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Exhibit 6—Proposed Shipbuilding and Conversion Budget ($ in millions) FY 1985 FY 1986 FY 1987 FY 1988 Qty $ Qty $ Gty $ Qty $ New Construction Trident Submarine (SSBN) l 1,503.6 1 1.309.4 1 1,509.1 1 1,516.5 Attack Submarine (SSN-688) 4 2.665.0 4 2,540.9 4 2,332.6 3 2.046.9 New Design SSN (SSN-21) - - - - 454.3 - 160.2 Aegis Cruiser (CG-47) 3 2,752.9 3 2,612.3 2 1,924.3 2 1,902.6 Destroyer (DDG-51) 1 976.0 - 74.0 3 2,527.8 3 2,354.6 Mine Countermeasures Ship (MCM) 4 344.5 2 197.2 - 3 272.2 Coastal Minehunter (MSH-1) - - 4 184.5 4 196.1 4 181.8 Amphib. Landing Ship Dock (LSD-41) 2 476.6 2 373.4 - - - Amphib. Landing Ship Dock (LSD-41/CV) - - - - - 1 311.2 Amphib. Assault Ship (LHD-1) - 39 2 1 1,268.3 232.0 1 1.046.9 Ocean Surveillance Ship (TAGOS) 2 99.7 2 115.1 3 148.1 3 193.9 Fleet Oiler (TAO) 3 463.0 2 266.3 2 275.5 2 319.9 Ammunition Ship (AE) - - - - -- 1 369.8 Landing Craft Air Cushion (LCAC) (9) 230.1 (12) 307.0 - (9) 221.3 Survey Ship (TAGS) 2 196.7 - - - - - Fast Combat Support Ship (AOE) - - - - 1 612.7 - - Oceanographic Research Ship (AGX) - -- - - 1 33.0 - - Con version/Acquisition AO Jumbo - - - - 1 62.3 1 49.5 Acoustic Research Vessel (AG) - - 1 57.0 -- - - Amphibious SLEP - - - - 23.1 - 97.8 Battleship Reactivation - - 1 469.0 - - — CV-SLEP 1 714.5 - 52.0 83.5 1 544.8 Moored Training Ship Demonstration (MTSD) - 30.0 (1) 175.4 - - - Aviation Support Ship (TAVB) 1 35.3 1 26.9 - - - Strategic Sealift - 31.0 - 228.4 27 8 - 50.4 Strategic Sealift Enhancement - - - - 20 7 - 18.4 Crane Ship (TACS) 1 30.5 3 82.5 2 61.1 2 59.9 All Other Costs -- 443.8 - 500.8 522 2 -- 577.3 Total 25 11,032.4 27 10,840.4 24 11,046 2 28 12,295.9 Source: Department of the Navy Exhibit 7—Proposed Weapons Procurement Budget ($ in millions) FY 1985 FY 1986 FY 1987 FY 1988 Qty $ Qty $ Qty $ Qty $ Missiles Trident II 162.9 - 550.9 21 1,424.4 66 2,283.7 Tomahawk 180 553.3 249 724.8 324 790.5 410 908.1 Phoenix 265 423.7 265 348.8 205 317.7 430 440.9 Sparrow 1,671 290 0 1,948 340.7 1,716 279.4 1,594 271.6 Sidewinder 1,000 68.5 2,120 107 0 627 64.6 488 52.2 Harpoon 354 277.3 370 286.3 94 139.9 204 197.1 HARM 813 278.2 825 224.4 1,110 256.7 1,492 336.6 Standard Missiles 1,384 730.7 1,316 857.9 1,194 730.6 1.250 747.3 Stinger — — — — 685 51.9 — — Mavericks 600 103.0 1,695 191.4 2,219 250.08 1,502 163.3 Other Missiles 438 45.6 1,504 78.2 306 86.1 2,217 196.1 Torpedoes MK-48 ADCAP Torpedo 28 105.6 123 395.9 227 508.4 296 552.6 MK-46 Torpedo 1,565 229.7 500 118.9 500 97.9 500 87.7 ALWT — — — — 84 109.9 204 346.9 MK-60 Captor 300 122.0 150 56.6 — — — — Vertical Launch ASROC — — — — 200 74.3 300 73.5 ASUW Torpedo — — — — 34 17.0 110 30.9 Other FLTSATCOM — 44.3 — 53.1 — 65.1 1 118.3 MK 15 CIWS Phalanx) 49 169.4 39 139.3 27 105.6 9 43.1 Spares & Repair Parts — 171.3 — 151.5 — 150.7 — 162.1 Other — 604.9 — 590.4 — 573.9 — 861.5 Total 4,380.4 5,216.1 6,095.4 7,873.5 Source: Department of the Navy NAVY (continued) 1987. Additional funding is re- quested for submarine advanced combat system development (IBM and EG&G have had a lead role) and the ASW stand-off weapon (Boeing is prime contractor). De- tails for the proposed RDT&E bud- get are shown in Exhibit 9. INDUSTRY DEVELOPMENTS Shipbuilding in this country con- tinues to be dominated by one cus- tomer—the Navy. GE to Buy RCA Shareholders of RCA approved the $6.3-billion acquisition of the firm by GE. The deal strengthens GE's already strong presence in the Navy market. GE supplies the LM- 2500 gas turbine, naval nuclear plants, Trident fire control systems and other ship systems. RCA's long involvement in Aegis gives GE a leading position in surface combat- ant electronics. Bath And Ingalls Receive Aegis Cruiser Contracts In early January Navy awarded Bath a $387-million contract to build two CG-47 class cruisers. In- galls received a $243-million con- tract to build one CG cruiser. Bath now has six CG's on order for a total contract value of $1.3 billion. Ingalls has already completed four CG's and has nine more on order. Newport News To Build Trident Submarines Extending its policy to use com- petition to drive prices down, Navy had decided to invite Newport News to bid on future Trident construc- tion. GD-Electric Boat has already received contracts for 12 Trident submarines. Current plans call for eight more Tridents at the rate of one contract per year. As an initial step Newport News will be selected to perform post shakedown work on (continued) HBC BARGES LAST LONGER. They last longer because they are: • built by craftsmen. • designed to provide maximum pound for pound strength with attention to critical wear points. • built with a full measure of quality materials and welding. • built straight and dimen- sionally accurate. HBC Barge What's more, HBC has the versatility to build the Brownsville barge that will last longer Pennsylvania 15417 in your service. Phone: 412/785-6100 16 Circle 165 on Reader Service Card Circle 241 on Reader Service Card Maritime Reporter/Engineering News