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Specifications U.S.S. Gridley
(DLG-21/CG-21)
Reclassified as guided missile cruiser (CG) on Jun.30/75
Displacement
Propulsion
Armament
Countermeasures
Radars
Aircraft
Complement
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Notes:
Radar: 1. A quick comment on your question regarding the AN/SPS-48 3D radar.. I don't know which 3D radar was onboard at commissioning, but the AN/SPS-39 3D radar was the predecessor of the AN/SPS-48 3D radar.. I do know that in 1979 she had an ANSPS-48 3D radar and an AN/SPS-43 2D radar which was replaced in the mid-80's by the AN/SPS-49 2D radar. (Don Morrison) 2. Looking at the ship's specs, I noticed a question about the air search radar. I was the ETR3 assigned to maintenance of the AN/SPS-43 long-range air search radar from 1974 to 1976. Its antenna was the big rectangular "bedspring" one. We could detect aircraft up to 300 miles away. There was also a SPA-63 countermeasures set attached to the radar, but we never used it (at least while I was maintaining the system). The ship ALSO mounted the AN/SPS-48 height-finding radar (using the black square antenna). The SPS-48 was a height-finding radar, range about 50 miles (the SPS-43 could only show bearing & distance, not height). Usually, the -43 would pick up aircraft wayyyy out; the -48 would use that information to pick them up closer and then supply bearing/distance/height to the SPG-55 fire-control radar. (The SPG-55's could also be used in a "scan" mode in an emergency, but that was not a very efficient use of it. The Terrier missles were "beam-rider" missles, following the track produced by the SPG-55.) While I was onboard (1974-1979), the other radar was the SPS-10 surface search. (Ray Haas)
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Propulsion - We made a speed run from
Adalaide to Port Lyttleton in 67. 25 Knots all the way. Same leaving Port
Lyttleton to Wellington.
The Gridley could do 26 and a bit on Two Boilers and 32 even on four. She was a slug. Remember I was on it twice. I do not believe that Gridley did over 32 unless someone towed it. The Horne could do 37 and a bit on 4 and 30 even on 2. Ships with Foster Wheeler and Babcock and Wilcock boilers, 16 and 26 class CG's top out at 33, some slower. Ships with Combustion Engineering Boilers, the 29,30,31 all were faster than the sister ships. Why I don't know but were. With Horne being at the head of the class. We beat Truxton to Subic once to get alongside the pier as we were junior to their Capt. and our CO didn't like him. Hope this adds some clarity to the discussion. (Jim Hampton) Robert (MM1) says: Phil, I was reading the info on Gridley engineering and was wondering why it reads 4 propulsion shafts...She had 2 shafts with 42,000 shp each, but true to say she had 4 foster and wheeler "D" type propulsion boilers (2 in each fireroom). Just wanted to let you know. |
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Leahy class guided missile cruisersDispl: 7,800 tons full load Dim: 547 x 55 x 25 ft Prop: Steam turbines, 4 1200 psi boilers, 85,000 hp, 2 shafts, 30+ knots Crew: 395 Arm: 2 twin Terrier (80 missiles total), 1 ASROC, 2 dual 3/50, 6 12.75 inch TT Armor: none Purpose-built double-end guided missile "frigates" (DLG). The entire class was given an AAW upgrade during the late-1960's and early 1970's, Terrier launchers modified to fire Terrier or Standard SM-1ER. Became CGs 30 June 1975 as part of the Cruiser/Frigate realignment. The 3/50s were replaced by 8 Harpoon missiles, the Terrier launchers were upgraded to fire the Standard SM-2ER missile (all complete by 1985), and 2 Phalanx CIWS were added. All were upgraded under the late-1980's NTU program. This included new radars, a new combat system, new fire control systems, and upgraded missiles and missile launchers. The entire class was taken out of service in the early 1990's, stricken and transferred to the Maritime Administration for disposal.DLG 21/CG 21 Gridley Built by Puget Sound SB&DD. Laid down 15 July 1960, launched 31 July 1961, commissioned 25 May 1963. AAW upgrade at Bath Iron Works 10 Sept 1968 to 17 Jan 1970. NTU 9 Jan 1989 to ???. Decommissioned and stricken 21 Jan 1994, MarAd 28 Jan 1994. |