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MSW Scuttlebutt
09/09/10
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Joined: April 13, 2005
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Posted: Thursday, September 09, 2010 - 01:03 AM UTC


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



Navantia Begins Sea Trials of the Frigate F-314 "Thor Heyerdahll" Navy for Norway
Source: Navantia

The Fene-Ferrol shipyard on August 31 began the initial sea trials of the frigate F-314 "Thor Heyerdahl," which will last until September 2.

During these three days, the main propulsion system as well as all of the ship’s systems and equipment will be tested. After the ship is reconditioned after this first sortie, formal customer trials will be undertaken with the Norwegian Navy in October.

The "Thor Heyerdahl,” which was launched on February 11, 2009 and is to be handed over early next year, is the last of the five ships of the F-310 class frigate program for which a contract was signed in June 2000.



F-314 is named after the famous Norwegian explorer and anthropologist Thor Heyerdahl, who was linked to Tenerife, because of their work in the Guimar Pyramids Ethnographic Park. Heyerdahl became famous for the Kon-Tiki expedition in 1947, in which he sailed 4,700 miles from Peru to the Tuamotu Islands in Polynesia, in a raft manned by six men and built of logs, plants and other natural materials of South America.

The general characteristics of the F-310 frigates, which are equipped with the U.S.-supplied Aegis combat system that incorporates a SPY-1F radar, are:

- Length overall: 133.25 m.
- Maximum Beam: 16.80 m.
- Height to main deck: 9.50 m.
- Full load displacement: 5,130 t.
- Design draft: 4.90 m.
- Crew: 146 officers and ratings.


Battle Rages in India over New Warship Construction
Source: Forecast International

NEW DELHI --- An increasingly three-way bitter battle is raging in the Indian Navy between supporters of aircraft carrier construction and those who favor submarine building. The latter group is further split between those submariners who wish to concentrate on nuclear submarine construction and those who wish to see additional production of diesel-electric submarines.

It is this three-way fight that has seriously delayed the second phase of India's Project 75 diesel-electric submarine program.

Project 75 envisioned building 24 conventional submarines in India. Six were to be built from Western technology and six with Russian collaboration; then Indian designers, having absorbed the best of both worlds, would build 12 submarines indigenously.

Project 75, to build six Scorpene submarines (the "Western" six), was contracted in 2005. The Indian MoD believes it is still four to six years away from Project 75I; i.e., beginning work on the second six submarines. In addition, the wisdom of building the second group of six boats using Russian technology has been questioned.

However, the Indian Navy carrier lobby, headed by the last two naval chiefs, has no interest in using the Navy’s limited budget for building submarines. So the lobby has exploited the division of opinion among submariners over whether to concentrate on nuclear-powered versus conventional submarines to push submarine building into the future.

The lobbyists have argued that India needs SSBNs to make the long-sought-after Indian nuclear triad a reality and provide a secure second strike capability. However, SSBNs are not a part of the fighting navy; they constitute a country’s nuclear deterrent, and fire their nuclear-tipped missiles on orders from the national leadership. The Navy therefore argues that the service should be funded from Indian government sources, not as part of the Indian Navy budget.

Supporters of nuclear submarine construction argue that SSNs are necessary to protect the SSBNs. They also point out that while diesel-electric submarines are quiet and hard to detect while submerged, they are easily picked up when they surface to charge their batteries. Furthermore, they move slowly underwater. These considerations allow a single nuclear submarine to do the job of multiple conventional submarines, which give their position away when they surface at regular intervals. Diesel-electric submarine supporters reply that India’s coastal waters are so shallow that SSNs, which typically weigh 4,000-5,000 tonnes, run the risk of scraping the bottom. Conventional submarines, which normally weigh around 1,500 tonnes, are needed for dominating the coastal areas.

This split in the submarine lobby has left the aviation supporters dominant in current Indian Navy policy decision-making. This factor may well see construction of India's indigenous aircraft carriers accelerating at the expense of the submarine fleet.




RFA Lyme Bay

Today’s website is RFA Lyme Bay. Enjoy.


This Day in U.S. Naval History

1825 - USS Brandywine sails for France to carry the Marquis de Lafayette home after his yearlong visit to America.
1841 - First iron ship authorized by Congress.
1940 - Navy awards contracts for 210 ships, including 12 carriers and seven battleships.
1943 - Operation Avalanche, Western Naval Task Force, under Vice Adm. Henry Hewitt, lands Allied forces at Salerno, Italy.
1944 - Fifth Fleet carrier aircraft begin air strikes on Japanese shipping and facilities at Mindanao, Philippines.
1945 - A "computer bug" is first identified and named by Lt. Grace Murray Hopper while she was on active duty. It was found in the Mark II Aiken Relay Calculator at Harvard University. The operators affixed the moth to the computer log, where it still resides, with the entry: "First actual case of bug being found." They "debugged" the computer, first introducing the term.


Photo of the Day



British and U.S. Navy mine countermeasures ships surround the British Royal Navy fleet auxiliary landing dock ship RFA Lyme Bay (L3007), center.

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