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China Debuts Aegis Destroyers
SIGNAL: AFCEA Official Publication ^ | July 2005 | James C. Bussert

Posted on 07/08/2005 10:27:26 AM PDT by spetznaz

A coastal force extends its reach and capabilities.

The People’s Liberation Army Navy recently introduced two domestically designed and built guided missile destroyers that include Aegis-type radars and related technologies. Known as Project 052C guided missile destroyers (DDGs), the ships feature Aegis-type phased array panels, vertical launch systems, long-range missiles and considerable command and control. These capabilities were not found on any previous Chinese-built DDGs.

The design of a lead ship with prototype Aegis radar, combat direction links and a vertical launch system (VLS) into a small 6,600-ton hull is an ambitious development. The smallest U.S. Navy Aegis ship with VLS is the 8,400-ton Arleigh Burke-class DDG 51. Russia had its Aegis-equivalent Sky Watch system only on 30,000-ton aircraft carriers. The nine years of sea test development prior to the U.S. Navy’s first installing Aegis on the warship USS Ticonderoga CG 47 indicates the complexity and the engineering effort necessary to build a successful Aegis system. The fact that the Soviet Union gave up on an Aegis system after years of frustrating problems on two warships also shows the extreme difficulties.

China is building only two 052C ships, and the next ship under construction will have a different Aegis and VLS suite. Even so, the mere existence of People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) warships with long-range phased array radar, communications to other naval assets and over-the-horizon ship-to-ship missiles (SSMs) complicates planning by other naval powers for the Taiwan Straits or other disputed Pacific Ocean waters.

The first sea platform for the U.S. Navy Aegis was the trial ship USS Norton Sound AVM-1 in 1974. The first warship full-up four-panel Aegis system was on the Ticonderoga in 1983, which had 50 meters between the fore and aft deckhouse arrays. The first Aegis destroyer with the single deckhouse array SPY-1D was the 8,400-ton Arleigh Burke lead ship in 1989. More than 50 DDG 51-class ships have been built in this highly successful and constantly upgraded class of warships. All cruiser and destroyer SPY-1 variant antennas are 3.7 meters in diameter and measure 13.5 meters vertically, and they have an F-band frequency of from 3100 to 3500 megahertz.

In 1988, the Soviet Union installed its first Aegis-type Sky Watch on two full-deck aircraft carriers. Each of the four square-plate phased array antennas measured about 5 meters in diameter, and their frequency was estimated to be F-band at about 850 megahertz. This is similar to the Top Plate radar that was mounted on previous Soviet carriers for long-range detection. The port array was 60 meters forward from the starboard array.

The Soviets seem to have had considerable trouble in exercises with their Gorshkov phased array radar, as mechanical scanning Top Sail/Top Pair radars replaced it on the next Soviet carrier, the Tblisi. Sea operations attempting to successfully target incoming threats using external ship or aircraft platforms also seem to have failed.

China’s first 6,600-ton missile destroyer with an Aegis-type four-plate phased array antenna is the Lanzhou DDG 170 launched in Jiangnan Shipyard in April 2003. The DDG 171 followed six months later. Their undesignated Chinese radar is different from the Aegis or Sky Watch phased array radars. This radar is C-band instead of L- or F-band, and it has convex curved arrays instead of flat panels. The four arrays are 4.6 meters high x 3.9 meters wide, and they face out from the forward deckhouse as on the U.S. DDG 51. China reportedly has purchased two advanced Russian phased array radars for a follow-on larger air defense DDG 103 ship that is under construction at the Dalien shipyard. The short one- or two-ship production runs are a trademark of post-Luda DDG designs.

When the U.S. Navy installed its first MK 41 VLS on the Ticonderoga-class Aegis cruiser CG-52 in 1989, it featured 64 missile cells forward and 32 cells aft. The MK 41 VLS cells launch multiwarfare missiles. The first Russian VLS trials were with SAN-6 missiles on the fourth Kara cruiser in 1977, and the 8,000-ton Udaloy DDG had eight SAN-9 VLS hatches. Both SAN-6 and SAN-9 VLS systems featured round modules with eight cells each and had a large unique Top Dome or Cross Sword acquisition and guidance fire control director and radar/datalink.

The PLAN DDG 170 and 171 feature six HHQ-9 VLS launcher modules forward of the bridge and two aft by the helicopter hanger. At first glance the Chinese VLS launcher looks like the Russian VLS, but there are major differences. The Chinese VLS modules each have two fewer cells than the original Soviet VLS, and the Russian VLS has only one hatch, as eight cells with blow-out patches rotate under it to launch. The rationale that the Russian eight-cell modules were too large for the smaller Chinese DDG hull does not seem valid because the diameter of the Russian module is only 1.5 feet larger than the Chinese module. Possibly, China used S-300 missiles, and Russia provided no naval SAN-6 equipment.

The Chinese VLS has a hinged hatch above each cell and launches each with no rotation needed. China uses a cold launch technique, as does Russia, which eliminates the complex smoke and flame ducts required by the U.S. Navy’s MK 41 VLS. A PLAN experimental ship has been testing a new VLS that has rectangular hatches similar to the MK 41, and this may be on the next-generation DDG 103 being built in Dalien.

China does not have a large dedicated SAN-6 Top Dome fire control radar near the VLS launchers. The Aegis phased array radar could provide search, and a small antenna near the VLS also could provide X-band acquisition and control links. The smaller guidance and tracking G-/H-band antennas that also have been found on Top Dome radars are located as stand-alone links fore and aft. A small radome is adjacent to fore/aft VLS launcher modules alongside the close-in weapons system, and this is usually covered by canvas in photographs. Several radomes are located fore and aft for satellite communications or non-VLS links or search functions. A very large radome atop the bridge mast may be a Type-364 multipurpose air search, surface search and targeting radar.

The usual PLAN antisubmarine warfare suite would be Italian triple antisubmarine warfare torpedo tubes and 12-barrel Type-75 mortars. Their locations on these new ships are not obvious from initial photographs. Almost certainly a French DUBV-23 bow-mounted sonar dome is under the raked bow. The fully automatic 100-millimeter gun turret on the bow is evolved from the French Creusot-Loire.

A pair of new 30-millimeter seven-barrel close-in weapons systems looks like Dutch Goalkeeper mounts, but the Netherlands claims it did not export the Goalkeeper to China. It appears that China has heavily modified the I-band Goalkeeper antenna, which also appeared on prior Project 052B DDGs. The Chinese designation for this close-in weapons system is Type-730.

The DDG 170 has 36 forward vertical launch system hatches along with a 100-millimeter copy of the fully automatic French Creusot-Loire gun mount. A Luda upgrade first installed rectangular YJ-81 SSMs in 1999, and this has continued through the YJ-81s on new DDGs. The large Russian Bandstand radome supports SSMs with a 250-kilometer-range I-band active radar and a 450-kilometer-range multiband passive radar. China’s DDG 107 has six new round-tube-shaped SSM launchers of slightly larger diameter than earlier C-803 SSMs. This indicates a more modern, longer range version of the C-805 (YJ-85) or a newer Russian supersonic SSM.

Taking full advantage of Aegis requires effective datalinks. The concept for the Naval Tactical Data System (NTDS) was outlined in a NATO study in 1955. Three NATO ships were the testbeds for prototype NTDS in 1961, and they operated together for years of development trials. Link 11, also called TADIL-A, was a high frequency (HF) and ultrahigh frequency (UHF) digital encrypted data bus. Later, wideband Link 16 UHF with 10 times the speed was added with antijam frequency hopping included.

Soviet NTDS concepts, such as integrated communication links, first appeared on Kara and Kresta II. The Bell Crown system, which was replaced by the newer Bell Thumb in 1993, was the original Soviet Link 11. The Light Bulb antenna serves the Link-16 Joint Tactical Information Display System (JTIDS) role, which would be replaced by newer AT-2M for Link-16 traffic. Russia has the expected surface-ship-to-aircraft and missile guidance datalinks. Light Bulb and Bandstand were datalinks to the SS-N-22 SSM on PLAN Sovremenny-class ships purchased from Russia.

The first Chinese tactical communication links with characteristics similar to NTDS were observed on the 4,200-ton Luhu-class DDGs in 1991. Initial TAVITAC CDS installations took place on the DDG 105 in 1987, and other Luda models in 1987 could have tried the concept. The PLAN link frequencies of 225 megahertz HF and 400 megahertz UHF are the same frequencies NTDS uses and may be part of the Chinese tactical datalink system designated HN-900.

Western vendors have provided Chinese aircraft with the MIL-STD 1553B data bus, which now has been installed on new 052 DDGs. China has used a Type-W datalink provided by France to non-NATO export customers that is similar to TADIL-A. Sovremenny and Ka-25 helicopters are equipped with the A-346Z secure datalink in addition to HF, very high frequency (VHF) and UHF radios. The newest frigates and DDGs 168, 169 and 170 have the HN-900. The HN-900 probably includes some of these foreign datalink technologies. The Russian Light Bulb datalink is positioned above the DDG 170 helicopter hanger, and Bandstand provides coordinated operations between the Russian navy using Chinese datalinks.

A Soviet 1950-vintage A-band Knife Rest early warning yagi radar antenna is aft. This antenna was not on 052B or the Luhu, but it was on the Luhai and 1990-vintage Luda upgrades and Jiangwei frigates. This seems to hint a weakness in the Aegis, which normally should perform such detection.

The Chinese Aegis DDGs have their own Ka-25 helicopters that can have distant reconnaissance or targeting capabilities and possibly can even carry missiles, although the Aegis concept is to pass target data to the control ship that would launch its weapons. Long-range shore-based fighter aircraft such as the Su-30MKK with its M400 over-the-horizon multispectral reconnaissance pod can pass target data back or can even be vectored to attack with its own long-range 3M80 Moskit missiles by the control ship. The early Su-27SK had an analog voice-encoding link, but the newer Su-30MKK has a TKS-22 datalink. China is negotiating with Russia to equip future Su-30 MK2 aircraft to include the next-generation TSIMSS-1 digital datalink. The DDG 107 would need the appropriate Sukhoi-variant link.

Long-range maritime patrol aircraft (MPA) variants of Tu-154- or Y8-converted An-12 are excellent reconnaissance assets with direct links to the Aegis control ship. Soviet naval MPA used R-837 and R-807 for long-range communications, and the R-802 was the UHF command radio—all of which are on PLAN ships. China has limited ocean reconnaissance satellite capability, but it is known to intercept and utilize data from other nations’ satellites, including those of the United States. Other non-Aegis warships can be good over-the-horizon data sources as long as they have the appropriate datalinks. They could even be shooters if targets are within their missile range. Naturally, the Sovremminy, the Luhu and the Luhai are the best consorts, but other frigates or Luda destroyers also could be used if necessary.

A key element required for an integrated Aegis capability is a shipboard local area network (LAN) and common display consoles shared by a sensors and computer/control station. The U.S. Navy has had several generations of workstations on its Aegis ships.

Soviet ships had primary Second Admiral force command consoles and subordinate Second Captain own-ship warfare area consoles. These were used on large Soviet cruisers such as the Slava and the Kirov prior to the appearance of Sky Watch.

Chinese combat system architecture is less visible, and open literature sources do not directly describe it. A photograph in a working space on the Luhu showed several identical consoles being manned by technicians, and this was not seen on earlier stovepipe sensor and weapon equipment. The consoles do not look like any units seen on Soviet or French products, and they may have been designed and produced by Chinese electronic plants. Possible vendors are the Jiangsu Automation Research Institute, which is known to make rugged naval computers and displays, and Huanwei Technology, which makes Ethernet switches, routers and fiber optic datalinks.

As on the U.S. Aegis ships, such systems can retain many of the original hardware cabinets, but the unique display console might be replaced with a standard shared console including open architecture LAN access. China’s choice of a LAN could be a Russian GOST standard or a Digibus LAN used on French TAVITAC CDS aboard recent PLAN ships. Ethernet or MIL-STD 1553 already are used in avionic and army systems and easily adapt to naval equipment, which supports interoperability of forces. Display console software operating systems likely would be commercial standard versions such as Windows or VX Works that are in production in China.

James C. Bussert is employed at the Naval Surface Warfare Center, Dahlgren, Virginia, where he works on surface-ship antisubmarine fire control systems.


TOPICS: Editorial; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: aegis; armsbuildup; china; chinese; chinesemilitary; chinesenavy; miltech; navy; phasedarray
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To: SierraWasp

What were you saying about not being clever?...Don't underestimate your (potential) enemy.


61 posted on 07/08/2005 7:07:00 PM PDT by lewislynn ( Is calling for energy independence a "protectionist" act?)
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To: spetznaz; rbmillerjr

Good catch. I was looking for where the US gave China Aegis technology. It appears to be similar technology to the Aegis, but not the same.


62 posted on 07/08/2005 7:08:33 PM PDT by stainlessbanner
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To: Kuehn12
If the Clinton's are guilty of sending Aegis technology to the Chinese than they are guilty of treason.

Read the article. It clearly states that the ships have a Russian phased array radar system. It's use of the word Aegis is confusing.

63 posted on 07/08/2005 7:09:43 PM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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To: Tallguy

Invasion of Taiwan?

China doesn't have enough landing craft or amphibious carriers.

Any opposition, at all, by the US Navy, would have the Chinese calling off any invasion.


64 posted on 07/08/2005 7:15:49 PM PDT by Nabber
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To: Non-Sequitur
I made the guess already, I was reacting to a few posts that blamed the Clinton for the Chinese advancements as though the Chinese were incapable of advancement on their own.
65 posted on 07/08/2005 7:17:08 PM PDT by Kuehn12 (Kuehn12)
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To: BIGLOOK

ping


66 posted on 07/08/2005 7:17:47 PM PDT by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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To: Steve Van Doorn
I grant you that Carter may have been inept, but I can't say I was to young to make a judgment. I became political aware during the latter part of the last Reagan administration.
67 posted on 07/08/2005 7:21:38 PM PDT by Kuehn12 (Kuehn12)
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To: spetznaz

I hope the Commies spend all their cash and build 100 of them. Nice easy targets for our Missiles. Radar is great, it tells you how many missiles are coming to kill you. But you can always shoot more missiles faster than the ship can respond too. Go China.

See the Movie Deterrence.


68 posted on 07/08/2005 7:25:38 PM PDT by TomasUSMC (FIGHT LIKE WW2, FINISH LIKE WW2. FIGHT LIKE NAM, FINISH LIKE NAM.)
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To: Non-Sequitur

Is it me or is the use of frequencies, Nato names and ELNOTS in this article really pushing the classification edge?


69 posted on 07/08/2005 7:40:59 PM PDT by Wristpin ( Varitek says to A-Rod: "We don't throw at .260 hitters.....")
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To: spetznaz
It what these ships don't have will have them destroyed in two minutes.

Vampires can kill you. Also, there are different types of stealth and detection technologies that a fleet system must have.

They must have anti-ship-missile capability. Otherwise, this is just a target ship for the first 5 or 6 incoming missiles.

And there are other threats besides sea skimming missiles.

Even a theoretical high flying missile they could not stop. Such a missile might deploy 5 or 6 guided bombs from 50,000 feet a mile away.

And the combination of 5 or 6 incoming sea skilling missiles and 5 or 6 high flying missiles leaves few alternatives.

Vampire attack was something that was used in the cold war in the 1980's.

The US has both Aegis Cruisers, Destroyers, and also frigates, besides aircraft carriers as well as other ships.

A high flying E2C or AWACS could monitor the attack and aid it at a stand off distance, as well as perhaps unknown UAV's.

And that does not even begin to introduce what has to be done for ECM.

Then another type of sea skimming missile could be launched that drops a torpedo at a standoff distance.

Now you have underwater threats, high altitude threats, and ultra low altitude threats.

And then that does not even take into account other types of sneaky ways to attack the rapidly sinking Chinese Junk.

(I wonder why they call Chinese boats junks?)

70 posted on 07/08/2005 7:47:39 PM PDT by topher (One Nation under God -- God bless and protect our troops)
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To: Calpernia
Thanks Calpernia! Interesting ship.....interesting battle!
71 posted on 07/08/2005 7:50:43 PM PDT by BIGLOOK (I once opposed keelhauling but recently have come to my senses.)
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To: Kuehn12
"I grant you that Carter may have been inept, but I can't say I was to young to make a judgment."

Oh, I was kinda young when Alexander the great made his way to Asia but I still think he was a military genius.

72 posted on 07/08/2005 8:35:00 PM PDT by Steve Van Doorn
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To: Kuehn12

I am with you. FR needs more respect for differing opinons and a more civil discussion of issues.

Hang in there, stick to the facts and don't let the wolf packs who try to seek and destroy dissent, get to you.


73 posted on 07/08/2005 8:54:01 PM PDT by staytrue
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To: Paul Ross

...which is what those serial numbers would be good for, I would think.

Have wondered if in these G8 and other bigwig meetings, our guys don't casually spread the word, unofficial-like, that notes belonging to X party are not considered to be transferrable, hinting along the way that any actions taken by X percieved to be an attack/attempt against our country could result in our not honoring the markers "X" holds against us.

Of course, such an act would be against the spirit of fiduciary objectiveness which supposedly is built into the system... part of the reason the US Economy is the biggest and most solid on the planet is the faith that we guarantee (as much as can be...) those bills. Such an act would no doubt shake that guarantee with obvious results.

But such acts have also happened, and in the recent past, and been conducted by countries who've endeavored to place their financial standing on the same footing/trust as the United States. Think France defaulting on debt to the US post WWII (other countries may have as well, i think). Yes, I know, using France is a terrible example, but it did happen, and absent the affects of the vichy social-economy experiment (certainly a different topic) we do business with them, they have an economy, conduct loans/investment abroad and in their country.

If anything, today's information world has resulted in one key change: higher levels of education/knowledge about how the world works than ever before, for example seeing a middle-class now become an investor class (previously a small and guarded elite).

These people not only understand better the intricacies of economies and investment, but the underlying premise of what makes an economy run. At their most basic level, economies run on trust. This trust is most obviously displayed in the faith an investor/loaner has that his investment will be treated in good faith.

This "good faith" is a two way street - the beneficiary of the investment must trust the loaner enough to know that the loan "won't be called in" before the previously agreed-upon schedule - and that's what a Tnote does.

If the Chicoms or anybody else thinks that they've got us by the short ones by holding so much of our paper, and think they can damage us by calling in the marker, well they'd be correct; there would be damage... but it cuts both ways, and they would suffer the larger gash.

I think today's middle-class investors, huge in numbers if not individual accounts, know this two-way trust relationship, and know it better than all those talking heads (who seem to only focus on one aspect of this trust). If the chinese get funny, Joe six-pack will know why... and ultimately lay his chips and fortune with the US.

Well, enough of my lay approach to this stuff... I say F$%K the chicoms.


74 posted on 07/08/2005 9:32:39 PM PDT by CGVet58 (God has granted us Liberty, and we owe Him Courage in return)
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To: Tallguy; spetznaz

Some websites say that the phased array radars were jointly developed with a Ukranian research facility.There is little logic behind the fact that China got such systems from Russia for buying the Varyag,which the Chinese probably have no intention of making operational.If that was the case,they would have looked at SU-33s & AEW systems.

The interesting thing about these ships is the very limited numbers being built which makes it pretty unique from all other Chinese military procurements be it tanks,subs or transport aircraft.My own guess is that this radar system needs finetuning or that they are bidding their time to buy the various European systems around like the Italian EMPAR & French HERAKLES.


75 posted on 07/08/2005 11:44:09 PM PDT by sukhoi-30mki
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To: spetznaz

Must be all that technology we offshored to them that they were too stupid to figure out.


76 posted on 07/08/2005 11:46:27 PM PDT by Euro-American Scum (A poverty-stricken middle class must be a disarmed middle class)
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To: Kuehn12

"You notice I didn't call names or invoke stupid imagery to make my point."

Xlinton butt kissin' Commie!! :)


77 posted on 07/09/2005 12:31:47 AM PDT by griffin
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To: griffin

Real productive guy, why don't you go back to school and learn a different way to express yourself.

They have ears and hear not, and they have eyes and see not. It is better to look dumb rather than to open your mouth and remove all doubt. These are the most apt sayings which fit those who rather call someone names than bring a strong argument to the court of public opinion.


78 posted on 07/09/2005 7:03:55 AM PDT by Kuehn12 (Kuehn12)
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To: spetznaz
"complicates planning"

Yep. Now our SSNs have to fire off two torpedos before the CVNs sweep the sea.

79 posted on 07/09/2005 7:17:53 AM PDT by JasonC
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To: CAP811

This ship is not a submarine, there for it is a ........? Guesses, anyone?


80 posted on 07/09/2005 7:28:47 AM PDT by 75thOVI (Any ship can be a submarine...............once!)
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