By UK Ministry of Defence on Thursday, March 15th, 2012
http://www.defencetalk.com/two-type-45-destroyers-resume-sea-trials-40920/#ixzz1pSerlYxb
http://www.defencetalk.com/two-type-45-destroyers-resume-sea-trials-40920/#ixzz1pSerlYxb
Two of Britain's latest state-of-the-art destroyers
have taken to the sea to further test their capabilities before initial
deployments.
Dragon left a trail of smoke and fire off
Portland as she tested her decoy flares for the first time during her intensive
trials and training package. Meanwhile
Defender left the BAE Systems yard on the Clyde on Friday for 28 days of tests
and trials in the waters off western Scotland.
On the south coast, Dragon, the fourth of the Navy's six Type 45 destroyers, has been
working with military scientists to test her weapons and defensive systems.
The
Portsmouth-based warship used the ranges off Portland Bill, with a team from
the Defence Science and Technology Laboratory - the MOD's in-house scientists -
ashore monitoring the destroyer's radar cross-section and infrared
characteristics as she fired off her decoy flares.
The distinctive angular nature of the Daring Class is
designed to minimise the 'blip' the ships produce on an enemy radar screen and
suggest that, instead of an 8,500-tonne warship bristling with weaponry, the
target is an innocuous smaller vessel.
This angular shape, coupled with the Sea Viper missile system, which can take out incoming missiles and aircraft at
ranges of up to 75 miles (120km) away, give it world-leading defensive
capabilities.
Leading Seaman Wayne Fugatt, who was the
loading team leader for the trials, said:
"It was my first time as leading hand
in charge of a firing serial.
"It's a unique experience to be
involved in taking a warship as capable as this out of build and up to her
first decoy firing. It fills me with confidence that we've the right kit to do
the job when it matters."
Meanwhile, 450 miles (724km) north a mixed
crew of Royal Navy and BAE Systems personnel are building on what was
accomplished during Defender's first trials last autumn, carrying out final
testing of the ship's power and propulsion and combat systems, and navigational
and communications
equipment.
If all goes well on this second 'workout', the £1bn
destroyer will be formally handed over to the Royal Navy this summer:
"Defender's departure on her second
set of sea trials marks another milestone in the life of the ship and her
company as we prepare to join the fleet later this year," said the
destroyer's senior naval officer Commander Nicholas Boyd.
"We are looking forward to operating
her sophisticated equipment and systems during trials and beyond, putting our
experience and training into practice."
As well as the arduous task of fitting and
testing the thousands of components and systems, Defender has used her time on
the Clyde to begin to forge relationships with her affiliates, notably the
cities of Glasgow and Exeter.
Upon
her return to Scotstoun next month, Defender
will undergo three months of final testing and checking of her systems before
sailing to her home for the next 30-plus years, Portsmouth, in July to join
the bulk of the Type 45 fleet.
As for Defender's and Dragon's four sisters, Daring is
deployed and Dauntless and Diamond will do so later this year.
The final ship in the six-strong class,
Duncan, is in the latter stages of completion at Scotstoun and will head to sea
for the first time towards the end of the year.
She's
due to be handed over to the Royal Navy before the end of 2013, bringing the
curtain down on a decade's construction on the Type 45 project.
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