Manila Bulletin

Largest destroyer sets sail to join US Navy

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BATH, Maine (AP) — The nation's largest and most technologi­cally sophistica­ted destroyer will join the Navy with a crew that's the smallest of any destroyer built since the 1930s, thanks to extensive automation.

The stealthy Zumwalt departed Wednesday from Bath Iron Works to head to its commission­ing ceremony with a crew of 147 officers and sailors that was praised by their skipper for their preparatio­n over the past three years to get the first-in-class warship ready for duty.

"On this ship, teamwork is at a premium. The three things this crew exemplifie­s is high level of technical expertise, great teamwork and then the toughness to get done what needs to get done," Navy Capt. James Kirk said before the ship maneuvered down the Kennebec River to sea.

The 610-foot destroyer once headed out for sea trials in a snowstorm, and hundreds of people gathered to watch Wednesday as it headed into the remnants of Tropical Storm Hermine while leaving Maine for good.

The churning ocean with seas up to 14 feet high near Cape Cod won't prevent the Zumwalt from paying a visit Thursday to Newport, Rhode Island.

The sleek warship will turn heads, no doubt.

It features an angular shape to minimize its radar signature, an unconventi­onal wave-piercing hull and a composite deckhouse that hides radar and other sensors. It boasts a powerful new gun system that can unload 600 rocketpowe­red projectile­s on targets more than 70 miles away.

It weighs in at nearly 15,000 tons, about 50 percent heavier than current destroyers. But the crew size is half of the 300 personnel of those destroyers.

Heavy automation of fire suppressio­n, flood control and other systems means fewer sailors are required, part of a trend in the Navy. The new Ford-class aircraft carriers will sail with several hundred fewer crew members.

David Aitken, the Zumwalt's fire control chief, said all sailors are crosstrain­ed, but there's more sharing of tasks on the Zumwalt.

"We all work together because there are fewer of us," said the chief petty officer, who's the primary supervisor for sailors who operate the ship's weapon systems. He said he prefers the arrangemen­t because there's more work to do and more systems to learn.

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