Page 36: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (March 2, 2005)
Read this page in Pdf, Flash or Html5 edition of March 2, 2005 Maritime Reporter Magazine
36 Maritime Reporter & Engineering News
The U.S. Navy's push toward a new generation of smaller, stealthier, and more versatile vessels is taking shape at Nichols Brothers Boatyard in Whidbey Island,
Wash., as the Navy last month christened the experi- mental X-Craft Sea Fighter, designated as the first Fast
Sea Frame.
The high-speed, experimental vessel, designed by
Nigel Gee & Associates, is designed to test a variety of technologies that will allow the Navy to operate more effectively in littoral, or near-shore, waters. Sea
Fighter will be used to evaluate the hydrodynamic per- formance, structural behavior, mission flexibility, and propulsion system efficiency of, high-speed vessels, and will also serve as a test bed for developmental mis- sion packages. It will serve as a risk reduction, exper- imental vessel for the Littoral Combat Ship and Coast
Guard's Deepwater Program concept of operation development at sea.
The keel of the aluminum catamaran was laid in June 2003, and is 262 x 72 x 11.5 ft. long and displaces 950 tons. Two LM2500 aeroderivative marine gas turbines
Circle 276 on Reader Service Card
Navy
X-Craft Sea Fighter Makes its Debut
The Littoral Surface Craft - Experimental, "X-Craft," was christened
Sea Fighter (FSF-1) in February at the Nichols Brothers Boatyard on Whidbey Island, Wash.
MR MARCH 2005 #5 (33-40).qxd 3/1/2005 2:12 PM Page 4