Saturday, June 18, 2011
Rust never sleeps ... on LCS-2
I think we know one of the reasons why LCS-2 has an open tab at Singleton's.
The U.S. Navy has discovered �aggressive� corrosion in Austal Ltd. (ASB)�s first new combat ship designed for operating close to shore.
The corrosion is in the propulsion areas of the USS Independence, the Littoral Combat Ship built by the Mobile, Alabama-based subsidiary of Australia�s Austal and General Dynamics Corp. (GD)
�This could be a very serious setback,� said Norman Polmar, an independent naval analyst and author in Alexandria, Virginia. �If the ship develops a serious flaw, you�re not going to continue producing them.�
Permanent repair will require drydocking the ship and removing its �water jets,� a key component of the propulsion system, the Navy said in a written statement to congressional appropriations committees provided to Bloomberg News.
Aluminum-hulled ships such as Austal�s tend to rust faster than steel-hulled ships, Polmar said. �But I�m surprised it happened so early,� he said. �This ship is brand new.�
And they want to operate this for a couple of decades + with minimal manning in tropical seas ....
Sigh.
Speaking of sub-optimal. Our pal Craig Hooper needs to go to PAO school.
While not discussing LCS-2, U.S.S. Independence, specifically, Craig Hooper, Austal�s vice president for sales, marketing and external communication said that �dynamic corrosion is a common problem for any ship.
�It�s a known issue,� Hooper said, �and fixes are widely known in the maritime community.�
Craig. Dude.
Byron, call you office.
Navy officials were concerned about the potential for corrosion during construction of the ship because of �dissimilar metals,� particularly near the steel propulsion shafts, Bloomberg reported.
We were discussing this problem with the design what - well over four years ago?
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