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FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Well ok ;) and i have read use torpedoes with a more big range they have wings as SBU-39 by example.
 

Jeff Head

General
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Zumwalts-both.jpg

Bangor Daily News said:
BATH, Maine — After a four-day “fast cruise” in October, the first-in-class DDG 1000, the $7.5 billion USS Zumwalt, is scheduled to leave Bath Iron Works for sea trials early next month.

The “fast cruise” began Oct. 12 and included four consecutive days of continuous operations conducted at the shipyard, in order to test the crew and key systems of the ship, according to an internal BIW release obtained by the Bangor Daily News.

“The fast cruise was a major event to evaluate readiness of the ship to get underway and was hailed as a big success by our customers and shipyard observers,” BIW Director of Test & Trials Steve Colfer said in the release.

The first “fast cruise” was “designed to exercise and flex all ship systems under a variety of scenarios, including casualty exercises, to observe our crew’s ability to recover,” the release stated. “While equipment and systems have previously undergone lengthy testing, this was the first demonstration of the continuous operation of all systems required in underway operations.”

A second “fast cruise” is scheduled for mid-November, according to the internal release, and it “will emphasize bridge control and interactions, validate specific watch transitions, run additional casualty events and complete additional test scenarios.”

Shipyard spokesman Matt Wickenheiser declined to comment on the fast cruises or sea trials, but said instead, “The men and women of BIW have been working hard on the final phase of our test and activation on DDG 1000, the lead ship of the Zumwalt class, and we’re all looking forward to sea trials. We anticipate we’ll learn a lot as BIW employees put the ship through its paces at sea, as we always do with a new ship — particularly so with a lead ship.”

The USS Zumwalt’s first sea trials will be a seven-day “shake down” that could begin as soon as Dec. 7, Assistant Secretary of the Navy Sean Stackley told
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.

Throughout the weeklong sea trials, the USS Zumwalt will return to Portland Harbor several times to pick up and drop off officials, and it will then return to the Bath shipyard with plans to head for its homeport of San Diego next year.

The new Zumwalt line of “stealth destroyers,” all three of which are being built in Bath, has been plagued with cost overruns and production delays, mostly related to the need to work out bugs with new weaponry and guidance systems. The Zumwalt line was originally introduced to replace the Arleigh Burke class of destroyers, which the Navy has used since the 1980s. However, when cost projections for the Zumwalt line spiked, the Navy chose to stop the Zumwalt line at three ships and restart construction of Arleigh Burke-class destroyers.

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than anticipated, and itis slated for completion in May 2016, about 20 months later than initially expected, according to an October report by Bloomberg. The overall cost of the three ships has increased by 37 percent — to $12.3 billion — since 2009,
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.

This is pretty exciting news.

And going to sea on December 7th is an important symbolic move for the US Navy.

Anyway, I am very excitied to see this happen, and look forward to what are bound to be GREAT pics of this vessel at sea.
 
just found Boeing’s KC-46 Tanker Completes Key Flight Tests
Boeing’s KC-46 Tanker recently completed aerial refueling initial airworthiness, the latest step on the road to full air refueling capability.

The test plane’s 20th flight on Thursday marked the completion of a series of flight tests that validated the plane’s initial airworthiness to conduct aerial refueling operations, Boeing spokesman Charles Ramey told Defense News.

The team conducted what is called “free air stability” testing and worked to validate the plane’s aerodynamic model during the flights, Ramey said.

The initial airworthiness validation is the first of two major milestones necessary for the new tanker to conduct its core mission, aerial refueling, according to Boeing spokeswoman Caroline Hutcheson.

The next step is “fuel dock” testing, in which the test team validates the fuel transfer control functions, she said.

The latest news is yet another sign that Boeing’s KC-46 is on track after several significant delays. First flight, which was achieved Sept. 25, was postponed repeatedly since 2014. The latest delay was caused when a mislabeled chemical was mistakenly loaded into the aircraft’s refueling line during testing.

Boeing is planning for a Milestone C decision, formal approval from the Pentagon for production, between January and April 2016. The company must deliver 18 full-up tankers by August 2017.

Soon after completing fuel dock, Boeing will begin conducting full refueling flight tests with six kinds of receiver aircraft, including another KC-46, Ramey said.

“It is positive progress and a major block complete in getting us to the first refueling flights that support Milestone C,” Ramey said.
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kwaigonegin

Colonel
The guided-missile submarine USS Ohio (SSGN 726) moors alongside the submarine tender USS Emory S. Land (AS 39). You can see two SDVs piggybacking on her.

S4I0lS8.jpg
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
The guided-missile submarine USS Ohio (SSGN 726) moors alongside the submarine tender USS Emory S. Land (AS 39). You can see two SDVs piggybacking on her.

S4I0lS8.jpg
I had the privilege of going aboard the USS Ohio twice.

Once during the refit of the vessel into a SSGN. I got to meet a number of officers, including the CO and senior enlisted level personnel on that visit and see a lot of the ongoing work, from the changes to the launch tubes (including the first two which were made into lockout chambers for the SEALs to access those delivery vehicles) and on the command deck, where a WHOLE lot of electronics work was going on to upgrade the systems and fire control to handle the new weapons and mission.

Neat stuff..

The second time was a few years later, after the refit was complete. On that visit I got to visit with the XO and several senior enlisted personnel. Also saw everything in a complete condition. Really cool transformation from the SSBN to the SSGN role.

Great boat, and a very good, talented, and capable crew.
 

kwaigonegin

Colonel
I had the privilege of going aboard the USS Ohio twice.

Once during the refit of the vessel into a SSGN. I got to meet a number of officers, including the CO and senior enlisted level personnel on that visit and see a lot of the ongoing work, from the changes to the launch tubes (including the first two which were made into lockout chambers for the SEALs to access those delivery vehicles) and on the command deck, where a WHOLE lot of electronics work was going on to upgrade the systems and fire control to handle the new weapons and mission.

Neat stuff..

The second time was a few years later, after the refit was complete. On that visit I got to visit with the XO and several senior enlisted personnel. Also saw everything in a complete condition. Really cool transformation from the SSBN to the SSGN role.

Great boat, and a very good, talented, and capable crew.
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
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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.
 
kinda alarming Report: Navy and Marine Corps Strained to Breaking Point; Second Forward Carrier in the Pacific Could Help
Faced with insatiable demand for resources for a fleet that is already overworked and under-maintained, the Navy and the Marine Corps need to ease the strain on the services or risk “breaking the force,” according to a new report from the
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released on Wednesday.

“The Navy and the Marine Corps are providing the maximum forward presence — or exceeding the forward presence — they can sustainably provide based on the service’s own readiness models,” co-author of the report Bryan Clark told reporters on Tuesday in a conference call.
“That [operational tempo] that results is wearing out the force and the fleet faster, and you’ll see further impacts on the personnel side, especially as this continued high OPTEMPO starts to wear down a generation of sailors and Marines.”

While authors Clark and Jesse Sloman have uncovered little not already known to naval observers, their study collects hard numbers outlining the Navy and Marine Corps presence problems.

For example, the Navy has maintained a deployed presence of about 100 ships consistently since 1998 despite the fleet falling by 20 percent (to about 271 ships). That level of demand required surface ships and nuclear carriers to forgo maintenance to meet the demand of the regional combatant commanders — in large part to serve requirements for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The Navy, in particular, has attempted for the last several years to claw back from a maintenance deficit from overly extended carrier deployments but has been stymied by sequestration reductions in defense spending due in part to the Budget Control Act of 2011.

“The backlog culminated in late 2015 with a Persian Gulf ‘carrier gap’ between the departure of the USS Theodore Roosevelt and the arrival of the USS Harry S. Truman. A second carrier gap will occur in the Pacific in 2016 and gaps will reoccur intermittently in both theaters until 2021, when the USS Gerald R. Ford becomes operationally available,” read the report.

On Tuesday Clark said the service has found t
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it has set aside for the carriers post-deployment wasn’t enough time to get the ships ready and cascaded into additional maintenance backlogs.

“Maintenance is really driving the problem. With the carriers we’re finding that [seven months] really isn’t enough time to do the maintenance between deployments,” he said.

The Navy is currently working to create a more predictable model for carrier strike group — a 36-month maintenance, deployment and readiness cycle called
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. The Navy has argued that by putting maintenance at the beginning of the cycle, the ships will be able to stay in the yard the for the full scheduled maintenance period — whereas today, a ship might have its deployment extended, which gets it into the yard late and often means work gets skipped to stay on schedule.

The recently departed Truman CSG deployment is the first to operate under the plan that promises seven-month deployments, a six-month maintenance cycle and a 15-month readiness period in which the crew and flyers of the CSG would maintain their skills in the event they would need to deploy quickly in an emergency.

However, Clark said that the OFRP’s 15-month readiness period is an expensive concept, and the Navy has to cut funds for sustainment periods in similar deployment schemes in the past.

“The Navy hasn’t been really paying for [sustainment],” Clark said.
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The report did offer some suggestions to mitigate the strain of the current status quo of overworked ships, sailors and Marines.

“The options that are available to them are either building more ships or a larger force — which may not be fiscally possible. You could expand forward basing. Get more readiness out of each individual ship by increasing OPTEMPO,” Clark said.

Notable among the report’s suggestions on how to increase presence without breaking the back of the fleet was to forward deploy a second carrier to the Pacific to ease the burden of the sending ships from the West Coast to patrol the region.

The Navy could consider moving a second carrier to the Pacific to operate in conjunction with the forward deployed USS Ronald Reagan (CVN-76) and sharing berthing space at Yokosuka, Japan.

“Japan would be the best option to add a second carrier, if you wanted to do it quickly,” Clark said.
While adding an additional carrier forward isn’t a new notion and one the Navy isn’t currently studying, the study has piqued the interest of some in Congress.

“The report illuminates the utility of deploying an additional forward-based carrier in the Pacific theater. You really cannot ignore the benefits, both for the Asia-Pacific and for the Middle East and Mediterranean maritime hubs,” a Senate staffer told USNI News.
“The Navy, U.S. Pacific Command [PACOM], Congress and our allies like Japan who could potential host another carrier are going to have to think really hard about exploiting this opportunity.”

In addition to another forward deployed carrier, the report suggested the Navy find ways to both moderate COCOM demand and offer commanders different options that would stress the force less.

The Navy has been exploring the use of so-called alternative force packages designed to augment the capabilities of existing ships and create non-traditional naval options for the COCOMs. For example, the Navy’s surface forces are exploring using more surface action groups for high-end military presence missions instead of a much larger carrier strike group.

“Maybe these alternative force packages would have the effect of reducing the demand signal [from the COCOM], maybe these alterative changing it from one size fits all to an a la carte menu,” Clark said.
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