US Navy ‘Super Destroyer’ Broke Down in Panama Due to New Engineering Casualty

The newest USS Zumwalt (DDG-1000) guided missile destroyer broke down in the Panama Canal due to a new engineering casualty.

US Navy ‘Super Destroyer’ Broke Down in Panama Due to New Engineering Casualty

USS Zumwalt (DDG-1000) guided missile destroyer (Photo: AFP 2016 / US Navy)

On Monday evening, the newest USS Zumwalt (DDG-1000) broke down, when it was transiting the Panama Canal, USNI News information website reported, citing US Navy officials.

According to USNI News, “the ship lost propulsion in its port shaft during the transit and the crew saw water intrusion in two of the four bearings that connect to Zumwalt’s port and starboard Advanced Induction Motors (AIMs) to the drive shafts.” The website explained that the AIMs are “massive electrical motors that are driven by the ship’s gas turbines and in turn electrically power the ship’s systems and drive the shafts.”

The destroyer, which was on the way to its home port in San Diego, is now stopped for repairs at the former US Naval Station Rodman, spokesman for the US 3rd Fleet, Cmdr. Ryan Perry, told USNI News. According to Perry, the timeline for repairs is currently being determined.

Meanwhile, on Tuesday, another defense official told the website that the “repairs could take up to ten days.”

Before the incident, it was planned that the vessel should arrive in San Diego by the end of the year and start its weapon system activation period before to join the fleet as an operational warship in 2018.

The guided missile destroyer came from the shipyard on September 7, but it has already managed to give problems to repairmen. In September, it became known about a “seawater leak in the propulsion motor drive lube oil auxiliary system for one of the ship’s shafts,” while in October USS Zumwalt encountered technical problems in Florida.

However, breakdowns were not the only problem of the vessel. The LRLAP (Long Range Land-Attack Projectile) 155mm guided precision munitions, developed for guns of the DDG 1000 Zumwalt-class vessels, have turned out to be too expensive. So, one shot from the unique gun costs about $800,000, while the price of the ship itself is $4.4 billion.

As it was reported earlier, the US Navy reduced the numbers of the Zumwalt-class destroyers from 28 ships to three.

USS Zumwalt (DDG-1000) officially joined the US Navy on October 15. The vessel became one of the most expensive ships in the history of the US Navy.

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hhabana

Maybe this should be it, ya think?

John Whitehot

ooohh noes. All those folks that thought the Kuznetsov would break down in the Med sea and need towing.

sólyomszem

Cusnyetsow is old smokey iron.

John Whitehot

you are probably older.

VGA

Well, they did lose a mig-29k immediately after starting air operations…

grumpy_carpenter

No, the Mig-29 is a lethal weapon. The USN can’t afford ordinance for this barges weapons so really it has no working weapons to lose…..at least it’s still stealthy sitting dead in the middle of the canal

Gary Sellars

“one shot from the unique gun costs about $800,000”

It would be cheaper to build a gun that shoots Lambourgini Diablos filled with RDX….

Mohsin Syedain

If the Lamborghini explodes….then….and if it does not then too…one or the other party will be a winner.

Bob

Funnily enough Lambo’s are known to occasionally self immolate when careless drivers rev engines too high and sit in traffic, overheating high performance engines without any cooling airflow makes them go up in flames.
Now, load up with a few careless wealthy owners and fling ’em at enemy = burn party.

John Whitehot

xD

Nexusfast123

The JSF of the seas. That bow will be fun in heavy seas or does it just go out when the sea is calm. Assuming of course its working at the time.

AdrianRR

It keeps the bow down, allowing the ship to submarine into the wave. So the boat doesn’t pitch as much.

Bob

So if am correct, of the current six operational littoral class ships commissioned by US Navy – including this Panama failure, five of the six vessels have had major failings in last nine months. Seems to be about be the engines on the angular types and the hulls on the catamaran types. Don’t build ’em like they used to.

888mladen .

It looks like an iceberg.

WarrenImany