The last World War II surface combatant in US naval service was the USS William C. Lawe (DD-763), a Gearing FRAM I, decommissioned and stricken 1 October 1983 and expended as a target 14 July 1999. Ten Gearing-class ships still exist. Gibbs & Cox - September 11, 1943. Shipping costs outside the USA will depend on the model size ordered and shipping destination. The model build time is generally 16 weeks from receipt of the order and deposit. The Gearing class was a series of 98 destroyers built for the U.S. Navy during and shortly after World War II. FRAM II ships included six DDRs and six DDEs that retained their specialized equipment (196061), as well as four DDRs that were converted to DDs and were nearly identical to the Allen M. Sumner class FRAM IIs (196263). The Gearing design was a minor modification of the Allen M. Sumner class, whereby the hull was lengthened by 14 ft (4.3 m) at amidships, which resulted in more fuel . Eventually all but four Gearings received FRAM conversions. Among the destroyers, conversion of the Gearing and Allen M. Sumner classes took precedence over the Fletcher and Benson classes. Also asked was at what point would the design grow large enough to become a torpedo target instead of a torpedo delivery system. (later cancelled), DD-812 awarded to Bath Iron Works, Bath, Maine. You will be responsible for any applicable taxes or duties, based on the commercial invoice value for the model.Add a museum-like touch to your model display - Consider our protective display case option. Custom orders are our specialty! DD-862 to DD-872 awarded to Bethlehem Steel, Staten Island. This fire control system provided effective long-range anti-aircraft (AA) or anti-surface fire. The last Gearing-class destroyer in US naval service was William C. Lawe, a FRAM I, decommissioned and struck 1 October 1983, and expended as a target 14 July 1999. planning that went into the construction of a destroyer.Each block is USS DD-358 McDougaal 1941 [Destroyer] 1697 x 707: USS DD-358 Porter (1941) 500 x 303: USS DD-359 Winslow (1940) 800 x 335: USS DD-359 Winslow 1945 [Destroyer] 1693 x 620: USS DD-360 Phelps 1942 [Destroyer] 1696 x 669: USS DD-362 Moffet 1944 [Destroyer] 1704 x 767: USS DD-362 Moffett (1944) 500 x 274: USS DD-362 Moffett (Porter Class Destroyer . Importantly, it did not include ASROC. Shipyard Overhaul Plans, Plans DD-809 to DD-811 awarded to Bath Iron Works, Bath, Maine. First Platform The destroyers USS Hull (DD-350), Spence (DD-512), and Monaghan (DD-354) all capsized and sank. Anti-submarine armament was two racks for 300-pound (140kg) depth charges at the stern and six K-gun 300-pound depth charge throwers amidships. 2019 - 2023 SD Model Makers. HANGERS used in the Fire Rooms, Plans At that time many were sold to other nations, where they served many more years. (Resolution 3679x1751 File Size 1.1 MB), Second, Third and Hold 37 ASW homing torpedo. Note that there is no mention of reading Playboy while following any of these Eighteen ships were redesignated as escort destroyers (DDE), optimized for anti-submarine warfare; these reverted to destroyer (DD) designation in 1962. Of 152 long-hull Sumners ordered, 98 were completed (see list at the bottom of this page). The depth of water prevented complete sinking. for how to set up for TOWING, Plans for the PIPE/SPRING These ships, along with Fletcher-class destroyers and Allen M. Sumner-class destroyers also acquired then, were upgraded under the Wu Chin (Chinese: ) I, II, and III programs and known throughout the ROCN as the Yang-class (Chinese: ) destroyers as they were assigned names that all end with the word "Yang". Naval Historical Center Photo #: sending us this rare document. All Photographs, technical specifications, and GEARING Class Destroyers not commissioned and SCRAPPED before complete: CASTLE (DD-720) (seen right) laid down on 11 July 1945 by Federal Ship Building & D.D. (815 and 816 later cancelled). process leading to the Allen M. Sumner (DD-692) class design. 44 homing ASW torpedoes. The second twin 5" gun mount and all previous AA guns and ASW equipment were removed. DD-805 to DD-808 awarded to Bath Iron Works, Bath, Maine. var a=new Image(); a.src=img; return a; Learn how and when to remove this template message, National Museum of the United States Navy, List of destroyer classes of the United States Navy, "Life on a Fletcher Class Destroyer in the 1950's", "NHL nomination for USS Cassin Young (destroyer)", "Veterans' Museum to Receive Historic Navy Ship's Mast", "Flag Honors Hall of Fame | Naval ROTC Alumni Society", "USS Knapp - bridge: Fujifilm X System / SLR Talk Forum: Digital Photography Review", "Fletcher-Klasse Mark-30 Turm Walkaround (124) Scalenews", "Tom Hanks' WWII drama filming aboard USS Kidd this week", "USS The Sullivans no longer sinking, but set for more repairs", Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, List of destroyers of the United States Navy, List of decommissioned ships of the Chilean Navy, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fletcher-class_destroyer&oldid=1142250976, World War II destroyers of the United States, Short description is different from Wikidata, Articles lacking in-text citations from September 2020, Articles with failed verification from July 2013, Articles containing potentially dated statements from October 2020, All articles containing potentially dated statements, Wikipedia articles incorporating text from the Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 3.0, 369.25ft (112.55m) wl, 376.5ft (114.8m) o/a, struck in 1978, sunk as a target on 23 February 1983, struck in 1988 and sunk as a target in 1990, struck in 1982, sunk as a target on 28 September 1991, struck in 1976, sunk as a target on 16 May 1979, transferred to Hellenic Navy on 18 September 1981, transferred to Hellenic Navy on 15 October 1980, transferred to Hellenic Navy in February 1981, transferred to Hellenic Navy in February 1982, Active - In commission as museum ship since 1991, struck on 10 October 1990, scrapped in 1997, struck in 1971 and cannibalized to provide spare parts for her sisters in Italian service, struck in 1999, sunk as a target on 1 November 2001, struck in 1999, sunk as a target on 14 October 2003, This page was last edited on 1 March 2023, at 09:55. Any service era or vessel configuration - We can build a model of them all - your pick. They were also to carry no fewer than five 5in (127mm) guns and ten deck-mounted torpedo tubes on the centerline, allowing them to meet any foreign design on equal terms. All Rights Reserved The shipyards created plans for everything that Speed requirements varied from 35 to 38 knots (65 to 70km/h; 40 to 44mph), and shortcomings in the earlier Sims class, which were top-heavy and needed lead ballast to correct this fault, caused the Fletcher design to be widened by 18in (46cm) of beam. This upgrade included rebuilding the ship's superstructure, electronic systems, radar, sonar, and weapons. Twenty-four ships (DD-742, DD743, 805-808, 829, 831-835, and 874-883) were ordered without torpedo tubes to allow for radar picket equipment; these were redesignated as DDRs in 1948. Some naval historians will tell you that the Fletcher class destroyer was the most successful ship of World War 2, and that the war would not have been won without them. They continued serving, with a series of upgrades, until the 1970s. [10] However, DASH proved unreliable in shipboard service, with over half of the USN's 746 drones lost at sea. This 30 September 1941 plan, for a 2195-ton (standard displacement) ship, As designed, the Gearing class's armament was identical to that on the Allen M. Sumner class. This upgrade program included life-extension refurbishment, a new radar system, ASROC, Mk. Historical Foundation, unless otherwise stated. part of the development of the design of the Allen M. Sumner class. These had the same ASW armament as a Gearing FRAM destroyer, with the addition of improved sonar and a piloted helicopter, initially the Kaman SH-2 Seasprite and from 1984 the Sikorsky SH-60 Seahawk. Options include keel block mounting, waterline models, nameplates, ships seals and ribbons, and weathering paint schemes. The FRAM MK II program was designed primarily for the Sumner class destroyers, but was used to upgrade the Gearing class as well. DD-862 to DD-872 awarded to Bethlehem Steel, Staten Island. Forty-five commissioned before the end of the war, 62 by the end of 1945 and 91 through 1946, followed by two more (Lloyd Thomas and Keppler) in 1947, four more (Epperson, Basilone, Carpenter and Robert A. Owens, with anti-submarine warfare modifications) in 1949, and a final one, (Timmerman, with an experimental engineering plant) in 1952. presented to the General Board, with the others existing only in tabular form. |state=expanded: { {Gearing class destroyer|state=expanded}} to show the template expanded, i.e., fully visible. Warships of World War II", Ian Allan Ltd., London:1965. After the Gearing-class ships were retired from USN service, many were sold abroad, including over a dozen to the Republic of China Navy (ROCN) in Taiwan. was gold plated! One depth charge rack was removed and two Hedgehog ASW mortar mounts added. DD-710 to DD-721 awarded to Federal Shipbuilding, Kearny. Gearing class 98 ships The destroyer USS Hawkins (DD 873) of the US Navy . Tacom TKOSP-7057 1/700 US Navy Gearing Class Destroyer USS Satherland DD-743 1945 1/72 MK38 5-Inch Consecutive Gun Plastic Model, Sumner-Gearing-Class Destroyers: Their Design, Weapons, and Equipment, Snowman Model 1/700 US Navy Gearing Class Destroyer 1944 (DD-831 & DD-742) Fullhull Plastic Model SP07002, Home Comforts The U.S. Navy Gearing-Class Destroyer USS Dyess (DD-880) Being refuled by The Aircraft Carrier USS C Vivid Imagery Laminated Poster Print-20 Inch by 30 Inch Laminated Poster. [1][2][3][4], Following World War II most of the class had their AA and anti-submarine warfare (ASW) armament upgraded. Your support will allow for that work to continue. The last batch of 7 WC-III program vessels, all of them Gearing class, were retired in the early 2000s.[16]. LAKE CHARLES, La. DD-805 to DD-808 awarded to Bath Iron Works, Bath, Maine. In 1941, the US Navy began building a fleet of large destroyers, its first design to rival the Japanese "special type" destroyers that had first entered service more than a decade before. provides two twin 5"/38 dual-purpose gun mounts (one forward and one atop (Resolution 3719x1759 File Size 1.1 MB). Three have been preserved as museum ships in the U.S. and one in Greece. $3.78 delivery Feb 1 - 2. A new ahead-throwing weapon called Weapon Alpha was installed in many of the ships. These two plan pages show the amount of detail and Four unnamed vessels (DD-809 to DD-812) awarded to Bath Iron Works, and five others (DD-813, DD-814, and DD-854 to DD-856) awarded to Bethlehem at Staten Island, were cancelled on 12 August 1945. provides a slightly updated Fletcher (DD-445) class destroyer, retaining (later cancelled), DD-917 to DD-924 awarded to Consolidated Steel, Orange. if(MSFPhover) { MSFPnav2n=MSFPpreload("_derived/fletcher_class.htm_cmp_clearday110_hbtn.gif"); MSFPnav2h=MSFPpreload("_derived/fletcher_class.htm_cmp_clearday110_hbtn_a.gif"); } // -->