ATLS-9701

ATLS-9701 is a small unnamed U.S. Navy active service auxiliary Aerial Target Launch Ship operated by the Pacific Targets and Marine Operations Division (PTMO), U.S. Department of the Navy.[1][2] The ship possesses VHF, UHF, Sat-Phone, NIPR/SIPRNET communication capabilities, equipped with Nobeltec Navigation system, and BQM-74 aerial targets launchers.[1]

ATLS-9701 in 2011
History
United States
Name: None
Builder: VT Halter Marine Shipbuilder, Moss Point, MS
Launched: 1998
In service: 1998-present
Homeport: Port Hueneme, Naval Base Ventura County
Identification:
Status: in active service
General characteristics
Class and type: aerial target launch ship
Displacement: 857 t
Length: 264 ft 5 in (80.6 m)
Beam: 26 ft (7.9 m)
Draft: 6 ft 10 in (2.1 m) maximum
Propulsion: 2 x diesels, 2 shafts, 1,342 bhp
Speed: 8 knots (15 km/h)
Range: 1,000 nanometres (1.0×10−9 km)
Complement: unknown/classified
Armament: 2 BQM-74 launchers

History

ATLS-9701 was built in 1998 for MQM-8G Vandal Targets program run by the Naval Air Systems Command. She was used for firing the MQM-8G super-sonic targets simulating cruise missiles, which were reconfigured RIM-8 Talos long-range naval surface-to-air missiles, in order to test the Phalanx and RIM close-range defensive systems deployed by the Navy. MQM-8G's were remote-controlled, non-recoverable vehicles, 36.2 feet in length, 7.3 feet in diameter, and weighing 8,225 pounds.[3]

U.S Marines with the 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit’s Maritime Raid Force fast-roped from Bell UH-1Y Venom onto the ATLS-9701 to train a VBSS mission

After the last MQM-8 targets were launched in 2005, the ATLS-9701 was converted to firing BQM-74 targets and also became a platform for the U.S. Marine Corps and the U.S. Navy for VBSS maritime training, confined space clearing, on-ship container access, and testing helicopter fast-roping skills, among other activities.[1]

On April 4, 2013, ATLS-9701 was used by the members of the 13th MEU Maritime Raid Force, who fast-roped onto her from a CH-46 helicopter during VBSS training.[4] On January 11, 2015, the 15th MEU Maritime Raid Force exercised their boarding skills on the ATLS-9701 in the San Diego Bay during interoperability training.[5]

gollark: Of course, certain osmarksnodes™ have 1.20892581961463*10^24 IP addresses.
gollark: semi, any sane apiohedron would rate limit per IP or something.
gollark: Why not implement a simple n-gram language model?
gollark: Oh, I just had a cool idea. Population control via manipulation of predictive text suggestions.
gollark: CONTINGENCY REPEALED PENUMBRAE WAS A COMPLETE SUCCESS

References

  1. ATLS-9701 Archived March 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  2. World Navies Today: US Navy Minor Auxiliaries & Yard Craft: ATLS 9701 drone launch ship
  3. Navy Training System Plan for General Aerial Targets, January 2002, Globalsecurity.org
  4. 13th MEU, MRF, Train on Maritime Platform, DVIDS, Video by Cpl. Ammon Carter, VIRIN:130405-M-KX613-001 (Released)
  5. MRF conducts interoperability training, DVIDS, U.S. Marine Corps photo by 1st Lt. Allison Burgos, VIRIN:150111-M-ZZ999-069 (Released)
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