US Navy DDG 1000 Zumwalt Class

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
by Zumwalts' shape?? (as far as I know, the first "stealth-shaped" class was the La Fayette, mid 1990s)

Exact first generation but yet before Burke get some arrangements despite their " lattice mast " with Multi bars/support is a very bad thing for RCS, true stealth have integrated radars, antennas in a stealth mast, small antennas but sometimes remains a visible long antenna as on Aquitaine Class but few wide.
 
The next class of combatants. Already influences are visible in ships across the world.
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according to NavalToday
Raytheon updates on US Navy Zumwalt destroyers
Raytheon Company, the mission-systems equipment integrator for the DDG 1000 Zumwalt-class destroyer program, has updated the status of their works as the ships progress toward delivery.

USS Zumwalt, or DDG 1000, the nation’s first Zumwalt destroyer set sail for the first time on December 7, 2015 for initial sea trials. You can watch the video of the ship’s first sail
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According to Raytheon, the systems that the company developed performed well during DDG 1000’s Alpha Trials, which is a week-long, at-sea exercise that demonstrated key ship capabilities, including the Total Ship Computing Environment and engineering control systems.

TSCE provides all shipboard computing applications, including the combat management system; command, control, communications, computers, and intelligence elements; ship and machinery control systems; damage control; embedded training; and support system.

Raytheon provides electronic and combat systems for the three-ship class with recent program milestones advancing critical mission systems of the Zumwalt class.

Raytheon’s onsite Ship Integration and Test team continues to work in close collaboration with the Navy and the shipyard, supporting ongoing installation, integration and testing in line with construction progress. DDG 1001’s program accomplishments include activation of TSCE-driven engineering controls and data center which support the Hull, Mechanical & Electrical phase of the program.

The integrated system was tested during sea trials, demonstrating more than 200 continuous hours of operation. Navigation and bridge activation is also complete.

More than 330 hours of training have been completed with the sailors of the DDG 1000 Pre-Commissioning crew, covering ship control system, TSCE operation, the integrated ship plan, combat systems overview and the fundamentals of the ship mission center.

DDG 1001 has had initial equipment installed while equipment deliveries continue in synch with ship installation and integration schedule.

When it comes to DDG 1002, Raytheon was awarded a $255 million contract modification for remaining mission systems equipment for the third ship of the class on December 31, 2015.
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I put one part in boldface:
Navy considers railgun for a Zumwalt-class destroyer
Development of a futuristic weapon depicted in video games and science fiction is going well enough that a Navy admiral wants to skip an at-sea prototype in favor of installing an operational unit aboard a destroyer planned to go into service in 2018.

The Navy has been testing an electromagnetic railgun and could have an operational unit ready to go on one of the new Zumwalt-class destroyers under construction at Bath Iron Works.

Adm. Pete Fanta, the Navy's director of surface warfare, has floated the idea of foregoing the current plan to put a prototype on another vessel this year and instead put it directly on future USS Lyndon B. Johnson, though no final decision has been made.

"The Zumwalt-class is one of a number of options being explored for the electromagnetic railgun," said Lt. Cmdr. Hayley Sims, a Navy spokeswoman. "Due to the size, weight and power requirements, some platforms will be better suited for the technology than others."

Railguns use electricity instead of gunpowder to accelerate a projectile at six or seven times the speed of sound — creating enough kinetic energy to destroy targets.

It's literal whiz-bang technology that holds the possibility of providing an effective weapon at pennies on the dollars compared to smart bombs and missiles.

There has been talk since the inception of the Zumwalt program that the massive destroyers would be a likely candidate for the weapon because of its power plant. The USS Johnson will be the third and final destroyer in the Zumwalt class.

The 600-foot-long warship uses marine turbines similar to those that propel the Boeing 777 to help produce up to 78 megawatts of electricity for use in propulsion, weapons and sensors. That's more than enough juice for the railgun.

If it's placed on the warship, the system could replace one of the forward turrets housing a 155mm gun that fires rocket-propelled projectiles.

For now, however, the official plan remains for the railgun prototype to be tested aboard a joint high speed vessel this year. But there are concerns that the plan may be pushed back into 2017, and Fanta suggested skipping it altogether.

The railgun, along with laser weaponry, are two futuristic technologies that Fanta said have evolved from being a matter of scientific research to one of practical engineering.

The Navy is interested in those weapons — along with smart munitions that can improve existing naval guns — because of their low cost as well as lethality.

"The Navy is determined to increase the offensive punch of the surface warships," said Loren Thompson, a defense analyst at the Lexington Institute. "To do that with a limited budget, it needs to look at everything from smart munitions to railguns to lasers."

The railgun discussion isn't widely known inside the shipyard.

Bath Iron Works, a subsidiary of General Dynamics, had no comment.

Shipbuilder Charles Davis said there was talk of a railgun when the yard began work on the first ship in the class, but he said there's been no discussion since then.

"They've been pretty tight-lipped about it," he said.
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means nothing
Repairs Made to New Destroyer Zumwalt
?
The technologically-advanced destroyer Zumwalt underwent propulsion repair work in mid-January, the US Navy confirmed Tuesday.

“The ship's hull was cut above the water line to enable the most effective means of conducting repair work on one of 12 propulsion motor drives,” said Capt. Thurraya Kent, spokesperson for the Navy’s acquisition directorate.

Kent couldn’t say precisely what the problem was, but she and other officials stressed that hull cuts are relatively routine to gain access to significant internal systems.

“The work took place in the weeks following initial trials and was done in parallel with the activation of propulsion systems,” Kent added. “The overall impact to the propulsion system was minor.”

The Zumwalt is in the final stages of fitting out at the General Dynamics Bath Iron Works shipyard in Bath, Maine. The 610-foot-long ship, first of a three-ship class, features an unusual tumblehome hull form to enhance stealth qualities, and is powered by an integrated electrical propulsion system driven by gas turbines and advanced induction motors.

The ship went to sea for the first time on Dec. 7 to conduct initial builder’s sea trials, and operated along the Maine coast for nearly a week before returning to Bath on Dec. 13. A second round of sea trials was tentatively scheduled for late February, but the Zumwalt has not been back to sea since the first round.

Results of those first sea trials, Navy officials have said, were generally positive.

The Zumwalt “successfully completed her first at-sea trials in December and is readying to return to sea next month,” Sean Stackley, the Navy’s top acquisition official, told Congress on Feb. 25.

“The ship is progressing well and is on track to complete trials and delivery later this spring,” Kent said Tuesday.

At least one more round of builder’s trials is expected before the Navy’s Board of Inspection and Survey comes aboard to carry out acceptance trials. Should those prove successful, the Navy will take ownership of the destroyer. A formal commissioning ceremony at Baltimore, Maryland will then take place before the ship heads west to her permanent home port of San Diego, California.
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Bernard

Junior Member
A little more bad news for the Zumwalts
New External DDG-1000 Mast Reduces Ship’s Stealth From Original Design
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March 3, 2016 12:10 PM
ddg_1000_mast.png


A newly revealed configuration of sensors set for next-generation destroyer Zumwalt (DDG-1000) could make the ship less stealthy than originally intended, several naval experts told USNI News on Wednesday.

According to a new artist’s concept of the configuration from the service, the three ships in the Zumwalt-class will position sensors originally designed to be embedded in the ships’ composite deckhouses on a mast positioned on the front of the deck house, with several more sensors on either side of the deck house.

The change will sacrifice some of the benefits of the composite deckhouse design, conceived to make the ship harder to detect by an enemy’s radar. The antennas for the sensors would have been mounted on the superstructure much like the flush antennas on the U.S. fleet of stealth aircraft.

USS_Zumwalt_DDG-1000_1.jpg

An artists rendering of Zumwalt’s original design prior to the Nunn-McCurdy restructure showing the original sensor configuration on the deckhouse.

Instead, to save weight and cost, the antennas will be installed on the outside of the superstructure, Naval Sea Systems Command told USNI News.

NAVSEA provided USNI News of a description of the changes, saying the Zumwalt-class would still perform within the Navy’s requirements for the stealth of the ship.

“The current DDG-1000 topside configuration is a performance and weight improvement and cost-avoidance initiative. This configuration adds a mast to the forward part of the deckhouse and relocates several communications systems including Ultra High Frequency (UHF), Very High Frequency (VHF), data link and the wind sensor from the deckhouse to the mast,” read the statement.
“This configuration will be present on all three ships and provides improved performance redundancy, cost avoidance and weight reduction, while still meeting Key Performance Parameters (KPP) requirements for Radar Cross Section (RCS).”

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The starboard view Zumwalt DDG-1000 from a Dec. 7, 2016 underway. US Navy Image

The RCS is a measure of stealth. The lower a RCS, the smaller a ship or aircraft appears on radar.

(For example, the Lockheed Martin F-22 Raptor is said to have the RCS of a “steel marble,” from certain angles.)

The original design of the ship would have had a much smaller RCS, but cost considerations prompted the Navy over the last several years to make the trades in increasing RCS to save money, Bryan Clark, naval analyst Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments (CSBA) and former special assistant to past Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Jonathan Greenert, told USNI News on Wednesday.

However, he said, the design still meets the minimum requirements for what the Navy asked for in its initial DDG-1000 requirements – the “threshold,” in acquisition speak.

“[The RCS] is still lower than their threshold but higher than it could have been,” Clark told USNI News on Wednesday.

Retired Navy captain and naval analyst Chris Carlson told USNI News that mast bore a resemblance to the configuration on the Arleigh Burke guided missile destroyers (DDG-51).

Several sources told USNI News the changes to the mast were a direct result of a downscale in capabilities the service made to the ship class following a 2010 Nunn-McCurdy restructure – a federal law that requires the Defense Department recertify a program after costs have increased of 25 percent per unit above the original estimate. The program tripped the legislation when the Department of Defense cut the program to three hulls from seven, spiking the price-per-unit.

DDG-1000_glass_ship.jpg
As part of the Nunn-McCurdy restructure, the Navy shed capabilities – like canceling the ship’s S-band volume search radar– on the hulls to bring the cost down on the $22.1-billion, three-ship program.

Other cost-saving choices have trickled out later, like
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The first ship – Zumwalt – is set to start a round of builders trials later this month ahead of a delivery of the ship’s hull to the Navy from shipbuilder General Dynamics Bath Iron Works (BIW) later this year.

Following delivery, the ship will complete the outfitting of its combat system in San Diego.

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