Supply Class Aoe Parts

(Page 10) End item NSN parts page 10 of 207
Part Number
NSN
NIIN
01A228390-01 Electronic Test Extender Card
011689776
01A228487-01 Shock Mount
011094014
01A228676-01 Switch Assembly
011689765
01BM2000M Hand Operated Resuscitator
010617812
01BM3700M Hand Operated Resuscitator
010617812
01E883362 Alternating Current Motor
013421782
01Y1202 Tapered Roller Bearing Cup
001000516
02-0822-00 Refrigerant Filter-drier
002261578
02-09-2101 Electrical Contact
010922655
02-28053-03 Defibrilla Heat Recording Stylus
013181546
020-623 Spark Gap Subassembly
007878194
0200-014 Lavatory
002779844
0208A6721NG1X2 Rotary Switch
012107163
0209890-3 Tapered Roller Bearing Cup
001000516
021-00451 Hexagon Plain Nut
011567706
021-01538 Screw
000069249
021-0190-00 Radio Receiver Support
009607832
021-021791 ITEM 63 Self-aligning Plain Bearing
012063318
021-11741 Screw
010680078
021-904826 Gasket
001636553
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Supply Class Aoe

Picture of Supply  Class Aoe

USNS Supply (T-AOE-6) is the lead ship of the Supply-class fast combat support ships. She was commissioned in 1994 and is in service with the U.S. Military Sealift Command.

Supply was laid down on 24 February 1989 and was launched on 6 October 1990. She was commissioned in the United States Navy as USS Supply (AOE-6) on 26 February 1994 at Naval Air Station, North Island in San Diego, California. After her initial outfitting in San Diego, she sailed to Norfolk, Virginia via the Panama Canal and Caribbean Sea, arriving on 7 August 1994.

After service in the U.S. Navy from 1994 through 2001 as USS Supply (AOE-6), her weapons systems were removed and she was transferred on 13 July 2001 to the Military Sealift Command, which designated her USNS Supply (T-AOE-6). Like other fast combat support ships, she is part of MSC's Naval Fleet Auxiliary Force.

In 2014, Supply resided at BAE Systems Southeast Shipyards in Mobile, Alabama for repairs.

USNS Supply was allegedly the target of Al Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent (AQIS) in 2014. AQIS claimed through Twitter and other social media forums that the AQIS attack on Pakistan Navy frigate PNS Zulfiqar was intended to attack USS Supply (sic). AQIS report contradicts the official Pakistan Navy account of the attack which states that the frigate was attacked by AQIS at the Naval Dockyard in Karachi. AQIS claims that PNS Zulfiqar crew were involved in the attempt to take over the ship at sea for attacking USS Supply and its unnamed naval escort.

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