Isn't it just beautiful to behold?It looks like the Ghost Busters hearse had a baby with the Animal House deathmobile.
Isn't it just beautiful to behold?It looks like the Ghost Busters hearse had a baby with the Animal House deathmobile.
I recall flying with one in the early 80's in an H-3. We were doing 70 KTS and it was outrunning us!"Aries" is still hangin' in there.... We had hoped to get her flying again someday but the money has never been there.
My company has the sad distinction of being the last technical and logistics support contractor for them when they were based in Key West. As such, we were in charge of organizing all the demil and subsequent scrapping/disposal activities. "Aries" is the only one out all of them that managed to escape having her foils scrapped out separately and she was saved from the scrap heap.I recall flying with one in the early 80's in an H-3. We were doing 70 KTS and it was outrunning us!
Isn't 10 years rather a short lifespan for a warship?My company has the sad distinction of being the last technical and logistics support contractor for them when they were based in Key West. As such, we were in charge of organizing all the demil and subsequent scrapping/disposal activities. "Aries" is the only one out all of them that managed to escape having her foils scrapped out separately and she was saved from the scrap heap.
https://www.ussaries.org/
No...they get scrapped or at least decommed for lots of reasons other than age. Recent examples include our MCM and, particularly, MCH mine hunters, and very recently a bunch of the "new" LCS'. And besides...the PHMs were active from '77-'93...so 16 years.Isn't 10 years rather a short lifespan for a warship?
Looked that one up.... alongside the then-new squadron of USCG Surface Effect Ships (WSES).
And that vessel is my pride and joy...my crowning engineering achievement. Spent 5-6 years of my life in the 90s as head of the design team for the hull and surface effect ship specific equipment design and arrangement. Fastest I've been was on the first of class "Skjold" prototype and was about 56 knots. The series production used a higher output turbine package and can "exceed 65 knots".Looked that one up.
I like the Skjold class the Norwegians built better. Looks a lot more combat worthy.