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Navy to commission littoral combat ship USS Sioux City
by Stephen Carlson
Washington (UPI) Nov 14, 2018

USNS Joshua Humphreys fleet replenishment oiler to enter drydock for overhaul
Washington (UPI) Nov 14, 2018 - Detyens Shipyards has been awarded a $10 million contract for a two month drydock overhaul of the USNS Joshua Humphreys.

The regular shipyard availability work will include general services like cleaning, routine maintenance and rebuilds, engine turbocharger overhaul and other work from lifeboats to painting.

The contract, announced Tuesday by the Department of Defense, includes options which, if exercised, would bring the cumulative value to more than $11 million. The company has already been obligated $10 million in Navy fiscal 2019 operations and maintenance funds already obligated.

The USNS Joshua Humphreys is a Henry J. Kaiser-class fleet replenishment oiler that has been retired and reactivated several times since it was completed in 1987. It accompanies carrier strike groups and other vessels to provide refueling for ships using conventional engines as well as jet fuel.

The Humphreys has five refueling stations, carries up to 180,000 barrels of fuel oil and gas and can transfer dry and refrigerated cargo as well. It is manned by a civilian crew operated under the Navy and is normally unarmed, but in wartime high-threat areas can be mounted with Phalanx 20mm point-defense cannons for self-defense.

The Navy will commission its newest Freedom-variant littoral combat ship USS Sioux City during a 9 a.m. ceremony on Saturday at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md.

U.S. Senator Joni Ernst of Iowa will deliver the principal address at the ceremony while Mary Winnefeld, the wife of former vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm. James "Sandy" Winnefeld, is the ship's sponsor.

The Navy will stream the commissioning Saturday on its Navy Live official blog.

The USS Sioux City, or LCS 11, is the 13th LCS to join the fleet and the sixth of the Freedom variant, alongside the Independence-type LCS. It would be the first naval vessel to be named after Sioux City, Iowa.

USS Sioux City will be homeported at Naval Station Mayport in Florida where it will undergo activation trials before entering active service.

The LCS is meant to operate in shallow coastal waters, along with regular sea operations. It is designed to be modular, allowing multiple weapons and sensor packages depending on the mission of the ship.

It's standard armament is a MK 110 57mm gun. The LCS can also be equipped with RIM-110 RAM surface-to-air missiles and a variety of other ordnance. It can carry up to two helicopters and vertical take-off drones like the MQ-8 Fire Scout.

The LCS comes in two highly similar models, the Freedom variant, by Lockheed Martin, and the Independence variant, by Austal USA, with multiple ships of each type on order.

The LCS has been criticized for design issues and a lack of significant firepower. Though production continues, it is expected to be supplemented by a new class of Guided Missile Frigates that carry vertical launch systems for missiles and other heavy weaponry.


Related Links
Naval Warfare in the 21st Century


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Norway frigate sinks after tanker collision
Oslo (AFP) Nov 13, 2018
A Norwegian frigate that collided with a Maltese tanker in a fjord in western Norway last week was almost entirely submerged on Tuesday after cables holding it in place broke. "The vessel is now lying immobile in deeper water," the head of the Navy's rescue operation, Havard Mathiesen, told reporters. A modern ship weighing around 5,000 tonnes, the KNM Helge Ingstad took on water after colliding with the Maltese oil tanker early Thursday in the Hjeltefjord near Bergen. The accident, the caus ... read more

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