Spruance Class Dd (963) Parts

(Page 124) End item NSN parts page 124 of 449
Part Number
NSN
NIIN
10281174-9 Incandescent Lamp
001558653
102818 Cartridge Fuse
000788659
102835 Gasket
006186525
102871 Instrument Shunt
006797882
10291850 Electrical Contact
000613276
10299 Electrical Headset
006650527
102P545 Paper Dielectric Fixed Capacitor
007716995
103 Junction Box
002810090
103 Preformed Packing
003698148
103-0051-00 Test Prod Tip
004116704
103-0051-01 Test Prod Tip
004116704
103-051 Test Prod Tip
004116704
103-062 Transistor
004944899
103-074-885 Transistor
001708048
103-122-1 Electrical Receptacle Connector
009887858
103-2 General Surgical Scissors
003651200
103-279-37A Diode Semiconductor Device
000893576
103-297 Cylindrical Roller Bearing
012948002
103-440 Transistor
004174108
Page: 124 ...

Spruance Class Dd (963)

Picture of Spruance Class Dd (963)

The Spruance-class destroyer was developed by the United States to replace a large number of World War II–built Allen M. Sumner and Gearing-class destroyers and was the primary destroyer built for the U.S. Navy during the 1970s.

First commissioned in 1975, the class was designed with gas-turbine propulsion, a flight deck and hangar for up to two medium-lift helicopters, all-digital weapons systems, and automated 5-inch guns. Serving for three decades, the Spruance class was designed to escort a carrier group with a primary ASW mission, though in the 1990s 24 members of the class were upgraded with the Mark 41 Vertical Launching System (VLS) for the Tomahawk surface-to-surface missile. Rather than extend the life of the class, the Navy accelerated its retirement. The last ship of the class was decommissioned in 2005, with most examples broken up or destroyed as targets.

The class was originally designed for anti-submarine warfare (ASW) with point defense anti-aircraft warfare (AAW) missiles; upgrades provided anti-ship and land attack capabilities.

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