Builders: | Ingalls Shipbuilding Bath Iron Works | |||||
Operators: | United States Navy | |||||
Preceeded by: | Virginia class | |||||
Succeeded by: | CG(X) | |||||
Cost: | ~US$ 1 billion | |||||
Built: | 1980 - 1994 | |||||
In commission: | since 1983 | |||||
Completed: | 27 | |||||
Active: | 22 | |||||
Laid up: | 4 | |||||
Retired: | 5 (CG-47 to CG51) | |||||
Type : | Guided missile cruiser | |||||
Displacement : | Approx. 9,600 long tons (9,800 t) full load | |||||
Length : | 567 feet (173 m) | |||||
Beam : | 55 feet (16.8 meters) | |||||
Draft : | 34 feet (10.2 meters) | |||||
Propulsion : | @propulsion@ | |||||
Speed : | @speed@ | |||||
Range : | @range@ | |||||
Complement : | @complement@ | |||||
Ship systems : | @systems@ | |||||
Electronic warfare : | @ewarfare@ | |||||
Armament : | @armament@ | |||||
Armor : | @armor@ | |||||
Aircraft carried : | @aircraftcarried@ |
The Ticonderoga class is a class guided missile cruisers in service with the United States Navy. They were first ordered and authorized in the 1978 fiscal year. One of the main characteristics of the ships in this class is that they use passive phased-array radar. Another interesting fact is that they were originally planned as a class of destroyers but the increased capabilities offered by the Aegis Combat System and the AN/SPY-1 radar justified the reclassification from DDG - Guided missile destroyer to CG - Guided missile cruiser.
Table of contents
History
Early retirement considerations
In light of the Budget Control Act of 2011 requirements to reduce the U. S. Defense Budget for the FY2013 the Navy considered the early decommissioning of some of the Ticonderoga-class cruisers. As a result the U.S. Defense 2013 Budget Proposal was made with plans to decommission seven cruisers in the fiscal years 2013 and 2014.
However these retirements would mean that the U.S. Navy would fall short of its requirements for 94 missile defense cruisers and destroyers beginning in FY2025.
The U.S. House of Representatives passed a budget bill that requires that these cruisers to be refitted to handle a missile defence role rather then being retired1
Design and construction
Vertical Launching System
Upgrades
Naming
Technology
Operational Service
Incidents
Iran Air Flight 655 incident
One major incident in which a ship of this class was involved is the shooting down of Iran Air Flight 655. On 3 July 1988 the crew of the USS Vincennes CG-49 mistakenly identified an Iran Air civilian aircraft as an attacking F14A Tomcat fighter and shot it down. All 290 civilian passengers on the aircraft lost their lives.Ships in class
Ticonderoga | CG-47 | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 25 April 1981 | 22 January 1983 | 30 September 2004 | Stricken, waiting for scrapping |
Yorktown | CG-48 | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 17 January 1983 | 4 July 1984 | 10 December 2004 | Stricken, waiting for scrapping |
Vincennes | CG-49 | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 14 January 1984 | 6 July 1985 | 29 June 2005 | Scrapped in 2011 |
Valley Force | CG-50 | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 23 June 1984 | 18 January 1986 | 30 August 2004 | Sunk as target in 2006 |
Thomas S. Gates | CG-51 | Bath Iron Works | 14 December 1985 | 22 August 1987 | 16 December 2005 | Stricken, waiting for scrapping |
Bunker Hill | CG-52 | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 11 March 1985 | 20 September 1986 | San Diego, California | in active service, as of 2016 |
Mobile Bay | CG-53 | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 22 August 1985 | 21 February 1987 | San Diego, California | in active service, as of 2016 |
Antietam | CG-54 | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 14 February 1986 | 6 June 1987 | Yokosuka, Japan | in active service, as of 2016 |
Leyte Gulf | CG-55 | Ingalls Shipbuilding | 20 June 1986 | 26 September 1987 | Norfolk, Virginia | in active service, as of 2016 |
See also
Further reading
Guided missile cruiser