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Bangladesh Navy

First one of the two.

@Avicenna
Yes, another ship (#521?) is going to BD Navy as well.
SDSDDS.jpg
 
Yes, another ship (#521?) is going to BD Navy as well.
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Yes. The contract was signed for two ships. Number 521 & 522.

These are good platforms. Very balanced weapon & electronic package.

Sensors and processing systems:

Type 360 Radar (SR60) Surface Search, E/F band

Type 517H-1 (Knife Rest)
2D long-range air search, A-band

Type 345 Radar(MR35)
HQ-7 Surface-to-air missile and100 mm gun fire-control, J-band

Type 352 Radar (Square Tie) surface search and SSM fire control, I-band

2 × Type 347G/EFR-1 (Rice Lamp) dual 37 mm AA gun fire control, I-band

2 × Racal RM-1290 Navigation radar, I-band

Electronic warfare & decoys:

Data link: HN-900 (Chinese equivalent of Link 11 A/B, to be upgraded)

Communication : SNTI-240 SATCOM

Combat Data System: ZKJ-3C

RWD-8 (Jug Pair) intercept

Type 981-3 EW Jammer

SR-210 Radar warning receiver Type 651A IFF

Armament:
8 × YJ-83 SSM in 2 x 4-cell box launchers

1 × 8-cell HQ-7 Surface-to- air missile system

1 × PJ33A dual 100 mm gun (automatic)

4 × Type 76A dual 37 mm (1.5 in) AA guns

2 × 6-tube Type 3200 ASW rocket launchers (36 rockets)

2 × DC racks & launcher

6 × torpedo launchers

2 × Type 946/PJ-46
15-barrel decoy rocket launchers.
 
Members are just making fun of some bamar trolls. Nothing serious.

As I mentioned earlier our naval establishment was expecting this turn of event & getting prepared accordingly. Heavy investment going to ASW capacity.

Rumor is Navy might buy 2 AW 101 ASW for second batch of ASW heli.


We finally have a clear photo of a Makassar-class LPD being built at Daesun Shipbuilding & Engineering shipyard in Busan, which had been spotted on Google Earth since at least a year ago.

The ship's hull number is 1501 and it is most likely meant for the Myanmar Navy according to local source. This deal was not reported on either Korean or Myanma media, most likely due to the latter's human rights issue and its connection to North Korea. South Korean government likes to keep potentially controversial arms deal "low key," for understandable reasons.

As seen in the photo, LPD 1501 was already launched, with the ceremony allegedly taking place at least a month ago. LPD 1501 is expected to be delivered to the Myanmar Navy soon.

Despite Makassar-class design's export right being granted to Indonesia, it seems like Daesun still retains the original IP considering Daesun also exported the Makassar-class to Peru in 2012.

Indonesia independently exported the class to the Philipines, which is locally known as Tarlac-class LPD.


First LPD of Myanmar Navy,UMS Moattama, Pennant No is 1501, will enter service on 2019 Navy Day. Moattama means gulf of martaban.

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We finally have a clear photo of a Makassar-class LPD being built at Daesun Shipbuilding & Engineering shipyard in Busan, which had been spotted on Google Earth since at least a year ago.

The ship's hull number is 1501 and it is most likely meant for the Myanmar Navy according to local source. This deal was not reported on either Korean or Myanma media, most likely due to the latter's human rights issue and its connection to North Korea. South Korean government likes to keep potentially controversial arms deal "low key," for understandable reasons.

As seen in the photo, LPD 1501 was already launched, with the ceremony allegedly taking place at least a month ago. LPD 1501 is expected to be delivered to the Myanmar Navy soon.

Despite Makassar-class design's export right being granted to Indonesia, it seems like Daesun still retains the original IP considering Daesun also exported the Makassar-class to Peru in 2012.

Indonesia independently exported the class to the Philipines, which is locally known as Tarlac-class LPD.


First LPD of Myanmar Navy,UMS Moattama, Pennant No is 1501, will enter service on 2019 Navy Day. Moattama means gulf of martaban.

View attachment 575121



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Kindly post myanmar related news in respective forum.
 
Yes. The contract was signed for two ships. Number 521 & 522.

These are good platforms. Very balanced weapon & electronic package.

Sensors and processing systems:

Type 360 Radar (SR60) Surface Search, E/F band

Type 517H-1 (Knife Rest)
2D long-range air search, A-band

Type 345 Radar(MR35)
HQ-7 Surface-to-air missile and100 mm gun fire-control, J-band

Type 352 Radar (Square Tie) surface search and SSM fire control, I-band

2 × Type 347G/EFR-1 (Rice Lamp) dual 37 mm AA gun fire control, I-band

2 × Racal RM-1290 Navigation radar, I-band

Electronic warfare & decoys:

Data link: HN-900 (Chinese equivalent of Link 11 A/B, to be upgraded)

Communication : SNTI-240 SATCOM

Combat Data System: ZKJ-3C

RWD-8 (Jug Pair) intercept

Type 981-3 EW Jammer

SR-210 Radar warning receiver Type 651A IFF

Armament:
8 × YJ-83 SSM in 2 x 4-cell box launchers

1 × 8-cell HQ-7 Surface-to- air missile system

1 × PJ33A dual 100 mm gun (automatic)

4 × Type 76A dual 37 mm (1.5 in) AA guns

2 × 6-tube Type 3200 ASW rocket launchers (36 rockets)

2 × DC racks & launcher

6 × torpedo launchers

2 × Type 946/PJ-46
15-barrel decoy rocket launchers.

Guys I wonder if the 053H3's can take this sort of maneuver like the Arleigh Burke class can. 509 foot metal vessel displacing 9200 tons of water can make this type of high-speed maneuver, American-made engineering at its finest...look at the size of the wake behind that thing...

 
Guys I wonder if the 053H3's can take this sort of maneuver like the Arleigh Burke class can. 509 foot metal vessel displacing 9200 tons of water can make this type of high-speed maneuver, American-made engineering at its finest...look at the size of the wake behind that thing...

many countries did not reveal ops details of ships
 
Guys I wonder if the 053H3's can take this sort of maneuver like the Arleigh Burke class can. 509 foot metal vessel displacing 9200 tons of water can make this type of high-speed maneuver, American-made engineering at its finest...look at the size of the wake behind that thing...

A lot depends on the Hull shape and then propulsion, Americans perfected their hull design with the USS IOWA, and subsequent ships use the experience gained.
I reckon the ship is being propelled by water jets?
I’ve seen BNS bangabandhu do tight maneuvers. Others mostly on straight line. The corvettes are also capable
 
A lot depends on the Hull shape and then propulsion, Americans perfected their hull design with the USS IOWA, and subsequent ships use the experience gained.
I reckon the ship is being propelled by water jets?
I’ve seen BNS bangabandhu do tight maneuvers. Others mostly on straight line. The corvettes are also capable

Tight maneuvers, which are called evasive maneuvers are necessary during wartime to avert tracking and also realign radars and sensors to track incoming threats as well as launch counter-offensive munitions.

The Arleigh Burke flight II-A version uses four GE LM 2500 external combustion turbine powerpacks, our Hamilton class cutters I believe use two of those, in addition to two Fairbanks Morse low power diesels for cruising. LM 2500 powerpacks are aero-derivative marine engines developed from the CF6 engine which powers our Biman Airbus 310's as well as the now-retired DC-10's.

No waterjets are used for this size ship, conventional screw props only.

Here are the 'supposed' specs for the Arleigh Burkes (real specs are classified):

Installed power: 3 × Allison AG9140 Generators (2,500 kW (3,400 hp) each, 440 V)
Propulsion:
Speed: In excess of 30 kn (56 km/h; 35 mph)
Range: 4,400 nmi (8,100 km) at 20 kn (37 km/h; 23 mph)
 
What is the purpose of a diving boat? Grateful for information shared.
 

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