World Maritime News said:The missile range instrumentation ship USNS Howard O. Lorenzen (T-AGM 25) successfully completed its final contract trials (FCT) in San Diego, the Navy announced, Dec. 5.
FCTs, run by the Navy’s Board of Inspection and Survey (INSURV), is the final review in a series of post-delivery tests and trials exercising all aspects of the vessel and its systems, including main propulsion, damage control, supply, deck, navigation, habitability, electrical systems and operations. INSURV officials monitored the successful demonstration of the ship’s systems including both in-port and at-sea testing.
Constructed by VT Halter Marine in Pascagoula, Miss., T-AGM 25 and its Cobra Judy Replacement (CJR) radar system will be the replacement for USNS Observation Island., which was launched in 1953. CJR will provide worldwide, high-quality, dual-band radar data in support of ballistic missile treaty verification.
The crew consists of civilian mariners that operate the ship and an Air Force operations and maintenance crew to operate the mission radars.
“The crew demonstrated their professionalism and dedication throughout many weeks of hard work to ensure the successful completion of the final contract trials, as assessed by INSURV,” said Capt. Roderick Wester, CJR major program manager, Program Executive Office for Integrated Warfare Systems (PEO IWS). “Captain Patrick Christian, the ship’s master, thoroughly prepared his crew and ensured the highest level of material readiness for Howard O. Lorenzen.”
Design and construction of T-AGM 25 was managed by PEO Ships. The Navy will transfer the vessel to the U.S. Air Force for operations and maintenance once the ship reaches initial operational capability in 2014.
NAVSEA, December 6, 2013
This is the Cobra Judy Replacement ship. It is over 550 ft. long, a beam of over 85 ft. and displaces 13,000 tons. The technology surrounding the Dual Band Radar these ships employ, and their powerful sensor suite, is something the Navy is now talking about including (in a different form) in a modified version of the San Antonio Class hull to create a Missile Defense Ships to help defend Carrier Battle Groups which Huntington Ingalls is proposing.
Be nice to have one of these for each deployed CSG, and to be able to have it work in a cooperative engagement mode with the Burke IIAs and the Ticonderoga or future Burke IIIs defending the carrier.
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