|
NAVY
NEWS
If you are in the
vicinity of Great Lakes, IL, visit the
National Museum of the American Sailor
to see why we have been chosen by
prestigious museums. The museum is located near
Naval Station Great Lakes in North Chicago,
Illinois. It honors the American Sailor’s unwavering
and patriotic allegiance to the three bedrock
principles which have guided United States’s sailors
since the earliest days of the naval service: Honor,
Courage, Commitment. |
To inquire about a new
ship model, please click here to let us know of your
preferences:
https://www.modelshipmaster.com/custom/Custom_made_model_boats.htm
There
are many great benefits of being the first,
including financial rewards when it's time for you
to auction off your "first ever produced" artwork.
If you tend to be the first on the coolest and
greatest things, ModelShipMaster can help a bit. We
are the only scale model company in the world that
pioneers models of newest ships that have cutting
edge designs.
Your model will have a metal plaque indicating
it is the world's first, the date of completion, and our company's name on
it.
Nov.
2024: U.S. Coast Guard Cutter
Healy
crew and
embarked science teams discover
volcano-like underwater feature while conducting
Arctic research.
Oct 2024:
USS Stewart found.
Sept 2024:
The most complex warfare submarine, the USS New Jersey,
was commissioned on Sept, 14. Dubbed as the
fastest submarine in the U.S. fleet and the first to be
designed with gender inclusion in mind, this submarine
counts with enhanced stealth, special warfare
enhancements, and sophisticated surveillance
capabilities that can even detect sound waves from sea
animals far away. Its bathrooms come with longer stalls,
more privacy in shower rooms, and secluded berths for
sleeping. Among 131 crew members are 29 women. The
submarine is very Jersey. Its interior spaces were
decorated with all things Jersey. The walls feature
posters from Rutgers University, New Jersey Devils
memorabilia, a guitar gifted by Jon Bon Jovi...
Sept 2024:
Three weeks after U.S.
Coast Guard icebreaker
Healy returned back to homeport in Seattle
following an onboard fire, she will be redeployed to the
U.S. Arctic region on October 1.
August 2024:
Coast Guard Cutter Alert says farewell to the
Northwest. For 30 years, the
medium endurance Alert called Astoria, Oregon
its home port. Now, after years of patrolling the
waters of the Pacific, she moves to the East Coast,
stationed in Cape Canaveral, Florida.
August 2024:
USS Idaho (SSN-799) -- the eighth of the U.S. Navy’s
new Virginia-class Block IV nuclear attack
submarines was launched. According to the U.S. Naval
Institute, the current production rate stands at 1.4
submarines per year, with efforts shared between
Newport News Shipbuilding and General Dynamics
Electric Boat. Newport News Shipbuilding is
responsible for manufacturing the bow and stern
sections of each submarine, while General Dynamics
Electric Boat builds the midsection housing the
nuclear reactor.
August 2024: 50-foot Bavaria 50 Cruiser Andromeda
Sailing Yacht Linked To Nord Stream Pipeline
Sabotage. German investigators searched the boat and
suspect a six-person crew used it to sail to the
Baltic Sea and plant explosives that detonated on
the Nord Stream pipeline in September of 2022,
causing extensive damage. Investigators found traces
of explosives on the table inside the yacht.
August 2024:
The WWII tank landing ship USS LST-325 will dock at
North Shore Riverfront Park in Pittsburgh from Aug.
28 to Sept. 3. Officials say they encourage
community members to visit and explore this piece of
history. ModelShipMaster builds excellent models of
this ship class
here.
August 2024: The US Coast Guard commissioned
ModelShipMaster.com to build a
Healy model.
July 2024: Icebreaker
Healy suffered an engineering compartment fire during its annual summer Arctic
patrol. It is now returning from its aborted patrol
on a single engine. This incident hinders the U.S.
Coast Guard Arctic Presence as the other icebreaker, the
50-year old
Polar Star, is not
available during summer as it is undergoing a
service life extension program.
July, 2024: The USS
Delaware submarine (SSN-791) is set to be a drone carrier.
It will deploy a
torpedo-tube launch-and-recovery uncrewed underwater vehicle capability later this
year. The U.S. Navy previously conducted tests of
the Huntington Ingalls Industry's REMUS 600 UUV –
which can exit and then re-enter a submerged
submarine through its torpedo tube – on USS Delaware
last year. "While the submarine is moving, the UUV
has to find that torpedo tube and drive in,"
according to the U.S. Navy's top submarine warfare
officer Rear Admiral Doug Perry. The REMUS 600,
shaped like a standard torpedo, is 10.6 feet long,
12.75 inches in diameter, and weighs 530 pounds. The
battery-powered UUV can operate down to depths of
600 feet and is capable of semi-autonomous
operation. It has a stated endurance of 70 hours.
We delivered a large model of
the Delaware to Sun Ma Healthcare on 7/11 (two
months after the delivery of a large USS Gerald
Ford.)
July, 2024:
U.S., Canada, and Finland unite for icebreaker
collaboration
July, 2024:
Israeli unmanned sub seen deployed against Iran
June, 2024: The public is invited to a Memorial Day
ceremony aboard the oldest steel American warship
still afloat- the
USS Olympia. The Independence Seaport Museum at
Penn's Landing is hosting a Memorial Day ceremony
aboard the Olympia, the oldest steel American
warship still afloat. The hour-long ceremony starts
at 10 a.m. on Monday, and the public is invited to
attend. "Olympia is a very special ship. She served
from the 1890s all the way up to 1921," says Mike
Flynn, the museum’s executive vice president and
chief operating officer. "She is most famous for two
acts. One is firing the first shot in the Battle of
Manila Bay, for the Spanish American War, May
1, 1898 — and even more significantly, she was
chosen to carry the remains of the Unknown
Soldier from La Havre, France, all the way to
Arlington National Cemetery after World War I."
June, 2024: The final
resting place for a U.S. Navy submarine that sank
the most Japanese warships in World War II has
been found. The USS Harder was found in the South
China Sea, more than 3,000 feet below the surface
off the coast of the Philippines’ northern island of
Luzon. The sub, with its 79-man crew, was sunk
during a 1944 battle. The Harder made six patrols
before it was sunk, with its fifth being the most
successful, sinking three Japanese destroyers and
heavily damaging or destroying two more in four
days. USS Harder received the Presidential Unit
Citation for her first five patrols, six battle
stars for World War II service.
April, 2024: U.S. Navy Submarine Fitted With
Silent Caterpillar Drive
In the first of a kind, the U.S. Navy has fitted a
new form of propulsion, magnetohydrodynamic drive,
to a Virginia class submarine. This promises to make
the submarine virtually undetectable. Water passing
through it is accelerated by means of a magnetic
field using superconducting magnets. This is often
likened to the way a caterpillar crawls leading to
the colloquial term ‘caterpillar drive’. Instead of
a traditional propeller at the stern, the new
propulsion will be entirely within the submarine’s
hull. The only external clues are likely to be the
water intake doors in the bow. These will resemble
torpedo tube shutters but larger, approximately the
diameter of a submarine launched ballistic missile.
But mounted horizontally, which is unusual for those
missiles. The first boat to be fitted with the new
propulsion will be the USS Montana (SSN 794). This
Virginia Class attack submarine was commissioned
into the U.S. Navy in June 2022. Although still a
new boat, she has been brought in to Groton,
Connecticut, for the modifications. Sonar operators
searching for the USS Montana will likely hear
noises which are indistinguishable from natural
phenomenon, such as seismic activity.
March, 2024: For the
first time ever, the US Navy has a carrier-based
aircraft that does not require a pilot--the
MQ-25 Stingray autonomous refueller.
March, 2024: Austal
launches first Saildrone vessel built for U.S. Navy
Jan. 4th, 2024: The U.S. Navy’s newest
Overlord Unmanned Surface Vessel Vanguard, was
launched from Austal USA’s shipyard in Mobile,
Alabama. Vanguard is the first USV for the Navy
purpose-built for autonomous operations from the
keel-up. The Program Office for Unmanned and Small
Combatants (PEO USC) and the Unmanned Maritime
Systems Program Office (PMS 406) lead the Navy’s
efforts to develop, deliver and sustain capable and
affordable unmanned maritime systems to meet Fleet
requirements.
Aug 1, 2023:
The
USS Zumwalt (DDG 1000) departed San Diego to
enter a modernization period and receive technology
upgrades including the integration of the
Conventional Prompt Strike weapons system. The
upgrades ensures the ship to remains one of the most
technologically advanced and lethal ships in the US
Navy. The
twin 155 mm Advanced Gun Systems on board will be
replaced with four 87-inch missile tubes, each tube
containing three Common Hypersonic Glide Bodies. The
ship will be deployable by 2025.
Aug.
2023:
Israel Launches New Submarine, First In World With
Modern Missiles In Sail
The House
Appropriations Committee approved an increase to
the Coast Guard's fiscal 2024 budget, forwarding
a bill to the full chamber that funds a 5.2% pay
raise for members, a commercial icebreaker, four
additional fast response cutters which are meant to
boost the Coast Guard's operations in the
Indo-Pacific region, and an extra HC-130J Super
Hercules aircraft.
June 2023:
Third-Generation Interceptor Cutter Craft Started
Measure 34
feet, the LRI III will have a speed of up to 40
knots (46 miles per hour). The boat will also have
closed or open cabin operation to enable all-weather
deployments as well as a 180-degree arc of fire to
port and starboard. The fleet will also be
integrated with Safariland’s portable ballistic
panel suite for high-threat missions.
The LRI can operate over the horizon
of the mothership and can travel 236 nautical miles
on any given mission on plane, giving it a very wide
swath to patrol after the mothership’s electronics
have detected something suspicious. The LRI III
fleet will replace the coast guard’s LRI IIs which
proved to be a very successful platform. LRI II was
the first design to successfully navigate the
recovery bay at the transom of the Coast Guard’s
flagship 418 National Security Cutter at up to 12
knots.
First Flight III Destroyer
Completes Acceptance Trials. USS Jack H. Lucas
(DDG 125) completed acceptance trials on May 18,
2023. During acceptance trials, the ship and its
crew performed a series of demonstrations for review
by the U.S. Navy’s Board of Inspection and Survey
(INSURV). INSURV uses these demonstrations to
validate Navy specifications and requirements prior
to delivery of the ship to the U.S. Navy. The Flight
III upgrade is centered on the AN/SPY-6(V)1 Air and
Missile Defense Radar and incorporates upgrades to
the electrical power and cooling capacity.
USS Nimitz CVN-68
decommissioned in 2026 and USS
Dwight D.
Eisenhower (CVN-69) in 2027.
Commissioned in 1975, Nimitz was
built for a 50-year service.
116-Year-Old
Experimental Submarine
Discovered in April
2023
https://www.foxnews.com/us/submarine-wreckage-discovered-long-island-sound
US Navy awards
contract for Bob Hope-class LMSR operations
https://www.naval-technology.com/news/us-navy-awards-contract-for-bob-hope-class-lmsr-operations/
August 2022:
the Third “Overlord” Robot Vessel Commissioned
the US Navy welcomed the third great
Overlord unmanned surface vessel into its fleet.
Mariner is constructed by Gulf Craft in Louisiana.
It’s outfitted with next-gen capabilities, including
a command and control system, a unique virtualized
Aegis Combat System, and an autonomous navigation
system. After additional upgrades and testing, it
will head out to California to begin operations in
FY 23. Mariner’s sister vessels--Ranger and Nomad--
recently took part in the Rim of the Pacific naval
exercise conducted in Hawaii.
Divers find wreckage
of first US Navy destroyer sunk by enemy fire
The destroyer was 60 miles off the
coast of England, near the English Channel, when a
torpedo struck three feet below the water line. The
ship was tasked with patrolling and escorting
convoys around the United Kingdom from May 1917
until its sinking on December 6.
In the eight minutes sailors had until the
ship sank, less than half the crew found refuge
aboard emergency rafts. Only 46 of the 110 crew
members survived the attack. After the sinking, a
German U-boat commander took two prisoners of war
from the chilly waters and radioed a nearby American
base about the need for rescue ships. Because of how
quickly the over 1,000-ton destroyer sank, its final
resting place was a mystery for over a century. The
ship is now at a depth of 400 feet.
U.S. Navy Declares
Initial Operating Capability (IOC) For Unmanned
Influence Sweep System (UISS). UISS provides
acoustic and magnetic minesweeping coupled with the
semi-autonomous, diesel-powered, aluminum-hulled
Mine Countermeasures Unmanned Surface Vehicle (MCM
USV). Notably, this is also the first IOC of an
unmanned surface platform by the U.S. Navy, marking
an important milestone in the evolution toward a
hybrid fleet of manned and unmanned systems.
Nuclear Ballistic
Missile Submarine District of Columbia
Construction of the first in a new class of
ballistic missile submarine that’s expected to
commission in 2027 has been started.
At a length of 560 feet and
displacing 20,810 tons, the District of Columbia
will be the largest submarine ever built by the U.S.
Its reactor will not require refueling during the
lifetime of planned service. In addition to its
complement of 16 missiles, the submarine will be
armed with Mk 48 torpedoes and will feature superior
acoustic performance and state-of-the-art sensors to
make it the most capable and quiet submarine ever
built.
The class will replace the
14 Ohio-class submarines due to begin
to retire from service in 2027.
The Columba-class will carry “70
percent of America’s deployed nuclear arsenal,” Navy
Secretary Carlos Del Toro said at the ceremony at
Electric Boat’s Quonset Point facility in Rhode
Island.
Submarines are the stealthiest and
most survivable of the nation’s nuclear triad of
land, air and sea-based nuclear weapons.
USS Mount Whitney is set to be decommissioned in
2026
Mount Whitney is the flagship of the U.S. 6th Fleet
and one of two Blue Ridge-class amphibious
command-and-control ships in the Navy. The move
would result in $179.7 million in savings. Mount
Whitney would be classified as out of commission in
reserve and be kept on the Naval Vessel Register as
a reactivation candidate.
In November 2021,
the ship drew the attention of Russian President
Vladimir Putin when it sailed in the Black Sea for
routine NATO operations. At the time, tensions were
running high amid a buildup of more than 150,000
Russian troops near the borders of Ukraine. Putin
used the ship’s presence as justification for
bolstering the country’s air defense system.
If decommissioned in 2026, the ship will have
reached year 55 of an expected service life of 68
years.
Mount Whitney is Retired Adm. James G. Foggo III's
favorite ship in the Navy.
ModelShipMaster would love to built a model of the
USS Mount Whitney for you. We invite you to check
out our accurate and beautiful Blue Ridge model
here:
https://www.modelshipmaster.com/products/modern_navy/USS-Blue-Ridge.htm
Construction
starts on US Navy’s future USS Robert E Simanek.
Expeditionary Sea Base vessel (ESB) ships are
designed to support multiple maritime-based
missions, such as air mine counter measures (AMCM),
special operations forces (SOF), and limited crisis
response. The 784ft ship, acting as a mobile sea
base, will be equipped with a 52,000ft² flight deck
to support operations of MV-22 tilt-rotor, MH-53,
MH-60, and H1 aircraft.
The
third and final ship in the Zumwalt class of
destroyers--the
Lyndon B. Johnson (DDG
1002)
started her
sea trials
on the birthday of its namesake, President Lyndon B.
Johnson. She
was launched in
December 2018 and christened in April 2019. Ships
of this class is known for their advanced electrical
system, capable of powering 50,000 homes, and their
stealth as a result of a radar-evading design and
construction.
Fincantieri uses all three of its
US shipyards to build new FFG(X) frigates and
will hire 600 more staff by year-end to handle the
work. The $553.9 million contract for the
second Constellation-class guided-missile
frigate was awarded Thursday to Fincantieri
Marinette Marine based in Marinette, Wisconsin.
US Navy researches long-range
aerial sea mine
The US Navy says it wants to know which companies
are capable of designing, manufacturing and testing
aerial sea mines as part of its “Long Range Aerial
Delivery of Maritime Mines” request for information,
posted on 20 August, 2020. the service suggests
these mines could be launched from aircraft at a
safe distance and flown to the target area,
presumably within the body of a cruise missile or
with the addition of a jet engine and wing kit. The
navy wants a weapon that can deliver at least a
227kg (500lb) explosive payload at a minimum range
of 100nm (185km). Ideally, it wants a weapon that
can carry a 907kg explosive payload beyond 100nm.
Ultimately, long-range aerial sea
mines could be helpful in a number of scenarios for
the US Department of Defense, including thwarting a
Chinese invasion of Taiwan. Such an assault would
require China to carry thousands of troops, as well
as tanks and other armored vehicles, across the
112-mile-wide Taiwan Strait. Mining the harbors and
other staging areas where the invasion force would
disembark could slow such an onslaught.
Air Force's New Helicopter Gets 1st
Aerial Refueling
The Air Force's newest combat
search-and-rescue helicopter, the HH-60W Jolly Green
II, hit another milestone Aug. 5, as it began two
weeks of developmental tests on its aerial refueling
abilities at Eglin Air Force Base, Florida.
|
|