. LaPlante used soon at the same conference. The Air Force deputy for acquisition, Lt. Gen. Arnold Bunch, told the House Armed Services seapower and power projection subcommittee on Sept. 29 he “hoped for” a decision “in a couple of months.” He told them LRSB “is a case, sir, where we need to go slow to go fast.” LRSB is a one of the top three priorities for the service, as we’ve heard for at least three years. We all know substantial work has been done on the aircraft and on its engines, but we don’t know how much because almost everything associated with it is classified.

We don’t really expect many new details from tomorrow’s briefing (though a reporter can always be surprised). Industry isn’t chatting. Neither the Boeing-Lockheed team nor Northrop Grumman will utter nary a word about the program. For the most part they won’t even speculate about when the contract award will be announced.

So just why is the bomber announcement, which was supposed to happen by late summer, hanging in the wind? Spending on this program is projected to be around $20 billion through 2020 and the program is likely to consume as much as $80 billion of taxpayer’s dollars, so it is no small thing to be waved off. Pentagon acquisition head Frank Kendall oversees the board which governs the Air Force’s (RCO). The RCO, not the service’s traditional acquisition corps, is charge of the program. Kendall and LaPlante have met and discussed the program several times in the last six months.

Possible reasons for the delays to the program announcement?

The Air Force and the Office of Secretary of Defense worry that announcing a winner just before Congress
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for the rest of 2016 would leave the program in limbo and leave the contractors hanging. This could well be considered a new start and those are not allowed under congressional rules when a CR passes — unless Congress grants an exemption. And no one, least of all Congress, has any idea what that august body will do until Republicans decide what to do about their speaker.

Congress has expressed skepticism about spending on the program, with
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trimming $460 million from the $1.25 billion request because of the delayed contract award. It also includes language requiring a report on the Technology Readiness Levels “of the technologies and capabilities critical to the Long Range Strike Bomber aircraft.” Breaking D readers will remember that Frank Kendall
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in our interview with him.

The Boeing-Lockheed team can afford to wait, although the costs of the design team it has to keep intact until a winner is announced are probably pretty steep. Boeing only makes roughly one third of its revenue from defense and Lockheed is almost twice the size of its next defense competitor. Northrop Grumman, viewed as the incumbent for its work on the B-2 bomber, is extremely eager for a decision. An $80 billion-plus program award to the single smaller company that depends on defense for three-quarters of its revenue looms large.
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"shield in place":
...
... related:
US Carries Out First Live BMD Intercept in Europe
Shrouded in North Atlantic mist, a US destroyer Tuesday carried out the first live intercept of a ballistic missile target in Europe as part of an integrated air and missile defense demonstration that included ships, aircraft and personnel from nine nations.

The guided-missile destroyer Ross launched an SM-3 Block IA guided interceptor missile at a short-range Terrier Orion ballistic missile target launched on the UK’s Hebrides Range, northwest of Scotland, according to the US Navy. The exo-atmospheric engagement took place simultaneously with the launch of two anti-ship cruise missiles fired at the coalition task group. The destroyer The Sullivans, in the air defense role, launched SM-2 missiles to engage the inbound cruise missiles.

On the scene were frigates and destroyers from six nations, including Canada, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway and Spain, along with the US. The UK and US provided aircraft, and Germany added personnel to the combined task-group staff. The partner frigates also used Aster-30 missiles in the exercise.

The Dutch frigate De Zeven Provincien and Spanish frigate Blas de Lezo tracked the target and provided cueing information to the Ross. Ships from both classes previously have traveled to Hawaii to participate in similar ballistic missile defense tests on the Pacific Missile Test facility at Kauai.

The test was carried out under the Maritime Theater Missile Defense Forum, an entity established in 1999 that includes Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain, the UK and the US.

In a statement, Adm. Mark Ferguson, commander of US Naval Forces Europe-Africa, said that “the execution of the live-fire exercise is a clear demonstration of the forum's ability to safely conduct effective coalition sea-based defense against simultaneous anti-ship and ballistic missile threats within an operational scenario.”

The exercise, he said, “demonstrates the commitment of the United States to the defense of Europe through our Aegis ships and our shore station in Romania, as well as the professional performance of our allied sailors.”

The Ross is one of four US BMD-capable destroyers forward deployed to Rota, Spain. The Sullivans is a Florida-based ship on deployment to the US Sixth Fleet.

The US has been expanding its BMD coverage in Europe both afloat and ashore. The Aegis Ashore installation at Deveselu, Romania, based on the configuration of a US Navy cruiser, is expected to become operational later this year, armed with SM-3 Block IB missiles to provide ballistic missile coverage of southern Europe, according to the US Missile Defense Agency. The installation is part of a US European BMD strategy called the Phased Adaptive Approach (PAA) Phase II. A similar installation in Poland is expected to become operational in 2018 as part of PAA Phase III, armed with SM-3 Block IB and IIA missiles to support the defense of northern Europe.

The test carried out Tuesday marked a number of first-time events, according to the US Navy, including:

  • The first intercept of a ballistic missile target in the European theater.
  • First SM-3 fired on a non-US range.
  • The first firing of an SM-2 and SM-3 on the Hebrides Range.
  • First use of multinational beyond-line-of-sight link architecture for integrated air and missile defense (IAMD) purposes in the European theater.
  • The first international ship (Netherlands and Spain) transmissions of BMD cues to a US BMD destroyer.
  • The first time coalition IAMD was used in a scenario with simultaneous attack from anti-ship cruise and ballistic missiles.
The US Navy said that in addition to the Forum nations, personnel from Denmark and Japan watched the missile intercept from on board the Sixth Fleet flagship Mount Whitney.
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