Navy's New High-Tech Warships Reach Freeway Speeds

October 22, 2009 RSS Feed Print

DAVID SHARP,
Associated Press Writer

BATH, Maine—The Navy's need for speed is being answered by a pair of warships that have reached freeway speeds during testing at sea.

[Photo Gallery: High-Tech Warships Reach Freeway Speeds]

Independence, a 418-foot warship built in Alabama, boasts a top speed in excess of 45 knots, or about 52 mph, and sustained 44 knots for four hours during builder trials that wrapped up this month off the Gulf Coast. The 378-foot Freedom, a ship built in Wisconsin by a competing defense contractor, has put up similar numbers.

Both versions of the Littoral Combat Ship use powerful diesel engines, as well as gas turbines for extra speed. They use steerable waterjets instead of propellers and rudders and have shallower drafts than conventional warships, letting them zoom close to shore.

The ships, better able to chase down pirates, have been fast-tracked because the Navy wants vessels that can operate in coastal, or littoral, waters. Freedom is due to be deployed next year, two years ahead of schedule.

Independence is an aluminum, tri-hulled warship built by Austal USA in Mobile, Ala. The lead contractor is Maine's Bath Iron Works, a subsidiary of General Dynamics.

Lockheed Martin Corp. is leading the team that built Freedom in Marinette, Wis. It looks more like a conventional warship, with a single hull made of steel.

The stakes are high for both teams. The Navy plans to select Lockheed Martin or General Dynamics, but not both, as the builder. The Navy has ordered one more ship from each of the teams before it chooses the final design. Eventually, the Navy wants to build up to 55 of them.

Speed has long been relished by Navy skippers. Capt. John Paul Jones, sometimes described as father of the U.S. Navy, summed it up this way in 1778: "I wish to have no connection with any ship that does not sail fast; for I intend to go in harm's way."

Eric Wertheim, author and editor of the U.S. Naval Institute's "Guide to Combat Fleets of the World," said speed is a good thing, but it comes at a cost.

"This is really something revolutionary," Wertheim said. "The question is how important and how expensive is this burst of speed?"

Early cost estimates for Littoral Combat Ships were about $220 million apiece, but costs spiraled because of the Navy's requirements and its desire to expedite construction. The cost of the ships is capped at $460 million apiece, starting in the new fiscal year.

Both ships are built to accommodate helicopters and mission "modules" for either anti-submarine missions, mine removal or traditional surface warfare. The modules are designed to be swapped out within 24 hours, allowing the ships to adapt quickly to new missions.

While they're fast, they aren't necessarily the fastest military ships afloat. The Navy used to have missile-equipped hydrofoils and the Marines' air-cushioned landing craft is capable of similar speeds, Wertheim said. And smaller ships are capable of higher speeds.

Nonetheless, the speed is impressive, especially considering that other large naval vessels have been cruising along at a relatively pokey 30 to 35 knots for decades.

Loren Thompson, a defense analyst at the Lexington Institute, noted that Independence sustained 44 knots despite a 30-knot headwind and 6- to 8-foot seas in Alabama's Mobile Bay. "For a ship of this size, it's simply unheard of to sustain that rate of speed for four hours," he said.

___

On the Net:

Bath Iron Works http://www.gdbiw.com

Lockheed Martin http://www.lockheedmartin.com

Tags:
technology,
science

Reader Comments Read all comments (8)

Add Your Thoughts
Your comment will be posted immediately, unless it is spam or contains profanity. For more information, please see our Comments FAQ.

The perfectly reliable (and faster) Pegasus fleet was scrapped a little more than a decade ago because "they were not judged cost effective for their mission in a Navy with primarily offensive missions rather than coastal patrol." Now, it is considered such a vital need for the Navy that we have to pay nearly double to expedite production.

HMB of VA 2:14PM August 25, 2011

I've heard the US Navy is building 10 to 12 small strike type destroyer half them will be controlled by US Army,except the ships will be managed by the US Navy These kind ships are more economical to build,plus they more fuel effecient. I 've heard the US Navy can develope anything to burn and make desiel fuel. I 'm afraid the US Navy Pegasus-class hydrofoils are over. When these ships starting to come out. In the long run, we will have these combative litteral ships just like carrier task groups.

John E. of NJ 2:32PM October 26, 2009

The retired (and scrapped) US Navy Pegasus-class hydrofoils could do 55 mph and handle any pirates afloat with a 76 mm gun and Harpoon missles.

At a fraction of the cost, I'm sure...

C.S. of GA 8:06PM October 24, 2009

National Science Foundation

NSF

Science of Spatial Learning

Center seeks to transform teaching practices.

Studying Carbon in Rivers

Researcher explores physical, chemical and biological interactions.

Challenge: Quantum Computers

CAREER awardee focuses on what they can and cannot do.

advertisement

Science Discoveries

Science Discoveries

iTunes icon RSS icon

advertisement