Lpd-17 Class Amphibious Transport Dock Parts

(Page 30) End item NSN parts page 30 of 32
Part Number
NSN
NIIN
170 Incandescent Lamp
004898529
170-2KOHM Nonwire Wound Variable Resistor
004017414
1700191 Gasket
014575292
17009903 Electrical Dummy Load
011239482
1701-1826 Incandescent Lamp
004375216
1705 Incandescent Lamp
008514352
173114 Connector Adapter
002593347
174-1-1-2 Hose Cap
002423242
1740-605 Incandescent Lamp
009024660
175-330 Incandescent Lamp
008514352
17539-3 Indicator Light
010809574
17610-1 Machine Screw
009359317
17640-01-446 Plug-in Electronic Compon Socket
011472159
1767188 Composition Fixed Resistor
008740147
176S-101 Non Wire Wound Variable Resistor
005038734
177-0080-1 Flexible Disk
011448447
177003-108 Annular Ball Bearing
001566718
177039-100 Annular Ball Bearing
001558894
177711-042 O-ring
010515542
Page: 30

Lpd-17 Class Amphibious Transport Dock

Picture of Lpd-17 Class Amphibious Transport Dock

The San Antonio class is a class of amphibious transport docks, also called a landing platform/dock (LPD), used by the United States Navy. These warships replace the older Austin-class LPDs (including Cleveland and Trenton sub-classes), as well as the Newport-class tank landing ships, and the Charleston-class amphibious cargo ships that have already been retired.

Twelve ships of the San Antonio class were proposed, but only eleven were funded. Their original target price was $890 million;

The San Antonio class was designed to provide the Navy and U.S. Marine Corps with modern, sea-based platforms that are networked, survivable, and built to operate with 21st century transformational platforms, such as the MV-22 Osprey, the (since canceled) Expeditionary Fighting Vehicle (EFV), air-cushioned landing craft (LCACs), and future means by which Marines are delivered ashore.

The project embraced a "Design for Ownership" philosophy; a concurrent engineering approach that injects operator, maintainer, and trainer input into the design development process. The goal was to ensure that operational realities are considered throughout the total ship design, integration, construction, test and life cycle support of the new ships and their systems.

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