"This ship is 100 times more powerful than a battleship when loaded with cruise missiles with 1/100th of the crew members. This is the wave of the future."
Width: 72 feet (22 meters)
Weight: 950 tons
Engines: 2 GE LM2500 gas turbine engines; 2 MTU 16V 595 TE90 propulsion diesel engines; 4 Rolls-Royce Kamewa 125SII waterjets
Operating crew: 26
Top speed: 50 knots (57.5 mph, 92.6 kph)
Cost of experimental ship: $80 million
The U.S. Navy officially took possession of the first of a new class of ships; a Littoral Surface Craft (LSC) called “Sea Fighter†(FSF-1). This ship was originally intended as an experimental ship, to test out a number of new technologies. But the sea trials were so successful, that pressure is building to put this class into mass production.
What’s so hot about the LSC? It’s a 1,600 ton (full load) catamaran that is 262 feet long, 72 feet wide and can operate in as little as 12 feet of water. Top speed is about 90 kilometers an hour, which is a unique capability for U.S. navy ships and a major advantage in coastal operations. Even in rough seas, the ship can do about 70 kilometers an hour. This is partly the result of using a T shaped hydrofoil.
The Sea Fighter has a crew of only 26, and room below and on the deck for twelve "mission modules". Mission modules can hold weapons, electronics or robotic air, surface or undersea vehicles for jobs like mine clearing, anti-submarine warfare, destroying surface ships or delivering commandoes. The deck is broad enough to handle two helicopters. There is a dock in the rear for launching boats.
What’s so hot about the LSC? It’s a 1,600 ton (full load) catamaran that is 262 feet long, 72 feet wide and can operate in as little as 12 feet of water. Top speed is about 90 kilometers an hour, which is a unique capability for U.S. navy ships and a major advantage in coastal operations. Even in rough seas, the ship can do about 70 kilometers an hour. This is partly the result of using a T shaped hydrofoil.
The Sea Fighter has a crew of only 26, and room below and on the deck for twelve "mission modules". Mission modules can hold weapons, electronics or robotic air, surface or undersea vehicles for jobs like mine clearing, anti-submarine warfare, destroying surface ships or delivering commandoes. The deck is broad enough to handle two helicopters. There is a dock in the rear for launching boats.
Dr. Mordrid
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