Stephen J. Mraz
Staff Editor
If U.S. military planners are correct,
much of the naval action in
the future will take place close to
shore, the littoral zones, in places
like the Persian Gulf and along the
coast of the Mediterranean Sea.
The days of blue-water air and
sea battles against another superpower,
like the Soviet Union, are
probably long gone. So the Navy
is redesigning its fleet and preparing
to launch a pair of new combat
vessels; the Littoral Combat Ship
(LCS), and DDG-1000, the next generation
destroyer.
LCS
The first LCS, the USS Freedom,
was christened and launched two
years ago at in Mainette, Wis., and
delivered to the Navy last year by
its prime contractor Lockheed
Martin Corp. Besides being built
for speed and agility, it will make
the most of shared data networks
and advanced communications.
Its modular design will let Navy commanders load their choice of
hardware packages, depending on
the ship’s upcoming mission. Currently,
plans call for three mission
packages: antisubmarine, mine
warfare, and surface combat. Each will consist of specialized crewmen,
hardware, deployable sensors,
and manned and unmanned
planes and boats.
The ship measures 377 ft stem
to stern, with a beam of 57 ft, and displaces 3,089 tons, but it can operate
in waters as shallow as 13 ft.
Its steel monohull is semiplaning,
meaning it rides partially atop
the waves at a top speed in excess
of 40 knots rather than plowing
through them.
Two Rolls-Royce MT30 36MW
gas turbines and two Fairbanks
Morse Colt-Pielstick diesel engines
power four large Rolls-Royce
Kamewa waterjets. Two of the jets
are for steering and reversing, and
the other two are forward motion.
There are no propellers.
The waterjets let the Freedom
turn 360° in less than eight ship
lengths (about 3,000 ft) at sprint
speed, and can accelerate it from
0 to 40 knots in less than 2 min.
Waterjets also eliminate problems
such as vibration, noise, and
cavitation which can alert faraway
enemy subs to the ship’s presence.
The LCS will carry enough fuel to
travel 3,500 miles.
The ship’s flight deck is 50%
larger and its hangar twice as large
as those on standard surface ships,
a hint it will be relying a lot on helicopters
and other VTOL aircraft.
The hangar is sized to hold two
SH-60 Seahawk helicopters or one
Seahawk and three drones.
The LCS also has at least two
points from which to launch, service,
and recover small manned and
unmanned boats. Stern doors on
the rear of the hull let the ship deal
with hard-bottomed boats as well as high-speed craft used by special
forces, even while the LCS is underway.
On the starboard (or right) side
of the ship, a second waterline-level
door with a roll-on/roll-off ramp accommodates
smaller boats, as well
as at-sea refueling and replenishment
of the LCS. A single overhead
crane can extend overboard near
both the stern and side doors to lift
any craft the LCS can carry. There’s
also a crane in the mission bay for
changing out mission-specific hardware
and taking on supplies.
For weapons, a modular weapons
zone on the front deck can
carry a 57-mm gun turret or missile
launcher. A rolling airframe missile
launcher mounts above the hangar
for short-range defense against airborne threats. (The rolling airframe
missile got its name due to the fact
that in flight, it rolls to maintain
stability.) The ship also has .50-caliber
gun mounts topside.
The core crew of the Freedom
with be 40 officers and sailors, but
a mission-specific crew and aviation
detachment will bring the total
to about 75.
The Navy plans to have 30 to
60 LCSs, with the Freedom homeported
in San Diego.
DDG-1000
The Navy’s next destroyer will
be the DDG-1000 (previously the
DD(X) and DD 21), and has been
named the USS Zumwalt for Admiral
Elmo Zumwalt Jr, onetime
Chief of Naval Operations. The
Navy had hoped to build more
than 30 of these ships, a number
they later cut to 24, then 7, due to
predicted cost overruns on still experimental
weapons and technologies.
And even now, Congress
has only approved funding for
two, so it is still unknown whether
the DDG-1000 will be the first in
a class of many ships or lead to a
lower-cost destroyer in the future.
The current version of the
DDG-1000, which is being built by
Northrop Grumman in Passacaglia,
Miss., will be 600-ft long, have
a beam of 80 ft, a navigational draft
of 28 ft, and displace 14,500 tons.The crew will consist of 142, and
that includes an aviation detachment.
The ship is designed for surface
and antiaircraft combat, and
to provide naval gunfire support
for land-based missions.
The ship is stealthier than
previous warships, as its illustrations
suggest. Lockheed
says the ship should
have one-fiftieth the radar
cross section of the DDG-51
Arleigh Burke Class destroyers.
There are no rotating
radars, the superstructure
is faceted with flat, slanted
sides made of composite
materials and there is little
clutter on the decks. The
ship is also low to the water,
thanks to its tumblehome
hull design. (A tumblehome
hull is widest at the waterline
and narrows as it goes
up. Most ships have a flared
hull in which the widest part
is the top deck) The DDG’s
hull also has a pronounced
wave-piercing bow. The exaggerated
front is supposed to let it pass through waves rather
than ride over them. This, in turn,
should make the ship more stable.
But some naval architects believe
the tumblehome design is unstable
and that when hit by waves from behind, the ship could pitch down,
not have the energy to right itself,
and roll over. The Navy, however,
has tested the tumblehome hull and
is proceeding with it.
For firepower, the destroyer was first slated for a pair of vertical
gun, ones in which the barrel
is fixed (and pointing more or less
straight up) and the munitions are
more like missiles with some having
propulsion as well as guidance.
Development for the vertical gun’s
“shells” was behind schedule and
costs were way over budget. So the
Navy scaled back to the Advanced
Gun System (AGS). It’s a 6.1-in. gun
with a water-cooled barrel that can
fire up to 12 rounds/min from an
automated magazine holding 600
rounds. Some of those rounds, such
as the Long Range Attack Projectile
(LRAP) developed by Lockheed
Martin and Science Applications
International Corp., can hit targets
up to 100 miles away. AGS can
also fire several rounds timed for
simultaneous impact on the same
target up to 75 miles. It does this by
changing trajectories for each shot.
It is said that the DDG-1000’s two
AGS have the same firepower as an
entire battalion of 155-mm howitzers,
which is made up of 18 guns.
The battalion also requires 58 cargo
trucks, 42 utility trucks, 28 cargo
trailers, two tow trucks, five water
trailers, two ambulances, and 640
personnel. Critics, however, contend
the new destroyer can’t deliver
that much firepower for long. Each
gun’s magazine will have a limited
number of long-range munitions (over 75 miles). But even if all munitions
are long range, 600 rounds
doesn’t last long at 12 rounds/min.
A pair of 40-mm guns firing
up to 200 rounds/min will defend
against close-in attacks by ships,
aircraft, and missiles.
The ship will also carry 80 missiles
in 20 Peripheral Vertical Launch Systems
(PVLS) lining the outer edge of
the forward top deck. This prevents
loss of the entire store of missiles,
and most likely the entire ship, if
there was only a single missile magazine
and it was hit. The PVLSs, if hit,
are designed to explode outward,
away from the ship. The ships will be able to carry Sea Sparrow missiles
for close in defense against airborne
threats, SM-2 anti-aircraft missiles
for planes in the 40 to 90 mile range,
antisub missiles, and Tomahawk
cruise missiles.
For propulsion and power, the
ship boasts two Rolls-Royce MareinTrent-
30 gas turbines and two
emergency diesel generators, with
each pair capable of generating 78
MW of electricity. That’s said to be
10 times more than current destroyers,
and they will feed an integrated
power system (IPS), a first for naval
ships. The IPS can power the propulsion
system, which are all electric,
as well as the rest of the ship.
Initially, the ship’s generators
were to power permanent-magnet
motors (PMM). Northrop even
built the world’s largest PMM to
test the idea. But finally the PMM
was dropped because it just wasn’t
ready for real-world operations.
Instead, heavier, larger induction
motors will be used. Still, the drives
will remain all-electric, with no
driveshafts or reduction gears.
The DDG-1000 could also be
the starting point for the Navy’s
next cruiser, currently designated
the CG(X). It will have the same
hull as the DDG-1000, but carry
more missiles and AGS. Currently,
the Navy wants about 19 new cruisers
to replace its Ticonderoga class
Aegis cruisers.
The other LCS
While Lockheed Martin is building one version of the Littoral Combat
Ship, (LCS-1, the USS Freedom), engineers at General Dynamics,
Falls Church, Va., are building another, LCS-2, the USS Independence.
It has the same missions and modular mission bays, as well
as the same agility, speed, and ability to navigate relatively shallow
waters (about 20-ft deep). But its hull is radically different, a pointy-nosed
trimaran. According to General Dynamics, the new hull,
which was built in Australia by Austal, will give the ship better speed,
range, and stability.
It seems the Navy will have two classes of LCS, the Freedom and
Independence classes. It is said the Navy wants between 30 and
60 LCS, but not much is known on whether that will be split 50/50
between the Freedom and Independence or whether the Navy will
pit the two in competition to determine an overall winner. |