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Tam

Brigadier
Registered Member
The collision happened at night on the ocean with little lighting other than what the ships themselves provided. So in the eyes of startled sailors on the ship even a smaller sized vessel might seem large, I wonder if the Taiwan Coast Guard managed to take more accurate readings of the ship in question, radar signature or night sight photos would be helpful.

It is said to be a Type 073A landing ship.

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asif iqbal

Lieutenant General
What strange design

They have the exhaust on the back deck

This would have been a great LPD like the Bay class if they didn’t have the silly looking exhaust on the back deck, no deck utilisation in mind here

Why not just put it right in the middle

sG2lHhp.jpg

iwbUjrT.jpg
 

Blitzo

Lieutenant General
Staff member
Super Moderator
Registered Member
What strange design

They have the exhaust on the back deck

This would have been a great LPD like the Bay class if they didn’t have the silly looking exhaust on the back deck, no deck utilisation in mind here

Why not just put it right in the middle

sG2lHhp.jpg

iwbUjrT.jpg

Shichang was converted from a ro-ro ship, it wasn't built as a dedicated naval ship.

It's not dissimilar to RFA Argus in their respective roles as well as their configuration, and they are quite appropriate designs for their given roles.

Ships like Shichang and Argus are not intended to be LPDs.
 

lcloo

Captain
PLANS 82 Shichang is a modular multi-role ship. In PLAN it is known as National Defence Mobilisation ship. Its role changes from time to time. The ship has been in PLAN service since 1996.

Installing hospital module
1004251634f5ec1f17b6cd9415.jpg

Transporting type 022 missile boat
FAC_82_25_61282.jpg

2019 Current role : Navy Cadet Training ship.
82 jkld.jpg
 

Blitzo

Lieutenant General
Staff member
Super Moderator
Registered Member
But you do agree that with little modification the ships capability can be optimised

Moving the funnel would be a pretty major structural modification.

Given the role of the ship it probably isn't worth the cost or effort, considering how many other ships suitable for larger scale aviation operations China has.


For its purpose the configuration it has is fine.
 

SpicySichuan

Senior Member
Registered Member
related to Yesterday at 7:31 PM
now noticed
Destroyer USS Wayne E. Meyer Sails Past Fiery Cross, Mischief Reefs in Latest FONOPS
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I've already heard China, understandably, denied Qingdao visit to (probably)
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is
Beijing hits out as US sends warship past two disputed reefs in South China Sea for the first time
  • Guided missile destroyer sails close to Fiery Cross and Mischief reefs, where China has military installations
  • PLA warns ‘all necessary measures’ will be taken to defend territorial claims
Updated: 3:01pm, 29 Aug, 2019
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China condemned a US naval patrol near disputed reefs in the South China Sea and called on Washington to stop infringing upon its sovereignty.

On Wednesday, the guided missile destroyer USS Wayne E. Meyer sailed within 12 nautical miles of Fiery Cross and Mischief reefs, China’s two biggest artificial islands in the disputed Spratlys. Other US vessels were nearby.

It was the first time an American warship had challenged two Chinese military outposts at once in a “freedom of navigation” operation.

On Thursday, Senior Colonel Li Huamin, spokesman of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) Southern Theatre Command, accused the United States of “acting as a hegemony in ignorance of the international laws and rules” and urged Washington to stop its “provocative actions” to avoid an “unpredictable incident”.

He said the PLA Navy and Air Force shadowed, identified, monitored, warned and expelled the destroyer.

“Our troops will [take] all necessary measures to resolutely defend national sovereignty and security and firmly safeguard the peace and stability in the South China Sea,” Li said.

Reann Mommsen, a spokeswoman for US 7th Fleet, said its forces operated in the Indo-Pacific region on a daily basis, including the South China Sea.

“All operations are designed in accordance with international law and demonstrate that the United States will fly, sail and operate whatever international law allows,” she said.

China lays claim to most of the South China Sea, an area rich in resources and through which trillions in trade passes each year. It has occupied the Paracel Islands, built up seven islands in the Spratlys, and assigned significant military forces to them.

The US Navy has sent ships into waters around the Chinese-controlled islands and reefs almost on a monthly basis since the end of last year “to challenge excessive maritime claims”.

Chinese and US warships regularly have encounters in the South China Sea, where Beijing also has territorial disputes with Asian neighbours.

The latest patrol comes amid rising trade and geopolitical tensions between Beijing and Washington.

It also follows China’s rejection of a request by a US naval vessel to make a port call at Qingdao in eastern Shandong province. Earlier in the month, Beijing also rejected a port call request for two US warships to visit Hong Kong.
details of how
"the PLA Navy and Air Force shadowed, identified, monitored, warned and expelled the destroyer"
could of interest
 
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