Kilauea-class ammunition ship

The Kilauea class ammunition ship is a class of eight United States Navy cargo vessels designed for underway replenishment of naval warships. The ships were constructed 1968–1972 and were initially commissioned naval ships, carrying a crew of naval personnel. At various dates 1980–96 these ships were decommissioned and transferred to the Military Sealift Command for civilian operation. They were eventually all replaced by the Lewis and Clark-class dry cargo ships. The lead ship of the class, Kilauea, was commissioned on 10 August 1968, and the last, the Kiska, on 16 December 1972.

Ships
ShipHull No.BuilderCommissionedTransferred to MSCStatusNVR link
KilaueaAE-26General Dynamics, Quincy1968-08-101980-10-01Stricken, sunk as an exercise target 2012
ButteAE-27General Dynamics, Quincy1968-12-141996-06-03Stricken, sunk as an exercise target 2006
Santa BarbaraAE-28Bethlehem Sparrows Point Shipyard1970-07-111998-09-30Stricken, scrapped
Mount HoodAE-29Bethlehem Sparrows Point Shipyard1971-05-01Stricken, scrapped
FlintAE-32Ingalls Shipbuilding, Pascagoula1971-11-201995-08-04Inactive, out of service, in Reserve
ShastaAE-33Ingalls Shipbuilding, Pascagoula1972-02-261997-10-01Stricken, scrapped commencing in November 2013
Mount BakerAE-34Ingalls Shipbuilding, Pascagoula1972-07-221996-12-18Stricken, scrapped
KiskaAE-35Ingalls Shipbuilding, Pascagoula1972-12-161996-08-01Stricken, to be disposed of by dismantling
Three of the eight Kilauea-class ships steaming together: Shasta (left), Kiska (right), Flint (rear) (2005)
Class overview
BuildersGeneral Dynamics, Bethlehem Steel, Ingalls Shipbuilding
OperatorsUS Navy and Military Sealift Command
Preceded by Nitro-class ammunition ship
Succeeded by Lewis and Clark-class dry cargo ship
Built1966–1972
In commission1967–1996
Completed8
Active0
Scrapped3
General characteristics
Typeammunition carrier
Displacement13,688 tons, 20,500 f/l
Length564 feet (172 m)
Beam81 feet (25 m)
Draft29 feet (8.8 m)
Propulsionone GE steam turbine, 22,000 shp; three Foster-Wheeler boilers; single propeller.
Speed20 knots (37 km/h; 23 mph)
Complement411 (USN)/130 (MSC)
Sensors and
processing systems
Mark 56 fire-control system
Armamentoriginally four twin 3"/50 caliber gun mounts
Aircraft carriedtwo helicopters (UH-46 or MH-60)
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