Larry Strong said:A landlubbers question...."Nuship" A title used prior to commissioning?
Thanks
Larry
Larry Strong said:A landlubbers question...."Nuship" A title used prior to commissioning?
Thanks
Larry
S.M.A. said:I thought it was another acronym similar to the American acronym PCU (Pre-commissioning Unit) to refer to warships that have not been commissioned? (E.g. PCU Zumwalt)
In Australia, the prefix NUSHIP is used to denote ships that have yet to be commissioned into the fleet.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ship_prefix
The ship name “NUSHIP” is used in Australia, to categorize the noncommissioned vessels in the fleet.
http://www.marineinsight.com/marine/marine-news/headline/what-are-ship-prefixes-for-naval-and-merchant-vessels/
Brand new $1.5 billion pride of Australia's fleet crippled after electrical meltdown during sea trials
[dailymail.co.uk]
5 June 2014
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A source said the first issue occurred when the electric powered pods at the stern of the ship were operated independently in low-speed mode when the ship was travelling at high speed, when they should have been operated in tandem, which caused serious vibrations across the ship.
Royal Australian Navy LHD Canberra Completes Sea Trials as Crew Tests Landing Craft
NUSHIP Canberra, the first of two Landing Helicopter Dock (LHD) ships being built for the Australian Defence Force, returned from her final contractor sea trials before delivery to the Australian Government. The ship returned to BAE Systems Williamstown today after being away on sea trials for two weeks.
Final contractor trials involve testing of the combat and communication systems along with some platform systems trials.
Aboard NUSHIP Canberra for the final contractor trials were BAE Systems and DMO project personnel along with a number of Royal Australian Navy (RAN) officers and sailors who will crew the ship once delivered, as well as BAE Systems subcontractors Navantia, Saab, L3 and Teekay.
In the meantime, Canberras' new Landing Craft were tested by RAN personnel on Sydney Harbour and local waterways.
The LHD Landing Craft (LLC) are scheduled to be handed over to Canberra in the coming months. In the mean time, the Canberra teams who will be driving, crewing and maintaining the vessels are undertaking further contractor training based at HMAS Waterhen.
Designed and built by Navantia, the LCM-1E landing crafts are the same type used by the Spanish Navy. With a length of 23.3 meters and a breadth of 6.4 meters they can reach 20 knots and have a range of 190 miles. They are fitted with two water jet propulsion units giving the LLCs a longer range, outstanding manoeuvrability, increase speed and more power compared to current in-service ADF landing craft.
OTR1 said:FYI confirmed handover date to RAN is September 25, and due to commission on November 28.
Should Australia field F-35B STOVL fighters on its Canberra Class LHD ships?
Nov 17/14: F-35Bs? The Australian Strategic Policy Institute issues a paper that looks at the viability of F-35Bs on Australia’s 2 Canberra Class LHDs, which are based on a Spanish design that expected to carry the fighters at some point. Australia is looking at this possibility, as part of its 2015 White Paper.
“Overall, this report concludes that the benefits would be marginal at best, wouldn’t be commensurate with the costs and other consequences for the ADF, and would potentially divert funding and attention from more valuable force structure enhancements.”
Their rationale is that operating the Canberra Class in escort carrier mode would be vast overkill for most missions, which are better served by the planned combination of EC665 Tiger ARH and NH90 helicopters. On the flip side, “…if the adversary were such as to merit strike operations against targets distant from Australia using the STOVL option, it would be quite capable of posing significant risk to the maritime strike force being used to project power in this way.” Removing much of the ship’s amphibious capability in exchange for 10-14 F-35Bs isn’t seen as enough airpower to both protect the ship, and offer useful offensive help.
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