Rolls-Royce Waterjets Delivered to New U.S. LCS

February 21, 2013

Littoral Combat Ship: Image credit Rolls-Royce
Littoral Combat Ship: Image credit Rolls-Royce

Rolls-Royce delivers advanced new Axial Mk1 waterjets for the latest US Navy Littoral Combat Ship (LCS).

Rolls-Royce Axial Mk1 waterjets are very power dense, delivering more cavitation-free performance for their size and power than any other waterjet. At 22MW of power, a single waterjet of this scale can move almost half a million gallons of seawater per minute.  Four of these waterjets will propel the LCS at speeds in excess of 40 knots.

This delivery marks the successful completion of the Office of Naval Research's (ONR) Future Naval Capabilities (FNC) program for “Compact, High Power Density Waterjets”.  This new, highly efficient waterjet will now be standard equipment for all future Freedom variants of the Littoral Combat Ships supplied to the U.S. Navy by Lockheed Martin.

The delivery of these waterjets is the culmination of a successful teaming between industry, ONR, the Naval Surface Warfare Center – Carderock Division, and the LCS Program Office.  The new waterjets are produced in the United States, with primary manufacturing activity at Rolls-Royce facilities in Walpole, Massachusetts and Pascagoula, Mississippi.

The underlying design of the Rolls-Royce Axial Mk1 waterjet has also been scaled for other research and development activity within the U.S. Navy.  Last year the power dense waterjet was retrofitted on Sealion, the Special Operations test craft, for performance demonstration tests.  Most recently, Rolls-Royce has provided the Navy's unmanned technology community with a 100mm diameter scaled ådesign for the X-Class USV program MUSCL.

Don Roussinos, Rolls-Royce,  President - Naval Marine said: “It is exciting to see this product transition from research to production and delivery.  We have been working closely with ONR since 2007 on this project, to ensure that the technology hurdles were overcome.”
 

Logistics News

Port of Oakland Moves 174,239 TEUs in November as Exports Increase

Port of Oakland Moves 174,239 TEUs in November as Exports Increase

CMA CGM Vessels Navigate the Suez Canal, Hinting at Easing Tensions

CMA CGM Vessels Navigate the Suez Canal, Hinting at Easing Tensions

Oil Loading in Venezuela Crawls After New US Interceptions

Oil Loading in Venezuela Crawls After New US Interceptions

FMC Investigates Spain’s Restrictive Port Practices

FMC Investigates Spain’s Restrictive Port Practices

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

Families question credibility of investigation after delay in Jeju Air crash report
Poland intercepts Russian aircraft over Baltic and reports airspace violations from Belarus
CPC oil loading plans revised down by 33% in December due to bad weather delays