Littoral Combat Ships (LCS)

dtulsa

Junior Member
Thanks looks like the Perry's proved to be pretty good after all I ultimately think the new ship's probably will also at least I hope so time will tell
 
Here's a great video of high speed operations during LCS-5 Trials. ...
... well the power installed on LCSs is similar to that on WW2 Battleships! (from what I recall, it's about the same as on the Roma) ... what's going in the red ellipse in here:
IvDjB.jpg

please?
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
... well the power installed on LCSs is similar to that on WW2 Battleships! (from what I recall, it's about the same as on the Roma) ... what's going in the red ellipse in here:
IvDjB.jpg

please?
That's sea water being forced back up through the anchor chain hole.

When in heavy see, or making very rapid transits like this...that can happen...and does on many vessels.
 

Jeff Head

General
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1280px-USS-Freedom-130222-N-DR144-174-crop.jpg

Naval Today said:
The Lockheed Martin team officially laid the keel for the U.S. Navy’s fifteenth Littoral Combat Ship (LCS), the future USS Billings, in a ceremony held at Fincantieri Marinette Marine in Wisconsin, Nov. 2.

Ship sponsor Sharla D. Tester completed the time-honored tradition and authenticated the keel of Billings (LCS 15). Mrs. Tester had her initials welded into a sheet of the ship’s steel, which will be mounted in the ship throughout its entire service.

Billings is a Freedom-variant LCS that will be designed and outfitted with systems to conduct a variety of missions. The industry team building Billings has delivered three ships with seven others in various stages of construction and testing. The future USS Milwaukee (LCS 5) will be commissioned in Milwaukee on November 21.

The first LCS, USS Freedom, completed a U.S. Navy deployment in 2013, and USS Fort Worth (LCS 3) is in the midst of her 20-month deployment to Southeast Asia.

Production is ramping up for these vessels, both the Freedom and the Independence variety at Marinette Marine in Wisconsin, and at Austal in Alabama. Each site has 3-4 under construction at any one time and is working toward launching two each per year over the next few years...which will mean four LCS per year.

A total of six have been acquired by the US Navy to date, with a total of ten launched to date.
 
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does anybody know how big the crew was?
Navy Swaps Crew on Forward Deployed LCS USS Fort Worth
The last crew for the Freedom-class Littoral Combat Ship USS Fort Worth (LCS-3) deployment to Singapore has taken control of the ship, according to a Monday release from the Navy.

“The turnover marks the end of a deployment for Crew 102, which frequently worked with other navies in South and Southeast Asia through a variety of exercises and joint patrols,” read the statement.

Now the 100 sailors assigned to LCS CREW 101 will operate Fort Worth for the last third of its first U.S. 7th Fleet deployment. The second crew swap is the Navy’s first expression of the service’s 3-2-1 deployment scheme for the Littoral Combat Ships — three crews split the manning between two ships, one of which is forward deployed.

“Under the 3-2-1 plan, baseline LCSs are to be deployed for 16 months at a time, and crews are maintain a greater percentage of the baseline LCS force in deployed status at any given time than would be possible under the traditional approach of maintaining one crew for each baseline LCS and deploying baseline LCSs for six to eight months at a time, “read a recent Congressional Research Service report on LCS.

CREW 102 participated in several regional training exercises as part of the Navy’s second LCS forward deployment to the Western Pacific with forces from The Philippines, Malaysia, Cambodia, Indonesia and Bangladesh.

The ship originally deployed from Naval Station San Diego, Calif. in late 2014 for the 16 month deployment following USS Freedom (LCS-1) in 2013 and 2014.

With two-thirds of the 16 month deployment completed, Fort Worth has had less setbacks than the Freedom with fewer complications and casualty reports (CASREPS).

Following the current deployment, the service expects to send two LCS to the Changi Naval Base next year and four ships by 2017 —
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Jeff Head

General
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does anybody know how big the crew was?
Navy Swaps Crew on Forward Deployed LCS USS Fort Worth

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Well, it says that the incoming crew, Crew 102, is 100 personnel.

Unless Crew 101 had other operational or testing and evaluation requirements that required more personnel for what they were tasked to do, I would expect that they were the same size.

Conversely, Crew 102 could have requirements that required more crew members for operational or other duties during their rotation.

Short of something like that, where the operational or other requirements between the two crews and what they are expected to accomplish differed, I would expect the 100 crew of Crew 102 replaced the 100 crew of Crew 101.
 

plawolf

Lieutenant General
For forward deployed ships, especially short ranged, small ships like the LCA, would it not make sense to deploy slightly more personnel than needed to crew the ship to cover for things like illness/injury, holidays and other absenteeism?

I know that normally ships a crewed to take such inevitable crew downtime into consideration to make sure the ships can continue operating without having to return to port for replacements.

However, as I said, given the small size of the LCA, and its relatively short range (and short deployments) compared to larger warships, would it not make more sense to remove some of the built in on-ship crew cover and just set up a rota so you have your "just in case" crew remain on shore while the ship goes to sea with a smaller complement?

That should help save costs and also give the crews more flexibility.
 

Jeff Head

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8676047055544083508_11n.jpg

Naval Today said:
The U.S. Navy has announced that commissioning of its newest Freedom-variant littoral combat ship, USS Milwaukee (LCS 5), would take place on Saturday, Nov. 21 during a ceremony on Milwaukee’s waterfront.

Milwaukee, designated LCS 5, honors the city of Milwaukee and is the fifth U.S. ship in the nation’s history to be named in honor of Milwaukee.

Wisconsin Senator Tammy Baldwin, will deliver the ceremony’s principal address. Sylvia M. Panetta, wife of former Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta, is serving as the ship’s sponsor.

The LCS class consists of two variants, the Freedom variant and the Independence variant – designed and built by two industry teams. The Freedom variant team is led by Lockheed Martin (for the odd-numbered hulls, e.g. LCS 1). The Independence variant team is being led by Austal USA (for LCS 6 and the subsequent even-numbered hulls) and was originally led by General Dynamics, Bath Iron Works (LCS 2 and LCS 4).

The LCS seaframes will be outfitted with reconfigurable payloads, called mission modules (made up of mission systems and support equipment), which can be changed quickly. These modules combine with crew detachments and aviation assets to become complete mission packages, which will deploy manned and unmanned vehicles and sensors in support of mine countermeasures, anti-submarine warfare, or surface warfare missions.

This is the sixth LCS vessel acquired by the US Navy...three of each variant.

Next year the program really kicks into gear with four vessels being commissioned (two of each variant)...and that will continue, four per year, for several years to come.
 
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