Warzone/The Drive: Watch Three Anti-Ship Missiles Rip Through USS Durham During RIMPAC Sinking Exercise
The Navy's big RIMPAC drills may have been dialed back this time around, but its highly anticipated SINKEX event certainly wasn't.
Even though this iteration of the biennial Rim Of The Pacific (RIMPAC) international naval exercises off Hawaii is smaller than in years past, the highlight of the drills, where a real ship is sunk with live weaponry, wasn't dropped from the program. For the sinking exercise, otherwise known as SINKEX, the ex-USS Durham, a mothballed amphibious cargo ship that was pulled from service in 1994, was the target. The Navy has released the first video of its demise, which appears to show a succession of no less than three anti-ship cruise missiles ripping through the ship's hull and detonating, along with a showering of shrapnel or submunitions from another weapon.
Read more ....
WNU Editor: The RIMPAC exercise are ending today.
ReplyDelete$$$$$$$. Now if I could just find a downward pointing arrow on the keyboard.
For some reason I was expecting a larger impact explosion.
ReplyDelete11:03
ReplyDeleteDestroyers are lightly built and they burn (They are also top heavy).
A supply ship is made of steel.
There is a big difference.
I wonder if the missiles would work as good against a manned ship performing evasive maneuvers, rather than an unmanned vessel lying dead in the water?
ReplyDeleteOther than getting shot down by an active defense tere really is no comparison between target speed and missile speed.
ReplyDeleteThis isn't the Battle of Midway. Things fly much faster.