Fms - Newport Class Lst Parts

(Page 63) End item NSN parts page 63 of 73
Part Number
NSN
NIIN
21541541 Engine Temperature Indicator
011931630
216047SH1 Electrical Receptacle Connector
001896245
21609 Shouldered Shaft
001492515
21664 Rotary Pump
001631074
21710228 Sleeve Bearing Half
006496549
21716G Self-indicating Thermometer
002422224
217568 Fluid Filter Element
008926210
2179900282 Diode Semiconductor Device
000623439
217G Annular Ball Bearing
001556333
217KG Annular Ball Bearing
001556333
217KGFS153 Annular Ball Bearing
001556333
217L Annular Ball Bearing
001556333
2181082 Electrical Starter Engine Drive
007334931
2186 Rotary Switch
005813419
219-51113 Electromagnetic Relay
006238738
21900 Sleeve Bearing
006627145
2191592 Sleeve Bushing Half
004549128
2195543 Paper Metallized Fixed Capacitor
008509496
2196048 Tapered Roller Cone And Rollers
001000263
219A1N5 Electromagnetic Relay
006238738
Page: 63 ...

Fms - Newport Class Lst

Picture of Fms - Newport Class Lst

USS Fresno was the 4th ship in the Newport class tank landing ships. Fresno was named for a city and county in California. She was laid down on 16 December 1967 at San Diego, California, by the National Steel & Shipbuilding Company; launched on 28 September 1968; sponsored by Mrs. Marilyn Hyde (wife of the mayor of Fresno); and commissioned on 22 November 1969 with Commander Stanislaus J. Sowinski in command.

Assigned to the Amphibious Force, Pacific Fleet, and homeported at San Diego, California, Fresno alternated amphibious training operations along the west coast of the United States with regular, extended deployments to the western Pacific. She continued this regimen into 1990. Fresno saw extensive service during the latter stages of the Vietnam War. Fresno was decommissioned in 1993 and berthed at the Naval Inactive Ship Maintenance Facility (NISMF), Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. In 2009, along with Racine, Fresno was reported to be sold to the Peruvian Navy. However, this Foreign Military Sales (FMS) case was never executed and the ship remained under the control of the U.S. Navy following its decommissioning.

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