US Navy Connected ASW Fleet Ship Designs

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Note by author: This isn't a real concept, and isn't fact checked at all. It is however an interesting idea that probably never happened for some good reasons..... but that is never a reason not to check the implications of it! So, take it with a grain of salt ;)

The problem

In the late 1960’s, the US Navy had a problem. They had started development and construction on the DX, to be known as the Spruance class, and these ships had the potential to be the best ASW ships that could be made at the time. Why was this a problem, you ask? Because with the capabilities and the numbers of Soviet submarines, the USN needed more of these ships then they could ever afford.

Anti-submarine warfare is most of the time limited by detection of the enemy submarine. It is a lot easier to get close to your target under water without being detected then it would be on the surface or in the air. This is mostly because even with powerful sonars it is impossible to reach ranges similar to what radar can achieve. Because of this, the expensive AAW missile ships can be found closer to the centre of any large formation then the ASW ships, which have to be further out to detect submarines in time.

This is a problem, when the ASW ships you want are relatively close to the cost of the AAW ships, while you need many more of them to form an effective shield around your formation. The FRAM ships had reached the end of their careers, being no longer considered effective, and the threat analysis suggests that the best ships to replace them with would be a ship that at least weapons and electronics wise would be equal to a Spruance. Quite the opposite of what the USN would realistically want: keep a smaller ‘peacetime navy’ that could be upgraded by adding wartime emergency construction/rebuild ships. This would free the Spruance class for conversion to DXG.

Connected ASW Fleet

To achieve this, a new strategy was needed. And with the development of the systems for the Spruance class, the cause of the issue, the solution was found as well: the Connected ASW Fleet.

The connected ASW fleet concept depends highly on datalinks, the core of which is formed by the NTDS (Naval Tactical Data System). This system allowed ships CIC’s to share information with each other in real time so a single unified map of the battlespace was available from the data from every sensor. This allowed for more effective IFF, targeting and command. The Spruance class all had NTDS at the core of their electronic systems, which was one of the drivers for the ships large size.

The concept

The connected ASW fleet concept took this one step further. If you could share data, could you also distribute tasks? Did every ship need all systems to perform it’s mission, or could you centralise certain data? By 1970, a conceptual proposal had arisen.

  • Towed arrays could be mass produced and had a relatively small ship impact. A containerised module could be build that could be put on wartime emergency ships or even on (modified) civilian ships.
  • Datalinks became available that could handle large amount of data from relatively simple data acquisition systems, for example on containerised towed arrays.
  • If ships could be operated cheaply enough, large numbers of towed arrays could be fielded using the above systems, allowing to ‘check’ a large area better then a smaller number of high cost ships could.
  • If a small number of ships could gather, check and plot the data from small towed array ships and attack targets that appeared in this data, this would allow the USN to both protect convoys and hunt enemy submarines.
  • If such a ship would be able to attack from beyond the submarines detection range, it could also act as deterrent, because any ship that COULD have a towed array would be a potential threat.

Reactions

The study initially wasn't a great success, but after the results were published, the navy felt it couldn't ignore it, as the potential was very high, IF it worked. The fact was, the abilities it promised could otherwise only be achieved by large numbers of aerial ASW assets. To judge its potential and cost-effectiveness, the navy started researching the baseline ships required for the Connected ASW Fleet concept. In 1971, the study was complete, and it was found that the resulting abilities were definitely worth it!

So, in 1973, congress authorised 4 brand new CLK's, 6 containerised towed arrays and 2 'wartime emergency prototypes'

The ships

CLK-3 Guadalcanal class

CLK-3 Cruiser Escort.png

The Guadalcanal class were the centerpiece of the Connected ASW Fleet.They carried a flag plot, command staff, a layered ASW attack system and various datalink and communication systems.

The ships design was initially based on that of the Spruance class. The original concept replaced the forward gun, the Mk 4 AWHS and the Mk 16 launcher with a VLS launched STAM missile. This missile would give these ships over the horizon anti-sub and anti-ship abilities by attaching an medium sized torpedo to an high-subsonic missile, giving the torpedo a range of over 300 nautical miles. The VLS proposed would end up far larger then the Mk 4 AWHS it would replace, even if only a few missiles would be shipped. The point could be made that this VLS would even be too substantial to fit it on any surface warship. Instead, it was proposed to fire the missile from an existing launch system: while the magazine wasn't suitable, the launcher developed for the Talos missile would fit a modified STAM.

The resulting design did not suit the navy well: when separated from it's 'cheap fleet', for example in peacetime operations, the ship would be less capable but more expensive to operate compared with an Spruance. So it was modified: in peacetime the ship would be able to perform the tasks of a flag ship Spruance while in a large scale conflict, the USN would use these ships to their full potential, with increased command staff, full helicopter load and effective use of the STAM missile. The resulting ship was a good bit bigger then the Spruance it was based on, but shared many parts and design aspects. 4 of these ships were initially build, named for notable escort carriers in WW2.

Dimensions
  • WL Length: 580 ft
  • Beam: 63 ft


Propulsion
  • 4 General Electric LM2500 gas turbines, 2 shafts, 80,000 shp (60 MW)
  • Top speed: 31 knots
  • Range: 8000 nautical miles at 20 knots
  • Range: 3300 nautical miles at 30 knots.
Armament
  • Twin launcher for STAM missile, 24 reloads
  • Mk 16 Box launcher for ASROC, 8 in launcher, 16 reloads
  • Mk 42 5/54 gun
  • Mk 29 launcher for Sea Sparrow, 8 in launcher
  • 2 Mk 144 launchers for Harpoon, 4 in launcher
  • 2 Mk 32 SVTT for Mk 46 torpedo, 3 in launchers, 20 reloads.
  • 2 SH-3 or 4 SH-2 helicopters.
Sensors
Other equipment

Hunter-Killer emergency ship

Converted Merchants