By Karen Parrish
American Forces Press Service
BATH, Maine, Nov. 21, 2013 – Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel
said the not-yet-launched Zumwalt-class destroyer he toured here today
“represents the cutting edge of our naval capabilities.”
The ship, now known as the Pre-Commissioning Unit, or PCU,
Zumwalt, will become the USS Zumwalt, named for former Navy Adm. Elmo Zumwalt.
Officials said the ship is about a year away from joining the fleet.
Now littered with large protective crates storing systems
not yet installed, the ship is being fitted with new automated systems. The
Zumwalt, Navy officials explained, has highly accurate long-range weapons, an
impressive power generation capability and a design emphasizing “stealthy”
radar-defeating materials and shapes.
The ship will be home ported in San Diego, Hagel noted, and
it “represents an important shift … in America’s interests to the
Asia-Pacific,” he told a mixed crowd of sailors, government civilians and
General Dynamics employees assembled near where the ship is docked.
Hagel thanked General Dynamics and its workforce at Bath
Iron Works, which will produce all three of the Zumwalt-class ships planned for
production. The secretary called the facility “a magnificent institution that’s
been part of the security of this country for 130 years.”
The secretary also spoke to a number of sailors and defense
civilians present, who are working to get the ship ready for active duty. Hagel
thanked them and their families for their service.
Sharon E. Burke, assistant secretary of defense for
operational energy plans and programs, accompanied Hagel’s delegation on the
ship tour. Later, she spoke to reporters while en route to Halifax, Nova
Scotia, where Hagel landed later in the day for an international security forum
that starts tomorrow.
Burke said that the ship’s power generation capacity -- 78
megawatts, impressed her. One megawatt of power can power about 1,000 American
homes.
The massive amount of available power makes the ship
expandable for future weapon systems such as rail guns, which “take a lot of
pulse power,” Burke noted.
“Also, you’re running a lot of very sophisticated systems on
that ship,” she said. “It gives them a lot of room to be able to run all those
systems.”
The ship can generate 78 megawatts of power, and can channel
it to propulsion, shipboard use and weapons systems. Officials said the guided
missile destroyer is the first Navy ship to be fully electrical, and it was
designed to use automated systems as much as possible to decrease the number of
sailors needed as crew.
For example, officials said, automatic systems route, store
and load the 300 rounds of 24-pound ammunition each of the ship’s two 155mm
guns can fire. The guns have, in testing, successfully fired at a rate of 10
rounds a minute and with 20- to 40-inch accuracy at a range of more than 60
nautical miles, officials noted.
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