Posted on 01/11/2006 4:53:40 PM PST by SandRat
The U.S. Navy will commission the USS San Antonio, lead ship of the latest class of amphibious ships, at 11 a.m. CDT, Jan. 14, 2006, at Naval Station Ingleside, Texas.
Former President George H. W. Bush will deliver the ceremonys principal address. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison will serve as the ships sponsor and will give the first order to "Man our ship and bring her to life!"
Capt. Jonathan M. Padfield of Salt Lake City, Utah, is the ships first commanding officer and will lead a crew of 360 officers and enlisted personnel. The ship is capable of embarking a landing force of up to 800 Marines.
Built by Northrop Grumman Ship Systems, the USS San Antonio is 684 feet in length, has an overall beam of 105 feet, a navigational draft of 23 feet and displaces about 25,000 tons. Four turbo-charged diesels power the ship to sustained speeds of 24 knots. As a member of the U.S. Atlantic Fleet, the USS San Antonio will be homeported in Norfolk, Va.
The USS San Antonio is the lead ship in the Navys new LPD 17 class that will serve as the functional replacement of four amphibious ship classes, LPD 4, LSD 36, LST 1179 and LKA 113, that have reached or are nearing the end of their service life.
The ship will provide greatly improved warfighting capabilities including: an advanced command and control suite; increased lift capacity with substantial increases in vehicle and cargo carrying capability; and advanced ship survivability features. The ship supports the Marine Corps "mobility triad," the Landing Craft Air Cushion vehicle, the Expeditionary Fighting Vehicle and the MV-22 Osprey tiltrotor aircraft, making this class a critical element of tomorrows amphibious ready groups and expeditionary strike groups.
The new design also features the latest in command, control, communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities with dedicated intelligence, mission planning, and command and control spaces. The USS San Antonios shipboard wide area network is a fiber optic shipwide large area computer network, which will support numerous operations including combat systems, ship systems, command and control nodes, and an integrated training system.
This expeditionary warship class will be the most survivable amphibious vessel ever put to sea. The ship's automated combat system includes a highly capable sensor suite and weapons that provide a robust self-defense capability. The San Antonio's design reduces its radar cross-section signature by streamlining topside design and incorporating other advanced technologies.
The USS San Antonio also features the advanced enclosed mast/sensor system (AEM/S) that replaces conventional masts, protecting radar and communications antennae from weather and reducing the ships vulnerability to detection by hostile radar. The AEM/S, the defining feature of the ships distinctive profile, is the largest composite material structure ever installed on a U.S. Navy steel ship.
Furthermore, the USS San Antonio incorporates the latest quality of life standards for the embarked Marines and sailors, including the sit-up berth, ship services mall, a fitness center and learning resource center/electronic classroom. The ship has the flexibility to accommodate a mixed-gender crew and embarked troops.
Reduced operational costs and an improved capability to periodically insert advanced technology over its planned 40-year service life were also essential design objectives for LPD 17. Accordingly, the design team incorporated hundreds of suggestions and recommendations received from sailors and Marines during formal review sessions in a "Design for Ownership" process to ensure that these ships will meet their needs throughout the first half of the 21st century.
GATOR NAVY TO GET A NEW SHIP.
mighty big flag!
She is a beautiful vessel!!!! Very nice-looks fast and, I hope, capable!
Click the URL in reply#1 and read on to get a jaw dropper.
Isn't this the ship that, about six months ago, was described as so problem-plagued and bug-riddled that it might never be able to enter full service as a combatant?
Article from the Navy Times by chance?
Nope an Official DOD News Release
Yeah, but shoudn't it be at the stern?
Is there something in particular that I should pay attention to? I am generally unfamiliar with the class of ships she is replacing (having spent my time only on "bird farms") so she seems pretty fast and big, but I don't know if it is a quantum leap...
My tax dollars well spent. Thank you American Military for keeping my freedoms and my family safe!!
Can also be flown from a gaff
10 knots was about as fast as the old ships could go, think of all those WWII movies about landing craft being lowered over the side to give you an idea.
Actually, I was thinking more of comparing it with the Austin class or Whitby Island class, which it doesn't seem much different from (apart from that rolling airframe missile thingy...:)
But a nice looking vessel nonetheless. Any vessel that can take 900 US Marines and a boatload of their gear and vehicles is tops on my list...
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