So you are saying, then it is almost certain to come the ship Hamilton 715 to Uruguay of the U.S. Coast Guard.
In our country we need new ships, but the Navy prefers type frigates Bremen. Are needed to patrol territorial waters that spread to Uruguay more than twice what we had.
That ship is interesting here for its ability to transport a helicopter, its capacity (3500 tonnes) and the propulsive gas.
Although poor weapons.
Joao Belo frigates with which we were built in 1964 and reach for the patrol.
Maybe this year we can get this ship here, as it appears the negotiations are well advanced.
Do not know how is the situation with the S-3 Vikings asked for our Navy and were discharged in 2007.
Saludos
The Hamiltons have Fairbanks Morse diesel engines for economical speeds and Pratt & Whitney gas turbines for flank speed.in a CODAG arrangement. In Uruguay service they will operate mostly with their diesels. They were FRAMed during the late 1980s and are in good working order as I have noted before. Yes, the ships are old, although not obsolete. The USCG are still operating them, and have been their most valued cutters. I am sure Uruguay could get a FMS hot transfer for the price of another refit... Four of the twelve are being decommissioned during the next fiscal year which starts in October.
I would think it wise for Uruguay to fund the refits for a few ships they plan to operate and not fund a refit of another one for spare parts. Considering Uruguay's coast guard type navy, they would make excellent replacements for an unbelievable price, really an upgrade over the ships they currently operate...
The Hamiltons don't have any missiles, but they do have a 76-mm gun, a 20-mm CIWS, and two 25-mm Bushmaster chain guns. The USCG operates all but one in the Pacific doing long range fishery patrols as far from the US west coast as the Bering Sea off Alaska especially during the Alaskan King Crab season... If they are good enough for the Bering Sea they will be good enough off the coast of Uruguay...
They should be good enough to last for another fifteen years or so, and if Uruguay played their cards right the Famous Class of USCG cutters should then be available later... After the Bertholfs have replaced the Hamiltons in US service, a newer class of OPCs will be built to replace the Resolutions and Famous class cutters in US service. I am sure the Famous class would be the next ships Uruguay may want in the future..