FFG
upgrade underway
By
Graham Davis
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HMAS
Sydney in the graving dock at Garden Island.
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Photo:
LSMT Danny John
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HMAS
Sydney undergoing the tilt tests in the partially emptied
dry dock.
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Photo:
LSMT Danny John
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One
of the Royal Australian Navy’s most important moves to increase
its warfighting capability, the $1 billion up-grade of its six
guided missile frigates (FFGs), is underway.
ADI Ltd formally began work on the first ship, HMAS Sydney, on
September 22 a few days after the 4,100-tonne warship entered
the Captain Cook Graving Dock at Garden Island in Sydney.
Work on the last ship should be completed in 2007, Mr Barry Barnes,
the Director/Naval for ADI told Navy News. Among the important
enhancements set for the six vessels is the addition of a second
missile system.
A new vertical launch system will be built to take the evolved
Sea Sparrow missile. The existing SM-1 missile system will be
retained.
Work on HMAS Sydney is expected to be completed in August, 2004,
her commanding officer, CMDR Michael Van Balen, said. Although
Sydney is vessel 03, once her work is done the sequence of upgrades
will follow the hull numbers. “01, HMAS Adelaide, will go nose
to tail with Sydney and so on,” CAPT Mark Kellam the commander
of the Surface Combatant FEG, said.
He said once workers honed their skills and learning on Sydney
and Adelaide, they could then parallel some of the work on the
remaining four ships to achieve the 2007 completion target. The
upgrade will affect the lives of nominally 1300 officers and sailors.
Each ship entering the program will see about half of her ship’s
company move off. The remaining 100 will be involved in maintaining
the ship’s routine, fire safety and security.
Should they be combat systems operators and electronic technicians,
they will find themselves doing courses applicable to the new
equipment and armaments their ships will carry.
“Their commanding officers will remain on board and the ships
will remain commissioned,” CAPT Kellam said. Days before Sydney
entered the dock sheets of steel had been positioned nearby.
Some of these will be used for the new Sea Sparrow well and for
re-inforcement of some sections of the ship. When the upgrade
is completed each ship will go from 4,100 tonnes to 4,200 tonnes.
In addition office space has been assigned to Sydney’s ship’s
company in an adjoining building. ADI Ltd as the prime contractor
for the upgrade, advertised for 80 additional workers earlier
this year. They included electricians, boilermakers, sheetmetal
workers, plumbers and pipe fabricators.
Ship repair assistants with a sound knowledge of grit blasting
were also called for. ADI will have more than 300 people working
on the project under the leadership of the FFG project manager
Phil New and production manager Peter Simmons.
The upgrade program will provide capability and supportability
upgrades to the six warships to increase their operational effectiveness
against regional threats and to ensure their supportability through
the end of their lives.
This will entail improvements to self defence and offensive capabilities
and enhancement to the ship’s reliability, maintainability, availability
and supportability.
Earmarked for upgrade are the ships’ command and control, surveillance
capability, air warfare capability, underwater warfare capability,
on-board training capability, improved communications, improved
shore support ability and the capabilities of the ship platform
itself.
Their hulls will be strengthened and ballast moved and added to,
while their service diesel generator prime movers will be replaced
as will static frequency converters.
Each ship will be able to make more chilled water and the ship’s
company will be better off with improved ventilation, more drying
space in the mess decks and modified laundries.