Sea Shadow (IX-529)
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Career | |
---|---|
Ordered: | 22 October 1982 |
Delivered: | 1 March 1985 |
Commissioned: | |
Decommissioned: | |
Fate: | Available for donation from Suisun Bay Reserve Fleet, September 2006 |
Struck: | |
General characteristics | |
Displacement: | 563 tons / 572 tonnes |
Length: | 164 ft / 50 m |
Beam: | 68 ft / 21 m |
Draft: | 15 ft / 4.6 m |
Propulsion: | Diesel electric |
Speed: | 10 knots / 12 mph / 19 km/h |
Range: | |
Complement: | 4 |
Armament: | None |
Sea Shadow (IX-529) is an experimental stealth ship built by Lockheed for the United States Navy.
Contents |
[edit] Development
Sea Shadow was built in 1985 and used in secret but in normal service until its public debut in 1994, to examine the application of stealth technology on naval vessels. In addition, the ship would test the ability to man a ship with fewer men and using more automation. The ship was created by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), the U.S. Navy and Lockheed. Sea Shadow was developed at Lockheed's Redwood City, California facility, inside the Hughes Mining Barge, which functioned as a floating drydock during construction and testing. She is sometimes incorrectly referred to as "USS Sea Shadow," but she was never a fully commissioned ship of the US Navy.
[edit] Overview
This article or section appears to contradict another article, HMB-1, about the date it was made public. Please help fix this problem in this article, and the one it's linked to. |
Sea Shadow has a SWATH hull design. Below the water are submerged twin hulls, each with a propeller, aft stabilizer, and inboard canard. The portion of the ship above water is connected to the hulls via the two angled struts. The SWATH design helps the ship remain stable even in very rough water of up to sea state 6 (wave height of 18 feet (5.5 m) or "very rough" sea). The shape of the superstructure has sometimes been compared to the casemate of the ironclad ram CSS Virginia of the American Civil War.
The T-AGOS 19-and-23-class oceanographic ships have inherited the stabilizer and canard method to help perform their stability-sensitive surveillance missions.
Sea Shadow has only 12 bunks aboard, one small microwave oven, a refrigerator and table. It was never intended to be mission capable and was never commissioned, although she is listed in the Naval Vessel Register.
Sea Shadow was revealed to the public in 1994, and was housed at the San Diego Naval Station until September 2006, when it was relocated with the HMB-1 to the Suisun Bay Reserve Fleet in Benicia, CA. The vessels are available for donation to a maritime museum.
[edit] See also
- Littoral Combat Ship, one of the descendants of Sea Shadow.
- Sea Fighter United States
- La Fayette class frigate France
- Visby class corvette Sweden
- Braunschweig class corvette Germany
- Milgem class corvette Turkey
- F125 class frigate Germany
- Sachsen class frigate Germany
- De Zeven Provinciën class frigate Netherlands
- Skjold class Norway