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FLOATING STEEL
Israel Aerospace supplying patrol boats to African military
by Richard Tomkins
Ben Gurion International Airport, Israel (UPI) Apr 1, 2015


Coast Guard taps Ingalls Shipbuilding for new cutter
Pascagoula, Miss. (UPI) Apr 1, 2015 - An eighth National Security Cutter is to be built for the U.S. Coast Guard by Huntington Ingalls Industries' Shipbuilding division, the company announced.

The future cutter, the Midgett (WMSL 757), is expected to be delivered to the Coast Guard in 2019 under a fixed-price incentive contract worth $499.8 million.

"We are performing extremely well in this (cutter) program, proving the point that serial production is the most efficient and effective way to build complex military ships," said Jim French, Ingalls' National Security Cutter program manager. "We continue to fold in learning for each ship we build, and the three under construction right now are tracking well because of this knowledge."

Ingalls has already completed four National Security Cutters for the Coast Guard and three more are currently under construction. The James (WMSL 754), Munro (WMSL 755) and Kimball (WMSL 756) will be delivered in 2015, 2016 and 2018, respectively.

National Security Cutters are replacing Hamilton-class vessels which first entered service in the 1960s. NSCs are 418 feet long, have a 54-foot beam and displace 4,500 tons with a full load.

The top speed of Legend-class NSCs is 28 knots. Range for the ships is 12,000 miles.

Israel Aerospace Industries reports that an unidentified African military has ordered fast patrol boats for delivery in 2016.

The four boats are the Super Dvora Mk 3, which is used by the Israeli Navy. The boats are 90 feet long, have a speed of as much as 50 knots in littoral waters, and have a range of 700 nautical miles while traveling at a speed of 14 knots.

IAI said the boats will be built at its Ramta facilities.

"This powerful boat will be an important addition to our customer's maritime arsenal for securing its littoral waters", said Nitzan Shaked, IAI/Ramta's general manager.

"We are very proud that our boats are being operated on nearly all of the world's oceans, and that this, another African customer, has selected our proven design to address their significant maritime challenges."

IAI said it has supplied more than 100 patrol boats in various configurations to maritime customers around the world.

The value of the contract was not disclosed.


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FLOATING STEEL
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The second of two French Mistral warships whose delivery to Russia has been suspended due to violence in east Ukraine began its first open sea outing Monday, AFP journalists observed. The Sebastopol was eased from its Saint-Nazaire port in western France by tugboats just after 1:00 pm (1200 GMT) for a scheduled five-day test voyage without Russian navy personnel aboard. The nearly comple ... read more


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