Hatakaze-class guided missile destroyer
JS Shimakaze (DDG-172) firing in a gunnery exercise on 21 December 2015
History
Japan
Name
Namesake Shimakaze (1942)
Builder Mitsubishi , Nagasaki
Laid down 13 January 1985
Launched 30 January 1987
Commissioned 23 March 1988
Reclassified Training vessel, 19 March 2021
Homeport Kure
Identification
Status Active
General characteristics
Class and type Hatakaze -class destroyer
Displacement
4674 tons standard
6096 tons full load
Length 492.1 ft (150.0 m)
Beam 53.9 ft (16.4 m)
Draft 15.8 ft (4.8 m)
Propulsion
Speed 30 knots (56 km/h; 35 mph)
Complement 260
Sensors and processing systems
Armament
Aviation facilities 1 × SH-60K helicopter
JS Shimakaze (DDG-172/TV-3521) is the second ship of the Hatakaze -class guided missile destroyers built for the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF). The ship was reclassified as training ship in 2021.
Construction and career
Shimakaze was laid down on the 13 January 1985 at Mitsubishi Heavy Industries shipyard in Nagasaki . She was launched on 30 January 1987, and commissioned on 23 March 1988.[ 1]
On 23 November 2017, Shimakaze along with JS Kaga , Ise , Teruzuki and Samidare participated in the search and rescue of a crashed C-2A Greyhound from the United States Navy 7th Fleet .[ 2]
HMCS Ottawa , JS Chōkai and Shimakaze participated in a bilateral exercise between the Royal Canadian Navy and Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force on 16 October 2019.[ 3]
On 30 March 2020, Shimakaze was damaged in a collision with a Chinese fishing vessel in the East China Sea .[ 4] [ 5]
Shimakaze was converted to training ship and redesignated as TV-3521 on 19 March 2021.[ 6]
See also
Citations
References
Saunders, Stephen, ed. (2015). IHS Jane's Fighting Ships 2015-2016 . IHS Global Limited. ISBN 978-0-7106-3143-5 .
External links
Media related to JS Shimakaze (DDG-172) at Wikimedia Commons