Surigao
The Surigao class Destroyer Esort (DE) is the second oldest vessel in the UNIN Fleet (after the Berlin class cruiser), and the sister class of the Samar DE. Designed to be built from the same yard tooling, both sister classes are largely identical save for their active search sensors and processing systems. Intended for missile interception and point defense, the Surigao class is equipped with a fine resolution sensor suite which comes at the cost of limited detection range of larger ships. A total of 8 Surigao class ships were constructed until production ceased in February 2034, and 7 of the ships remain in service to the UNIN Fleet. The Surigao class has not undergone a modernization program, and no plans currently exist to design a successor. The Surigao class continues to play an important role in escorting survey & logistics ships, maintaining pickets, and carrying out extra-solar operations.
Contents
Development
- See also: Samar Class Development
During development of the Samar class DE, it was decided to create a sister class by replacing the Raytheon UN/SGY-5 Overwatch Tracking Array with the Honeywell UN/SGS-4 Warbler Missile Warning Sensor. This was a minor enough change that both ship classes could be produced without any costly changes in shipyard tooling. In an unusual turn of events, six of these Surigao class variants would be commissioned before the lead-ship UNS Samar would be completed.
Operational History
Battle of Mars
- See also: Battle of Mars, Samar Class Operational History
Surigao class ships were present in Task Group Phalanx during the battle of Mars, although none sustained damage in the conflict. With sensor coverage from the Warbler Missile Warning Sensor and Mosquito interceptor missiles, Phalanx succeeded in intercepting only 1 out of 12 Bowyer anti-ship missiles fired on the task group.
K2 Incident
On 20 February 2035 the jump tender UNS Galileo Galilei reported that it failed to make its scheduled contact with the survey ship UNS Klondike and its destroyer escort UNS Kagayan in the UNTJS 001 system. Investigation immediately revealed the debris of both ships in orbit around the 6th planet of the system, and broadcasts from their emergency beacons.
Analysis of the Kagayan’s ship data recorder indicates on the 3rd of January the Kagayan’s Warbler array picked up 4 unknown contacts (UN Reporting name: Hoplite) at close range massing 8,000 tons. Upon detection, the unidentified ships immediately activated their own targeting arrays and opened fire on the Kagayan with an unknown directed energy weapon, disabling the Kagayan in the first salvo. A second salvo destroyed the Klondike. Logs indicate survivors (including the CO of Kagayan) made it to life pods, however all transmissions from them ceased 30 minutes after launch.
All attempts at communicating with this extra-terrestrial intelligence (ETI) have received no response. Covert surveillance of the system by the UNS Aristarchus has reported no trace of the missing life pods, and the hostile ships remain in orbit around the planet. All traffic into UNTJS 001 has been restricted, pending pacification of the hostile ETI.
Batavia Incident
Following new protocols developed after the K2 Incident, the surveillance corvette UNS Eratosthenes began investigating the newly discovered Batavia system for ETI prior to geological survey by the UNS Boomtown. On 27 August 2036 the Eratosthenes began observation of the Earth-like 5th planet around Batavia-A, considered a top candidate for colonization.
After careful approach to low orbit (20,000 km), the Eratosthenes detected 36 small thermal contacts in orbit (UN reporting name Ratel) emitting weak active sensor signals. 5 seconds later the ship registered impacts from 5 separate 30 kiloton nuclear detonations, suffered major structural failure, and began launching life pods. The survey ship UNS Boomtown was able to successfully recover 15 crewmembers of the Eratosthenes, over half its complement.
The Surigao class DE UNS Caloocan was dispatched to the system to begin mine-sweeping operations. The Caloocan arrived in system on the 27th of October, and successfully engaged and destroyed 9 remaining mines with SIM-10 Mosquito-B missiles. Investigations into the Earth-like planet Batavia-A V have revealed no signs of indigenous life, the search for further indications of ETI in the system is still ongoing.
Tactical Analysis
The range of the Warbler Missile Warning sensor has proven to be too short for the ship's intended role of missile interception. While automated final defensive fire is possible, coordinated point defense is impossible due to crew response times, communications delays, and light lag. Despite these drawbacks, the Warbler continues to fill a niche no other ship in the fleet can fill, as demonstrated in the Batavia mine clearing operation. Even with sufficient detection, existing interceptor missile designs have low probabilities of successfully intercepting another missile.
With only a single belt of duranium armor, these vessels can be expected to withstand only light weapons fire before losing combat effectiveness. Any warhead rated strength 4 or above will fully penetrate the armor layer and cause internal damage to the ship.
The Surigao class may still prove effective against the Federation Moskva corvette. The Moskva's primary armament consists of "knife-fight" range Meson cannons, and its active sensor suite lacks the capacity to detect missiles in flight.
Ships in Class
Hull Number | Name | Laid Down | Commissioned | Construction Shipyard |
---|---|---|---|---|
DE-1 | UNS Surigao | 24th December 2030 | 11th March 2031 | Valhalla Naval Yard |
DE-2 | UNS Ilocos | 11th March 2031 | 28th May 2031 | Valhalla Naval Yard |
DE-3 | UNS Abra | 19th April 2031 | 6th July 2031 | Victoria Naval Yard |
DE-4 | UNS Kagayan | 10th June 2031 | 28th August 2031 | BC Void Shipbuilding |
DE-5 | UNS Benguet | 16th August 2031 | 4th November 2031 | Valhalla Naval Yard |
DE-6 | UNS Quirono | 25th September 2031 | 23rd January 2032 | Victoria Naval Yard |
DE-17 | UNS Caloocan | 29th November 2031 | 2nd August 2032 | Valhalla Naval Yard |
DE-18 | UNS Taguig | 20th February 2032 | 24th October 2032 | Valhalla Naval Yard |
Design Specifications
Surigao class Destroyer Escort 1,450 tons 152 Crew 176.5 BP TCS 29 TH 80 EM 0 2758 km/s Armour 1-11 Shields 0-0 Sensors 1/1/0/0 Damage Control Rating 1 PPV 5 Maint Life 7.6 Years MSP 76 AFR 16% IFR 0.2% 1YR 2 5YR 35 Max Repair 30 MSP Magazine 35 Pratt & Whitney 40000M-E100 Nuclear Pulse Engine (2) Power 40 Fuel Use 100% Signature 40 Armour 0 Exp 5% Fuel Capacity 50,000 Litres Range 62.1 billion km (260 days at full power) ATK SML-1 Mk. 1 Point Defense Launch Tube (R30) (5) Missile Size 1 Rate of Fire 30 Honeywell UN/SGM-3 Aegis Missile Defense Control (D3-R50) (1) Range 3.0m km Resolution 1 MBDA SSM-6A Hornet Anti-Ship Missile (35) Speed: 11,200 km/s End: 13.3m Range: 9m km WH: 1 Size: 1 TH: 37 / 22 / 11 Honeywell UN/SGS-4 Warbler Missile Warning Sensor (D1.5-R50) (1) GPS 30 Range 1.5m km Resolution 1 Missile to hit chances are vs targets moving at 3000 km/s, 5000 km/s and 10,000 km/s This design is classed as a Military Vessel for maintenance purposes