The U.S. Navy is
seeking replacements for its 32 LCUs (Landing Craft Utility), which are
all over 40 years old and fading fast. LCUs have a flat bottom and a
ramp built into the front of the ship, which can be dropped into shallow
water to allow armored vehicles or tucks to leave the ship and move
right onto the beach. Current LCUs (LCU 1600s) are 380 ton ships that
can carry 125 tons of cargo (two tanks, 400 troops or just cargo) These
LCUs have a crew of 13, a top speed of 20 kilometers an hour and can
stay at sea for up to ten days. LCUs were developed during World War II,
and are still in wide use by nations that have lots of coastline, or
nearby islands as well as in large amphibious ships (for carrying troops
from ship to shore).
The LCU replacement is called SC(X)(R) (for Surface Connector
Replacement) and the design is still under consideration. Given the
growing cash shortages in the navy, it’s likely that the LCU replacement
will just be an updating of the existing design. LCUs were developed
during World War II, and are still in wide use by nations that have lots
of coastline, or nearby islands.
In the 1990s the U.S. Army replaced its own fleet of LCU 1600s
with 34 LCU 2000s. These are 1,087 ton ships that can carry 350 tons
(or up to five tanks or 24 cargo containers). The LCU 2000 has the same
size crew but can stay at sea up to 27 days. The army stations some of
them overseas (Kuwait, Japan) to help move cargo from anchored ships to
shore (and up rivers or numerous bases).
The navy may end up following
the army lead in choosing an affordable design for its LCU replacement.
The navy would like something more exotic, but the cash just isn’t
there. The army LCU 2000s have been in service nearly two decades now
and the army is planning to refurbish them so the ships can serve
another decade beyond their designed life of 25 years. If the navy wants
a low-risk replacement for its older LCUs, something based on the army
LCU is the best candidate.
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