USS Scott (DDG-995)

For other ships of the same name, see USS Scott.
USS Scott
Career (United States)
Name: USS Scott (DDG-995)
Builder: Litton Ingalls,
Pascagoula, Mississippi
Laid down: 12 February 1979
Launched: 1 March 1980
Acquired: 8 September 1981
Commissioned: 24 October 1981
Decommissioned: 10 December 1998
Struck: 10 December 1998
Fate: Sold to Taiwan, 30 May 2003; commissioned as ROCS Kee Lung (DDG-1801)
General characteristics
Class and type:Kidd-class destroyer
Displacement:9,783 tons full
Length:171.6 m (563 ft)
Beam:  16.8 m (55 ft)
Draft:    9.6 m (31.5 ft)
Propulsion:4 × General Electric LM2500-30 gas turbines, 80,000 shp (60,000 kW) total
Speed:33 knots (61 km/h)
Complement:31 officers
332 enlisted
Sensors and
processing systems:
AN/SPS-48E 3D air search radar
AN/SPS-49 2D air search radar
SPG-60 gun fire control radar
AN/SPG-51 missile fire control radar
AN/SPS-55 surface search radar
AN/SPQ-9A gun fire control radar
SQS-53 sonar
AN/SQR-17A Sonar Signal Processing System sonar
Electronic warfare
and decoys:
AN/SLQ-32(V)3
Armament:2 × Mark 26 RIM-66 Standard missile launchers
2 × Mark 141 quad launcher with 8 × RGM-84 Harpoon
2 × Mark 15 20 mm Phalanx CIWS
2 × Mark 45 5 in (127 mm) / 54 caliber gun
2 × Mark 32 triple tube mounts with 6 × Mark 46 torpedoes
Aircraft carried:1 × SH-3 Sea King or
2 × SH-2 Seasprite

USS Scott (DDG-995) was a Kidd-class destroyer of the United States Navy. She was named for Rear Admiral Norman Scott, who was killed during a surface action at the First Naval Battle of Guadalcanal (sometimes referred to as the Battle of Friday the 13th) aboard USS Atlanta, winning a posthumous Medal of Honor for his actions.

Originally named Nader, Scott was ordered by the Shah of Iran, but was undelivered at the time of the Iranian Revolution and the U.S. Navy elected to commission her and her sister ships for service in the Persian Gulf. The destroyers were equipped with heavy-duty air conditioning and were also well suited to filtering sand and the results from NBC warfare. She was commissioned in 1981.

Scott completed a major re-fit in Philadelphia in 1988 that focussed on upgrading its radar and fire control tracking system.

Scott was decommissioned from the U.S. Navy on 10 December 1998.

Current status

Scott was sold to the Republic of China in 2004, originally to be named Chi Te. However, due to her better storage condition than her sister ships, she became the first Kidd class vessel to be commissioned by the Republic of China Navy (ROCN) and thus became ROCS Kee Lung (DDG-1801), the lead vessel of the new ROCN Kee Lung-class destroyers.

After almost two years of refit and training in the U.S., the Kee Lung was commissioned on 17 December 2005 at Kee-Lung naval port in northern Taiwan. The ROCN paid just over $690 million for the four Kidd-class destroyers, giving it extensive AAW capabilities.

References

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