Dock landing ship

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Template:Short description

File:USS Harpers Ferry (LSD 49).jpg
Template:USS, a United States Navy dock landing ship
File:Quarter view of a Soviet Ivan Rogov class ship.JPEG
Soviet Ivan Rogov-class landing ship

A dock landing ship (also called landing ship, dock or LSD) is an amphibious warfare ship with a well dock to transport and launch landing craft and amphibious vehicles.[1] Some ships with well decks, such as the Soviet Ivan Rogov class, also have bow doors to enable them to deliver vehicles directly onto a beach (like a tank landing ship). Modern dock landing ships also operate helicopters.

A ship with a well deck (docking well) can transfer cargo to landing craft in rougher seas far more easily than a ship which has to use cranes or a stern ramp.[2] The U.S. Navy hull classification symbol for a ship with a well deck depends on its facilities for aircraft—a (modern) LSD has a helicopter deck, a landing platform dock also has a hangar, and a landing helicopter dock or landing helicopter assault has a full-length flight deck.[2]

History

The LSD (U.S. Navy hull classification for landing ship, dock) came as a result of a British requirement during the Second World War for a vessel that could carry large landing craft across the seas at speed. The predecessor of all modern LSDs is Script error: No such module "WPSHIPS utilities".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". of the Imperial Japanese Army, which could launch her infantry landing craft using an internal rail system and a stern ramp. She entered service in 1935 and saw combat in China and during the initial phase of Japanese offenses during 1942.

The first LSD of the Royal Navy came from a design by Sir Roland Baker who had designed the British landing craft tank. It was an answer to the problem of launching small craft rapidly. The landing ship stern chute, which was a converted train ferry (Train Ferry No. 1 which had been built for British Army use in the First World War), was an early attempt. Thirteen landing craft mechanized (LCM) could be launched from these ships down the chute. The landing ship gantry was a converted tanker with a crane to transfer its cargo of landing craft from deck to sea—15 LCM in a little over half an hour.[3]

The design was developed and built in the U.S. for the U.S. Navy and the Royal Navy. The LSD could carry 36 LCM at Template:Convert. It took one and a half hours for the dock to be flooded down and two and half to pump it out. When flooded they could also be used as docks for repairs to small craft. Smaller landing craft could be carried in the hold as could full-tracked and wheeled amphibious assault or support vehicles.

File:AAVs preparing to debark USS Gunston Hall (LSD 44).jpg
Amphibious vehicles inside a US LSD
File:Mounts Bay (L3008).jpg
A British Template:Sclass2

Vessels

In the U.S. Navy, two related groups of vessels classified as LSDs are in service as of 2023, the Template:Sclass and Template:Sclasses, mainly used to carry hovercraft (LCACs), operate helicopters, and carry Marines.[4]

The British Royal Fleet Auxiliary (RFA) operates three Template:Sclass2s based on the Dutch-Spanish Enforcer design in support of the Royal Navy's operations, while a fourth ship of the class—previously in RFA service—is now operated by the Royal Australian Navy.

Former U.S. LSDs include the Template:Sclass, Template:Sclass, Template:Sclass, and Template:Sclass.

LSD classes

In service

Country Class In service Commissioned Length Beam Draft Displacement (mt) Note
Script error: No such module "flag". Choules (L-100) 1 2011 Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert 17,810 Ex-RFA Largs Bay (L3006) sold to Royal Australian Navy in April 2011. File:HMAS Choules starboard bow.jpg
Script error: No such module "flag". Hsu Hai (LSD-193) 1 2000 Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert 14,225 Ex-USS Pensacola (LSD-38) sold to Republic of China (Taiwan) Navy in 2000. File:US Navy 030117-N-2069B-002 USS Anchorage (LSD 36) departs San Diego Bay.jpg
Script error: No such module "flag". Ivan Gren 2 2016 Template:Convert Template:Convert 6,600 Two more building to an improved design File:Ivan Gren landing ship (1).jpg
Script error: No such module "flag". Template:Sclass2 3 2007 Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert 17,810 File:RFA Lyme Bay in Plymouth Sound.jpg
Script error: No such module "flag". Template:Sclass 6 1985 Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert 16,100 File:USS Germantown (LSD-42).jpg
Template:Sclass 4 1995 Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert 19,600 File:US Navy 071007-N-4014G-055 Dock landing ship USS Carter Hall (LSD 50) approaches Military Sealift Command fleet replenishment oiler USNS Tippecanoe (T-AO 199) for an underway replenishment.jpg

Decommissioned

Country Class Out of service Commissioned Length Beam Draft Displacement (mt) Note
Script error: No such module "flag". Cándido de Lasala (Q-43) 1 1970–1981 Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert 7,930 Ex-USS Gunston Hall (LSD-5) sold to Argentina in 1970, scrapped after 1981. File:ARACandidodeLasalaQ43.jpg
Script error: No such module "flag". Ceará (G-30), Rio de Janeiro (G-31) 2 1990–2012 Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert 11,989 Ex-USS Hermitage (LSD-34) loaned in 1989 and later sold to Brazilian Navy, sunk as target 2021; ex-USS Alamo (LSD-33) loaned to Brazilian Navy in 1990, scrapped 2015 Turkey. File:NDD Rio de Janeiro (G-31).jpg
Script error: No such module "flag". Chung Cheng (LSD-191) 1 1977–1985 Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert 7,930 Ex-USS White Marsh (LSD-8) loaned to the ROC Navy in 1960, scrapped 1985.
Chung Cheng (LSD-191) 1 1984–2012 Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert 7,930 Ex-USS Comstock (LSD-19) sold for scrapping 1984, salvaged by ROC Navy, sunk as artificial reef June 2015. File:USS Comstock (LSD-19) underway off Korea 1951.jpg
Script error: No such module "flag". Template:Sclass 3 1978–2002 Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert 14,060 Ivan Rogov and Aleksandr Nikolayev are now being preserved; Mitrofan Moskalenko auctioned off for scrapping in 2012.[5] File:DoD-Ivan Rogov-DN-SN-85-07169 50pct.jpg
Script error: No such module "flag". Template:Sclass 8 1943–1969 Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert 7,930 Ex-USS Gunston Hall (LSD-5) sold to Argentina; Ex-USS White Marsh (LSD-8) sold to Taiwan; rest scrapped from 1968 to 1970. File:USS Lindenwald (LSD-6) underway in Hampton Roads 1965.jpg
Template:Sclass 13 1944–1970 Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert 7,930 Last ship ex-USS Shadwell (LSD-15) scrapped in 2017. File:USS Comstock (LSD-19) underway off Korea 1951.jpg
Template:Sclass 8 1954–1990 Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert 11,989 Ex-USS Alamo (LSD-33) loaned to Brazilian Navy; ex-USS Hermitage (LSD-34) loaned and later sold to Brazilian Navy; all other scrapped or sunk as target File:USS Thomaston;10122801.jpg
Template:Sclass 5 1969–2003 Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert 14,225 Ex-USS Pensacola (LSD-38) sold to Republic of China (Taiwan) Navy and only active ship with all others scrapped or sunk as target. File:US Navy 030117-N-2069B-002 USS Anchorage (LSD 36) departs San Diego Bay.jpg
Template:Sclass 2 1985–present Template:Convert Template:Convert Template:Convert 16,100 Whidbey Island and Fort McHenry in inactive reserve File:US Navy 050117-F-4884R-015 he amphibious dock landing ship USS Fort McHenry (LSD 43) makes a wide turn prior to conducting helicopter operations off the coast of the island of Sumatra, Indonesia.jpg

See also

References

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Bibliography

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External links

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Template:Warship types of the 19th & 20th centuries Template:Authority control

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