Umihana-class destroyer (Pacifica)

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Umihana class
Class overview
BuildersShiroimizu Naval Yard, VostMash
OperatorsPelinai (Pacifica)Royal Pelinese Navy
Preceded byPartisan-class
Succeeded byProject 213-17A
Built2002-present
In commission2004-present
Planned82
On order5
Building14
Completed63
Active48
Laid up4
General characteristics
TypeGuided missile destroyer
Displacement12,100 tonnes at full load
Length175 meters
Beam20.5 meters
Draft6.5 meters
PropulsionIEP system, 104MW total
Speed32 knots / 59 km/h maximum
Range5,000nmi / 9,000km
Boats & landing
craft carried
2 x Rigid-hulled inflatable boats
Complement325 personnel including helicopter aircrew
Sensors and
processing systems
  • Dual S/C-band 3D AESA radar (air search / fire control)
  • X-band AESA radar system (sea search / fire control)
  • C-band radar (sea search)
  • 3 x X-band CW radars (fire control)
  • Electro-optical sensors
  • Variable-depth towed array sonar
  • Bow sonar
Electronic warfare
& decoys
ELINT/ECM system
Armament
  • 1 x YAF O-98K 125mm naval cannon
  • 2 x 25mm autocannon RWS mounts
  • 4 x 32-cell VLS arrays
  • 2 x Windshear-K 30mm combined gun/missile CIWS emplacements
  • 2 x 3-tube 324mm surface torpedo launchers
ArmorAramid anti-fragmentation protection around critical systems
Aircraft carried2 x Be-19 naval utility helicopters
Aviation facilities
  • Hangars and facilities for 2 medium-size helicopters
  • Stern helicopter deck

The Umihana class, also known in Pelinai by its development code Project 213-97B, is a class of guided missile destroyers currently operated by the Royal Pelinese Navy. The class is the most numerous surface combatant in the Royal Pelinese Navy of frigate size or larger, with 52 ships in active service and 30 additional ships on order, under construction, or in sea trials.

Umihana class vessels are multirole warships capable of performing a wide variety of tasks, including air defense, anti-submarine warfare, anti-surface warfare, land attack, and anti-ballistic missile/anti-satellite functions. The intended primary role of the Umihana class is defense of a carrier battlegroup; most active ships are assigned to provide long-endurance escort to Pelograd-class and Sakura-class aircraft carriers alongside the Ayame-class frigate and the Admiral Seisuko-class missile cruiser. The class’s ability to carry the K27M Almandine long-range interceptor missile also allows it to provide theater-wide ballistic missile defense and anti-satellite capability when provided targeting data by an Admiral Seisuko-class missile cruiser or a ground-based tracking station.

History

The first iteration of the concept for what would become the Umihana-class guided missile destroyer appeared in 1992 under the “21st Century Multirole Combatant” program, which was initiated by the Royal Pelinese Navy in late 1990 as a program to replace the aging Partisan-class destroyer used during the Pelinese Civil War. The keel of DDG-37, KPF Umihana, was laid down in 1999, with the ship being completed in 2002 and commissioned in 2004. 51 additional vessels of the class have since been commissioned, with an additional 25 in sea trials or shipyards.

Design

General characteristics

Umihana-class destroyers are unusually large for their ship classification, with a length of 175 meters, a beam of 20.5 meters, a draft of 6.5 meters, and a full-load displacement of 12,100 tonnes. Propulsion and electrical power for the class are provided by four 24MW Tyr TDB-13 gas turbine generators and two 4MW Tyr TD-91B diesel generators connected to an integrated electric power (IEP) system. Top speed and operational range are estimated to be 32 knots (59 km/h) and 5000 nautical miles (9000 kilometers), respectively. The procurement cost for an individual destroyer varies by contract, but is estimated to be approximately ~$800 million when including distributed initial development costs.

Armament

The armament of the Umihana-class was designed to be capable of performing a multimission role in the RPN, with a particular focus on area air defense for then-planned Pelograd-class aircraft carriers. The 12,100-tonne displacement ships carry four 32-cell VLS system blocks, which are capable of launching SAMs, quad-packed point defense missiles, LACMs, and ASCMs. Two 324mm triple-tube torpedo launchers are mounted to provide additional anti-submarine capability. A single O-98K 125mm naval cannon and two 25mm remote-operated autocannons give the Umihana-class limited shore bombardment capacity and function as self-defense weapons against approaching small craft.

Countermeasures

Defensive equipment mounted on the Umihana-class includes a full combined ELINT/ECM package as well as two Windshear-K CIWS arrays mounting both 30mm autocannons and point defense missiles for close-range defensive fire against attacking aircraft and anti-ship cruise missiles. In addition to antiaircraft missiles stowed in the VLS blocks and the cannons and missiles on the CIWS turrets, antiaircraft and missile defense fire can also be provided by the 125mm cannon and 25mm autocannons within their effective ranges.

Sensors

The two primary radars on the Umihana-class guided missile destroyer are the Type 118A “Sakura Petal” combined S/C-band radar and the Type 114A X-band radar. Both types are AESA radars; the Type 118A is intended to track and target aircraft, and the Type 114A is intended for use against naval vessels. Three X-band continuous wave radars are also mounted to provide fire control and targeting functions to missiles that utilize semi-active radar homing guidance systems. A C-band navigation and surface detection radar is also present.

A bow sonar and a variable-depth towed-array sonar are both fitted to the Umihana class in order to allow it to provide ASW detection coverage.

The Umihana’s combat information and fire control system is capable of sharing and receiving sensor and targeting information from nearby RPN ships and aircraft as well as performing data fusion with radar and sonar information from multiple ships in order to increase effective sensor resolution, facilitate the continued combat effectiveness of ships with damaged radars and other fire control systems, and allow for the long-range firing of weaponry against below-the-horizon targets. The C-band component of the Type 118A is stated by the RPN to be capable of tracking and targeting stealth aircraft.

Ships

See also