US Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


1280px-USS_Mount_Whitney_(LCC.jpg

gCaptain said:
The U.S. Navy has confirmed that a fire broke out on board USS Mount Whitney (LCC 20) while the ship was in Viktor Lenac Shipyard in Rijeka, Croatia this past Friday, with the extent of damage still unknown.

The Navy said the fire occurred July 31 and lasted about 45 minutes before it was extinguished by the shipboard fire suppression systems and shipyard firefighters. No personnel were injured in the incident.

The cause of fire and extent of damage are under investigation, the Navy said.

USNI News reported that the fire originated in a diesel generator space during testing, according to a Navy official.

Mount Whitney has been in Viktor Lenac Shipyard since January 2015 undergoing a scheduled maintenance overhaul designed to extend the service life of the ship to 2039. The Navy said previously that the USS Mount Whitney is scheduled to depart the shipyard later this summer.

Mount Whitney is a Blue Ridge-class command and control ship that forward-deployed to Gaeta, Italy and operates with a combined crew of U.S. Navy Sailors and Military Sealift Command civil service mariners. The civilian mariners perform navigation, deck, engineering and supply service operations, while military personnel support communications, weapons systems and security. It is one of only two seaborne Joint Command Platforms in the U.S. Navy.

This appears to be fairly minor in terms of damage...but we will have to wait and see what the US Navy reports.

She was about complete with the overhaul and was going to go back to see within the next few weeks.

I am kind of surprised that such a significant (8+ month) overhaul was done there in Croatia..
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


00000000000000000000 aboard Ford-1.jpg

Huntington Ingalls Shipyard said:
Newport News August 3, 2015 - Huntington Ingalls Industries reached a major milestone on the aircraft carrier Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78) today as the ship's crew moved aboard and ate its first meal prepared in the galley. The first-in-class carrier is in the final stages of construction and testing at HII's Newport News Shipbuilding division.

"This is a rewarding time for the shipbuilders who have worked for the past six years to complete the systems and compartments needed to support the crew as they move aboard," said Rolf Bartschi, Newport News' vice president, CVN 78 carrier construction. "The ship we are building will be their home and will serve the Navy and the nation's need in defense of our country for the next 50 years."

Ship's Sponsor Susan Ford Bales helped serve a meal of prime rib, crab legs, shrimp, salmon and a 7-foot-long cake made to look like an aircraft carrier. The galley and associated messing areas were redesigned for Gerald R. Ford and future Ford-class carriers, offering a new layout that provides more space and greater efficiency for sailors as they prepare for meals. The serving lines and messing areas are arranged to offer significant quality-of-life improvements compared to Nimitz-class carriers.

"This is the tipping point for Ford," said Capt. John F. Meier, CVN 78's commanding officer.

"Currently pierside in Newport News, we have water under our hull, and 1,600-plus sailors are eating, sleeping and working aboard. Our crew is fully aligned with Newport News Shipbuilding in executing the test program to deliver Gerald R. Ford next spring."

Ford is designed to house a crew of up to 4,660 sailors who will benefit from quality-of-life improvements in the ship's design. Compared to Nimitz-class carriers with berthing units that sleep up to 200 sailors, Ford will have quieter berthing areas sleeping no more than 86 people. Each berthing features an adjoining washroom. Sailors will also have access to separate recreation areas, multiple gymnasiums and more air conditioning.

00000000000000000000 aboard Ford-2.jpg

15372301503_da65a9e57a_c.jpg


17701260504_b9d69492b2_c.jpg
 
U.S. Navy uses Raytheon's SM-6 to Destroy Ballistic Missile Target for the First Time
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

navyreco, you also put this related, interesting info on your Facebook Profile, I thought you would post it here as well, but since you didn't ...
Lockheed Martin Aegis Combat System Successful in Air Warfare & Ballistic Missile Defense Test

The latest iteration of the Aegis configuration for destroyers, called Baseline 9.C1, also includes the most current generation of ballistic missile defense programming, known as BMD 5.0 CU. The MMW events were designed to verify performance of recent BMD upgrades. Over the course of the four MMW events, Aegis flawlessly detected, tracked, and engaged two Ballistic Missile and two air warfare targets. Each event resulted in the successful intercept of a single target.

This test series also marks the first endo-atmospheric (lower atmosphere) engagement of a Ballistic Missile target to demonstrate a Baseline 9.C1 capability. This capability allows Aegis to engage ballistic missiles in their terminal phase—as they re-enter the endo-atmosphere—which is the last opportunity to intercept the warhead before it reaches its target.

“Each generation of the Aegis Combat System adds new capabilities to keep pace with emerging threats, and these tests were really designed to demonstrate the compatibility of new BMD capabilities with the entire system,” said Paul Klammer, Lockheed Martin’s director of the Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense program. “Tremendous credit goes to the crew of USS JOHN PAUL JONES, who really put forth a great effort under challenging test conditions to demonstrate the extraordinary capabilities their ship can bring to defending our nation.”

Aegis Baseline 9 provides the U.S. Navy surface fleet with the most advanced air defense capability ever. Under the Baseline 9 configuration, Aegis merges BMD and anti-air warfare into its Integrated Air and Missile Defense (IAMD) capability using commercial-off-the-shelf and open architecture technologies.

The central component of the Lockheed Martin-developed Aegis BMD Combat System is the SPY-1 radar, deployed on more than 100 ships worldwide— the most widely fielded naval phased array radar in the world. SPY-1 capability has been greatly enhanced with the introduction of a new Multi-Mission Signal Processor (MMSP). Together, the Aegis system, MMSP and SPY-1 radar provide the U.S. and allied nations with advanced surveillance and an unprecedented IAMD capability.

As Aegis Combat Systems Engineering Agent, Lockheed Martin leads the ongoing development of the weapon system for the U.S. Navy and Missile Defense Agency. Lockheed Martin pioneered the open-architecture software design of Aegis and each new program developed for Aegis becomes part of the Aegis Common Source Library, which allows the U. S. Navy and Missile Defense Agency to affordably and efficiently re-use and upgrade Aegis programing across a variety of defense platforms.

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
 

Miragedriver

Brigadier
Military Sealift Ship Runs Aground near Okinawa
The U.S. Navy and Japanese authorities are working to refloat a Military Sealift Command vessel after it ran aground Thursday off the coast of Okinawa.

The USNS Sgt. Matej Kocak, an 821-foot long, 50,000-ton prepositioning ship designed to carry supplies and ammunition in support of American ground troops, ran aground off the island’s east coast at 11:30 a.m., according to a Navy release. The ship is located some six nautical miles from the coast of Uruma.

None of the ship’s 127 civilian crewmembers were injured in the incident, according to the release. All remained on the ship.

An early assessment found no hull leaks and no damage to the surrounding area, the release stated. Tugboats were on scene to stabilize the vessel and further assess the situation.

Ship groundings can cause significant damage to ship hulls, propellers and surrounding infrastructure.

Military Sealift Command operates as the Navy’s logistics arm, providing fuel, ammunition and underway replenishment to ships at sea. Civilian mariners crew MSC ships, and a civilian master is in charge of all ship maneuvers, even when military detachments are on board.


Back to bottling my Grenache
 

strehl

Junior Member
Registered Member
I thought JAGM was dead but apparently Lockheed just won the contract to enter engineering/manufacturing development. Raytheon did not receive a contract. It's fuzzy on whether this is a full blown missile contract or one to install a dual mode seeker into the existing Hellfire. This Jane's article indicates it is a full up missile but the Hellfire legacy is clear so it may still be something of an upgrade program. The new seeker combines millimeter wave active radar plus a semi-active laser tracker.

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
This might help.
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

The Lockheed Martin Joint Air-to-Ground Missile (JAGM) multi-mode guidance section offers enhanced performance on tomorrow’s battlefield. Our multi-mode seeker provides an improved semi-active laser (SAL) sensor for precision-strike and a fire-and-forget millimeter wave (MMW) radar for moving targets in all-weather conditions. These new sensors have been integrated into our JAGM guidance section and mated with our AGM-114R missile bus and demonstrated during multiple guided flight tests.

Fire-and-forget engagement modes significantly increase JAGM user survivability against threat defenses in GPS denied and austere communications environments. JAGM can engage multiple stationary and moving targets, in the presence of adverse weather, battlefield obscurants and advanced countermeasures. Laser and radar guided engagement modes allow JAGM users to strike accurately across wide target sets and reduce collateral damage. JAGM’s target sets include moving and stationary armor, air defense units, patrol craft, artillery, transporter erector/launchers, radar sites and C2 nodes in addition to bunkers and other structures in urban and complex terrain.

The modularity of Lockheed Martin’s proven, low-risk JAGM design ensures continued affordability in support of the Army’s incremental acquisition strategy and the Department of Defense Better Buying Power initiatives.

Our Continued Technology Development (CTD) qualified hardware is built on active production lines by the same team that has produced over 65,000 HELLFIRE and LONGBOW missiles with a reliability rate exceeding 97%.
right now the aim is a common missile for the AH64E, AH1Z, MQ1 series as well as armed versions of the H60,H1Y V22 and C130
there was Talk of a program for a common missile between These platforms and fast movers like the F35, FA18, F15E and F16 but it seems to have disappeared
 

Scratch

Captain
With these programs and the numbers involved, I wonder if it can't be economical to also produce a single mode seeker. One that only packs the improved SAL, which should still be rather cheap. And then the Dual Mode one with the rather expensive (I guess?) active MMW radar.
For years I'v had the same thoughts about the british Dual Mode Brimstone.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
since you mentioned it I personally would love it if the US DOD adopted a US Made Brimstone. It already mates with or can be mated to All the Helicopters and Drones the US Makes and Has been proven on fast movers like the Hornet and is slated for comparability with Lightning II it would just need to be worked to fit V22, AC130 and LCS missions.
 

Miragedriver

Brigadier
USA Dropped a Safe Nuclear Bomb in Nevada - F-15 Launching a Brand New B-61 Bomb
Published on Jul 21, 2015

READ the description please: USA have dropped (from a F-15 strike eagle) a safe ( which means no nuclear and explosive warhead inside, a dummy bomb in other words) B61-12 nuclear bomb in the Nevada test and training range (Nellis AFB) during June 29 and July 1 2015 for testing the precision of this brand new nuclear bomb.

The nuclear bomb B61 was during two decades the most widely used nuclear weapons in the United States . It's as free-falling bomb design and was stationed in large numbers in Europe since 1968. The B61 is (with the exception of the model 7) considered as a " tactical nuclear weapon "bomb in the arsenal of the US Armed Forces .

The new model is the B61 Mod. 12 (B61-12) for the F-35 Lightning II in development because their inboard electronics than can not communicate with the existing versions of the B61 bomb. The new modification should be in proportion to the F-35 and largely based on the B61 Mod. 4, but also include components of other versions. The B61-12 will gradually replace the otherB61 models, with the exception of Mod. 11 that can be used by all nuclear carrier aircraft of the USAF and the NATO allies. The cost of the B61-12 program in 2012 is 6 billion USD and is 50% higher than the estimation in 2011.



Back to bottling my Grenache
 
Top