Posted: January 27, 2014 2:46 PM

LCS 4 Coronado Begins Sail-Away


MOBILE, Ala. - The Navy’s newest Littoral Combat Ship, the future USS Coronado (LCS 4), departed from the Austal USA shipyard Jan. 27 en route to its commissioning site in Coronado, Calif., Naval Sea Systems Command spokesman said in a release.


Coronado
is the fourth LCS delivered to the Navy, and the second of the aluminum, trimaran Independence variant. It is scheduled to be commissioned April 5, and will be homeported in San Diego.


“It is exciting to see Coronado, operated by her Navy crew, exiting the new construction yard en route to her homeport,” said CAPT Tom Anderson, LCS program manager. “There is a great sense of pride among the many who were involved in her construction in seeing her headed to sea to do what she was built to do.”


During its transit to the West Coast and prior to commissioning, Coronado will conduct hull, mechanical and electrical system shakedown events, as well as navigation checks and combat systems test events. Additionally, the crew will participate in training events to continue honing their familiarity with the Independence variant.


Prior to sail away, the Navy’s Board of Inspection and Survey (INSURV) conducted acceptance trials aboardCoronado. INSURV found the ship’s performance to be “strong” following what was hailed as “the most complete and rigorous trial on the Independence variant to date,” and recommended the vessel be accepted.


LCS 4 incorporated a number of design changes based on lessons learned from the first ship of class, USSIndependence (LCS 2). These changes are now part of the baseline design and are being incorporated in the construction of follow-on ships of the Independence variant.


The Austal USA team has Jackson (LCS 6), Montgomery (LCS 8 ), Gabrielle Giffords (LCS 10) and Omaha(LCS 12) under construction in Mobile. In March 2013, construction contracts were awarded for Manchester(LCS 14) and Tulsa (LCS 16).


http://www.seapowermagazine.org/stor...-coronado.html