Largest destroyer built for Navy departs shipbuilder, eases downriver, embarks on sea trials
More than 200 shipbuilders, sailors and residents gathered to watch as the futuristic 600-foot, 15,000-ton USS Zumwalt glided past Fort Popham, accompanied by tugboats.
Kelley Campana, a Bath Iron Works employee, said she had goose bumps and tears in her eyes.
"This is pretty exciting. It's a great day to be a shipbuilder and to be an American," she said. "It's the first in its class. There's never been anything like it. It looks like the future."
Larry Harris, a retired Raytheon employee who worked on the ship, watched it depart from Bath.
"It's as cool as can be. It's nice to see it underway," he said. "Hopefully, it will perform as advertised."
Bath Iron Works will be testing the ship's performance and making tweaks this winter. The goal is to deliver it to the Navy sometime next year.
"We
are absolutely fired up to see Zumwalt get underway. For the crew and
all those involved in designing, building, and readying this fantastic
ship, this is a huge milestone," the ship's skipper, Navy Capt. James
Kirk, said before the ship departed.
The
ship has electric propulsion, new radar and sonar, powerful missiles
and guns, and a stealthy design to reduce its radar signature. Advanced
automation will allow the warship to operate with a much smaller crew
size than current destroyers.
All
of that innovation has led to construction delays and a growing price
tag. The Zumwalt, the first of three ships in the class, will cost at
least $4.4 billion.
The ship looks like nothing ever built at Bath Iron Works.
The
inverse bow juts forward to slice through the waves. Sharp angles
deflect enemy radar signals. Radar and antennas are hidden in a
composite deckhouse.
The builder sea trials will
answer any questions of seaworthiness for a ship that utilizes a type
of hull associated with pre-dreadnought battleships from a century ago.
Critics
say the "tumblehome" hull's sloping shape makes it less stable than
conventional hulls, but it contributes to the ship's stealth and the
Navy is confident in the design.
Eric
Wertheim, author and editor of the U.S. Naval Institute's "Guide to
Combat Fleets of the World," said there's no question the integration of
so many new systems from the electric drive to the tumblehome hull
carries some level of risk.
Operational
concerns, growing costs and fleet makeup led the Navy to truncate the
32-ship program to three ships, he said. With only three ships, the
class of destroyers could become something of a technology demonstration
project, he said.
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