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NEW FROM )EAArk MARINE SeaArk Now Builds Excursion Models 54* Excursion Boat / 90 Passengers SeaArk Marine, internationally known manufac- turer of Patrol Boats, Fire Boats, Crew Boats, and Oil Spill Boats, has added to their line of all- welded aluminum work and patrol boats. SeaArk now builds U.S. Coast Guard Certified Excursion Boats for passenger transport. Several different passenger capacities are avail- able with customized paint, seating, and top options. Call today for more information on our complete line of Excursion Boats. P.O. Box 210, Monticello, Arkansas 71655 Phone (501) 367-9755 • Fax (501) 367-2120 For more information on Ingalls Shipbuilding 154 NASSCO ..... . .155 Newport News Shipbuilding .156? A UNITED EF Ingalls, NNSy NASSCO Join Forces To Bid For Next-Generation Navy Ship Three of the leading ship design and ship- building companies in the U.S. have joined in a team effort to bid for the design, pro- duction and life cycle support of the Navy's next generation of amphibious ships, the LPD- 17 class. Litton's Ingalls Shipbuilding division, Pascagoula, Miss., Tenneco's Newport News Shipbuilding in Virginia and National Steel and Shipbuilding Co. (NASSCO) in San Diego will bring decades of experience in naval combatant ship design, construction and fleet support to the LPD-17 program. Lockheed Martin Government Electronic Systems, Moorestown, N.J., will be on the ship production bidding team to provide ship system and combat system integration. Ingalls will be the team's prime contrac- tor. Pending congressional appropriation, bids for the detail design and construction of Gefo|d j St n president< |nga|s shipbuj|ding the lead ship of the new class are expected to be submitted in early- to mid-1996, with a contract awarded before the end of the government's fiscal year on Sept. 30, 1996. The LPD-17 class will meet Navy/Marine Corps amphibious lift needs well into the 21st Century. These multi-mission ships will replace retiring ship classes with aircraft and vehicle lift, troop transport, mission support and sig- nificant self-defense capabilities exceeding their predecessors. "Teaming of the three shipbuilding companies with Lockheed Martin will combine the resources of this nation's best ship designers and builders with a world-class ship systems integrator to achieve the highest level of efficiency in the production of the LPD-17 class," said Gerald J. St. Pe, a Litton senior vice president and Ingalls president. In producing the LPD-17 class, Ingalls would build and completely outfit the forward portion of each ship. Newport News would do likewise with the aft por- tion. Each aft section, weighing more than 11,000 tons, would be floated from Newport News to Ingalls for integration into the final ship configuration. Ingalls would then complete each ship's outfitting and testing prior to delivery to the Navy. "Ingalls and Newport News are uniquely experienced for this method of partnership production, with decades of experience in efficiently designing and building aircraft carriers, submarines, cruisers, destroyers and amphibious ships,'" Mr. St. Pe said. Over the past 25 years, Ingalls has been the sole builder of the Navy's two most advanced amphibious assault ship classes — Tarawa class LHAs arid Wasp class LHDs — as well as builder of 60 cruisers and destroyers. Newport News Shipbuilding is America's largest privately-owned shipyard. In its 109 years of operation, the company has built almost 800 ships, includ- ing nuclear-powered aircraft carriers, submarines, cruisers and a wide Variety of commercial vessels. Under the teaming agreement, NASSCO would provide preconstruction support, as well as post-delivery support for Pacific Fleet-based ships of the LPD-17 class. NASSCO currently is involved in construction and conversion work in the Navy's strategic sealift program. Lockheed Martin would provide the system integration of LPD-17's advanced machinery control, damage control, interior and exterior communi- cations and combat systems. Its Government Electronic Systems operation, producer of the Navy's shipboard Aegis weapon system, would lead that com- pany's work on the new program. 14 Circle 303 on Reader Service Card Maritime Reporter/Engineering News