Henry J. Kaiser-class replenishment oiler

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The Henry J. Kaiser class is an American class of eighteen fleet replenishment oilers which began construction in August 1984. The class comprises fifteen oilers which are operated by Military Sealift Command to provide underway replenishment of fuel to United States Navy combat ships and jet fuel for aircraft aboard aircraft carriers at sea.[3]

Class overview
NameHenry J. Kaiser class
Builders
Preceded byCimarron class
Succeeded byJohn Lewis class
BuiltAugust 1984-May 1996
In serviceDecember 1986-present
Planned18
Completed16
Cancelled2 (Ship hulls scrapped in 2011)
Active14 US, 1 Chile as of 1 March 2011
Laid up1
Retired0
General characteristics
TypeFleet replenishment oiler
Tonnage31,200 DWT
Displacement
Length677 ft (206.3 m)
Beam97 ft 5 in (29.7 m)
Draft35 ft (10.7 m) maximum
Installed power
  • 16,000 hp (12,000 kW) per shaft
  • 34,442 hp (25,683 kW) total sustained
PropulsionTwo medium-speed Colt-Pielstick PC4-2/2 10V-570 diesel engines, two shafts, controllable pitch propellers
Speed20 knots (37 km/h)
Capacity
  • Patuxent, Laramie, and Rappahannock: 159,000 bbl (25,300 m3) of fuel oil and jet fuel
  • Other ships:178,000 to 180,000 bbl (28,300 to 28,600 m3) of fuel oil and jet fuel
  • All ships: 7,400 sq ft (690 m2) of dry cargo space; eight 20 ft (6.1 m) refrigerated containers with room for 128 pallets
Complement66 to 89 civilian personnel and 7 to 24 U.S. Navy personnel
Sensors and
processing systems
2 x AN/SPS-59 LN-66 surface search radars
Electronic warfare
& decoys
AN/SLQ-25 Nixie Torpedo Countermeasures[1]
Armament
Aviation facilitiesHelicopter landing platform
Notes
  • 5 refueling stations
  • 2 dry cargo transfer rigs

Twelve of the Kaisers are not double-hulled like most modern tankers. The class will be replaced by the John Lewis-class replenishment oiler.[4]

One ship, operated by the United States from 1987 to 1996, was sold to Chile in 2009 and commissioned into the Chilean Navy in 2010. Two ships were scrapped in 2011 while still incomplete.

Technical overview

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There are stations on both sides of each ship for underway replenishment of fuel and stores. The ships in this class have a small capacity to carry and transfer fresh and frozen foods as well as other materials, and have two dry cargo transfer rigs.

Patuxent, Laramie, and Rappahannock differ from the other 15 ships, in having double hulls to meet the requirements of the Oil Pollution Act of 1990. Hull separation is 6 feet (1.8 m) at the sides and 6 feet 6 inches (1.98 m) on the bottom. This resulted in a 12% reduction in cargo capacity.

Construction program

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The circumstances of the construction program were convoluted and it is worthwhile to spell them out here. The original contract, for T-AO 187, was awarded to Avondale Industries, (Avondale), in November 1982. This contract included options for T-AOs 188, 189 and 190, which were exercised in January 1983, (T-AO 188) and November 1983, (T-AOs 189 and 190). A second-source contract, for T-AOs 191 and 192, was awarded to Pennsylvania Shipbuilding Company, (Penn Ship), in May 1985.

This contract included options for T-AOs 194 and 196, which were never exercised. After Penn Ship began to have cash flow problems, the Navy transferred these options from Penn Ship's contract to Avondale's contract and exercised them in June 1988. Additional options on Avondale's contract were executed in June 1985 for T-AO 193, in February 1986 for T-AO 195, in February 1987 for T-AO 197, in June 1988 for T-AO 198, in October 1988 for T-AOs 200, 202 and 204, and in March 1989 for T-AOs 199, 201 and 203.

The Navy's contract with Penn Ship for T-AOs 191 and 192 was terminated before the ships were complete. A new contract was executed with Tampa Shipyards, Inc., of Tampa FL, a division of the American Ship Building Company. This company should not be confused with Tampa Shipbuilding Company, (TASCO), which was a totally different entity, at a different location, long gone by 1989.

Disputes over corrective construction and materials costs between the U.S. Navy and Tampa Shipyards resulted in termination of this contract in 1993, when T-AO 191 was said to be 95% complete and T-AO 192 84% complete. The Navy then determined that the ships were no longer needed as oilers, and undertook a study of the feasibility of converting them to ammunition ships. This study concluded that such a conversion was cost-prohibitive and the ships were placed in long-term storage in an incomplete condition. They were sold for recycling in 2011.

Naming

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The class is named for its lead unit, Henry J. Kaiser, which is named for the American industrialist and shipbuilder Henry J. Kaiser (1882–1967). The first nine ships were named for American shipbuilders, inventors, naval architects, and aeronautical engineers who played important roles in the history of the U.S. Navy. The tenth to eighteenth ships were named after American rivers, which is a more traditional naming convention for U.S. Navy oilers.

Operations

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In U.S. Navy service, the ships serve in a non-commissioned status in the Military Sealift Command, with primarily civilian crews, and as such, they are prefixed as "USNS" instead of "USS", as commissioned ships are. After joining the fleet, the 16 completed ships all saw active service between 1986 and 1996, when Andrew J. Higgins became the first unit of the class to be laid up. Since then, some of the others have also spent periods out of service in reserve or in a limited operational status.

Foreign transfer

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Andrew J. Higgins never re-entered U.S. service after being laid up in 1996. She was sold to Chile in 2009 and was commissioned into the Chilean Navy in 2010 as Almirante Montt.

Ships

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Photo Ship Hull No. Status Years Active NVR
Page
  Henry J. Kaiser T-AO-187 Active - Proposed decommission 2027[5] 1986–present AO187
  Joshua Humphreys T-AO-188 Active - Proposed decommission 2026[5] 1987-1996; 2005-2006; 2010-present AO188
  John Lenthall T-AO-189 Active - Proposed decommission 2023[5] 1987-1996; 1998–present AO189
  Andrew J. Higgins T-AO-190 Inactivated May 1996. Sold to the Chilean Navy May 2009. Towed to Atlantic Marine Alabama shipyard, Mobile, Alabama, September 2009 for three-month refit. Commissioned in Chilean Navy on 10 February 2010 and renamed Almirante Montt.[1] 1987-1996 (USA); 2010–present (Chile) AO190
  Benjamin Isherwood T-AO-191 Cancelled when 95.3% complete,
transferred to the Maritime Administration,
laid up in the James River Reserve Fleet,
scrapped in 2011
Launched 1988, christened 1991, never in service AO191
  Henry Eckford T-AO-192 Cancelled when 84% complete,
transferred to the Maritime Administration,
laid up in the James River Reserve Fleet,
scrapped in 2011
Launched 1989, never in service AO192
  Walter S. Diehl T-AO-193 Decommissioned 1 October 2022[6] 1988–2022 AO193
  John Ericsson T-AO-194 Active - Proposed decommission 2026[5] 1991–present AO194
  Leroy Grumman T-AO-195 Active - Proposed decommission 2025[5] 1989–present AO195
  Kanawha T-AO-196 Active 1991–present AO196
  Pecos T-AO-197 Active - Proposed decommission 2026[5] 1990–present AO197
  Big Horn T-AO-198 Ran aground September 2024 1992–present AO198
  Tippecanoe T-AO-199 Active 1993–present AO199
  Guadalupe T-AO-200 Active 1992–present AO200
  Patuxent T-AO-201 Active 1995–present AO201
  Yukon T-AO-202 Active 1994–present AO202
  Laramie T-AO-203 Active 1996–present AO203
  Rappahannock T-AO-204 Active 1995–present AO204

References

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  1. ^ "SLQ-25A/B (NIXIE) - Archive 7/2005". www.forecastinternational.com. Retrieved 19 October 2017.
  2. ^ "T-AO-187 Kaiser Class - Archived 7/99". www.forecastinternational.com. Retrieved 19 October 2017. The electronics consist of two LN-66 radar units, a commercial fathometer and an SLQ-25 NIXIE torpedo decoy. They have space and weight reserved to mount two Mark 15 Phalanx close-in weapons systems when required.
  3. ^ "FLEET REPLENISHMENT OILERS - T-AO". www.navy.mil. US Navy. Retrieved 19 October 2017.
  4. ^ Ronald O'Rourke. "Navy John Lewis (TAO-205) Class Oiler Shipbuilding Program: Background and Issues for Congress" (PDF). fas.org. Retrieved 19 October 2017.
  5. ^ a b c d e f "Report to Congress on the Annual Long-Range Plan for Construction of Naval Vessels" (PDF). media.defense.gov. 20 April 2022. Retrieved 6 October 2022.
  6. ^ "Walter S. Diehl". nvr.navy.mil. 7 October 2022. Retrieved 2 November 2022.
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