After seven years of construction, the DDG-1000 Zumwalt, the US Navy's first 21st Century destroyer, is scheduled to hit the water for the first time in December to undergo an initial set of sea trials.
The
Zumwalt features a tumblehome hull optimized for stealth, a new
propulsion and power distribution system, and a software environment
that ties together nearly every system on the ship.
"We've got a builder's sea trial with a notional start of the 7th of December," Sean Stackley, the Navy"s top official for research, acquisition and development, said in an interview with Defense News.
But the Zumwalt will not be fully operational when it leaves Maine next year. Its mission systems – which include the ship's combat systems, radars and other sensors – will be installed when it reaches its home port of San Diego, Defense News reported.
"This two-phased delivery approach has been in place since the contract was first struck," Stackley said.
The Navy plans to build only three DDG-1000s. It originally planned to build 32 ships, then reduced that number to 12 before settling on three. The service simply was unable to afford the ship's price tag – $4 billion each, not including research and development. Total program costs are near $23 billion.
"We've got a builder's sea trial with a notional start of the 7th of December," Sean Stackley, the Navy"s top official for research, acquisition and development, said in an interview with Defense News.
"That is the critical milestone in terms
of being able to deliver in the spring. We need a successful trial.
We'll learn things from the trial, we always do. First-of-class, we
expect to learn a lot."
The roughly 15,700-ton Zumwalt has been under construction since 2008
in Maine at the Bath Iron Works shipyard of General Dynamics. But
development and design started even earlier than that.But the Zumwalt will not be fully operational when it leaves Maine next year. Its mission systems – which include the ship's combat systems, radars and other sensors – will be installed when it reaches its home port of San Diego, Defense News reported.
"This two-phased delivery approach has been in place since the contract was first struck," Stackley said.
The Navy plans to build only three DDG-1000s. It originally planned to build 32 ships, then reduced that number to 12 before settling on three. The service simply was unable to afford the ship's price tag – $4 billion each, not including research and development. Total program costs are near $23 billion.
No comments:
Post a Comment
smanalysis