Oliver Perry Class Ffg Parts

(Page 188) End item NSN parts page 188 of 291
Part Number
NSN
NIIN
2-002 N674-70 O-ring
012040726
2-003 V747-75 O-ring
010063930
2-003V0747-75 O-ring
010063930
2-003V1164-75 O-ring
010063930
2-003V1226-75 O-ring
010063930
2-003V747-75 O-ring
010063930
2-0040-06182-000-019-015 Plug-in Electronic Compon Socket
014077471
2-005 N674-70 O-ring
004056022
2-0053 Vehicular Universal Joint Spider
005081566
2-0053J Vehicular Universal Joint Spider
005081566
2-011 N103-70 O-ring
004190749
2-011N103-7 O-ring
004190749
2-019 N674-70 O-ring
004891012
2-019N674-70 O-ring
004891012
2-021 47-071 O-ring
008195282
2-022 S604-70 O-ring
009007399
2-022S604-70 O-ring
009007399
2-023 E515-80 O-ring
004190828
2-023E515-80 O-ring
004190828
2-023E515-80 O-ring
006896460
Page: 188 ...

Oliver Perry Class Ffg

Picture of Oliver Perry Class Ffg

USS Oliver Hazard Perry (FFG-7), lead ship of the Oliver Hazard Perry class of guided-missile frigates, was named for Oliver Hazard Perry, American naval hero, who was victorious at the 1813 Battle of Lake Erie. Oliver Hazard Perry (FFG-7) was the first ship and, as of 2015, the only ship of that name in the U.S. Navy. Oliver Hazard Perry was in service from 1977 to 1997 and was scrapped in 2005.

The class was originally intended as austere 'low' category guided missile frigates (compared with the high capability Spruance class) for General Purpose and Anti-Air convoy escort. They were built under a cloud of controversy, with their very light gun armament and lack of redundancy and duplicated systems in event of ship being hit. They were regarded by the Reagan administration and Secretary John Lehman as not part of the 500 ship navy plan, but ultimately proved useful as anti-submarine ships if fitted to carry Seahawks and towed arrays and in the 21C as low grade patrol ships making up the numbers in a USN desperately short of escorts.

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