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U.S. Navy puts second Zumwalt class stealth destroyer to sea

The Zumwalt class of destroyers are stealthy, ultra-tech and kind of odd-looking and the Navy just sent its second one out to sea Monday for sea trials.

The USS Michael Monsoor (DDG 1001), named after a Medal of Honor awarded Navy SEAL who selflessly threw himself on a grenade to save his team, navigated the Kennebec River to reach the Atlantic Ocean where she will spend several days at sea before returning to Bath Iron Works in Maine for adjustments.

“Michael Monsoor (DDG 1001) is currently on Builders Trials, testing the hull, mechanical and engineering components of the ship,” Bath Iron Works said in a statement. “While all these systems are tested pierside, there is no substitute for the real world testing taking place in the Gulf of Maine.”

The Monsoor is the second ship in the Zumwalt class, the first being the USS Zumwalt already in-service and being outfited with weapons and other systems at Naval Base San Diego. A third, the Lyndon B. Johnson, is currently under construction.

This video of life aboard a Zumwalt class ship features video and images of what it’s like aboard America’s most advanced warship (the ship shown is the USS Zumwalt – DDG 1000.)

The Zumwalt class features electric-drive propulsion, modernized RADAR, SONAR and powerful guns and missiles.

Automation will allow the Zumwalt class to operate with half the crew of a traditional Arleigh Burke-class destroyer despite being significantly larger.

With all this automation, updated technology and upgraded weapons, what would happen is a Zumwalt-class destroyer ended up face-to-face with a Russian battlecruiser?

https://youtu.be/beWNuuro1lU

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Rich Mitchell

Rich Mitchell is the editor-in-chief of Conservative Daily News and the president of Bald Eagle Media, LLC. His posts may contain opinions that are his own and are not necessarily shared by Bald Eagle Media, CDN, staff or .. much of anyone else. Find him on twitter, facebook and

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One Comment

  1. Parts of the hulls construction seem to echo marine architecture of the 1890’s, for instance the aft-raked bow. But with upgraded navigation and engineering I am sure this newest “Zumi” destroyer is a far cry, and far deadlier, than any “flush-deck and four pipe” destroyer from those days.

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