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MSW Scuttlebutt
01/12/10
#027
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Louisiana, United States
Joined: April 13, 2005
KitMaker: 5,422 posts
Model Shipwrights: 5,079 posts
Posted: Tuesday, January 12, 2010 - 01:01 AM UTC


Welcome to MSW’s Scuttlebutt! Here’s the news for the day.



USS William M. Wood I (DD-715)

MSW crew-mate William "Greg" Fowler ( Fnorkk) shares his first submission with us, and what a beauty! A fine gallery of images and text of his build of Dragon Models 1/350 Gearing Class Destroyer, USS William M. Wood I (DD-715), in this "On Display" feature.




Navy Force Structure and Shipbuilding Plans: Background and Issues for Congress
Source: Congressional Research Service

The Navy’s proposed FY2010 budget, submitted in May 2009, originally requested funding for eight new Navy ships. This total included two relatively expensive, high-capability combatant ships (a Virginia-class attack submarine and a DDG-51 class Aegis destroyer) and six relatively inexpensive ships (three Littoral Combat Ships [LCSs], two TAKE-1 auxiliary dry cargo ships, and one Joint High Speed Vessel [JHSV]).

The Navy in September 2009 reduced the LCS request to two ships, reducing the total requested number of all types of ships to seven, of which five were relatively inexpensive LCSs, TAKE-1s, and JHSVs. The Navy’s proposed FY2010 budget also requested procurement funding for certain Navy ships that were procured but not fully funded in prior years, and advance procurement funding for certain other Navy ships to be procured in future years.

The Administration submitted its proposed FY2010 budget as a single-year budget only, without an accompanying Future Years Defense Plan (FYDP) for the period FY2010-FY2015. The Administration also did not submit a 30-year shipbuilding plan for the period FY2010-FY2039, as required by 10 USC 231. Consequently, relatively little budget-submission information was available in 2009 concerning the Administration’s plans for Navy ship procurement in fiscal years after FY2010.

December 2009 press reports provided information on a draft version of the FY2011 30-year shipbuilding plan that is to be submitted to Congress in early February 2010, in conjunction with the proposed FY2011 defense budget.

Concerns about the Navy’s prospective ability to afford its long-range shipbuilding plan, combined with year-to-year changes in Navy shipbuilding plans and significant cost growth and other problems in building certain new Navy ships, have led to strong concerns among some Members about the status of Navy shipbuilding and the potential future size and capabilities of the fleet.

The explanatory statement for the FY2010 DOD appropriations act (H.R. 3326/P.L. 111-118 of December 19, 2009) funds the procurement of the revised total of seven ships requested by the Navy for FY2010.




HMS Victory

Today’s website is HMS Victory. The Victory currently has a dual role as the flagship of the Commander-in-Chief Naval Home Command and as a living museum to the Georgian navy. Enjoy.


This Day in U.S. Naval History

1813 - U.S. frigate Chesapeake captures the British warship Volunteer.
1848 - Sloop Lexington attacked in San Blas, Mexico.
1953 - Aircraft landings are tested aboard USS Antietam (CVS 36), the first angled-deck carrier.


Photo of the Day



The battleship EX-USS Missouri (BB 63) returns to Ford Island after finishing scheduled repairs at Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard. Missouri underwent three months and $18 million of preservation and maintenance repairs at Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard.

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