JS Inazuma (DD-105)

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US Navy 040625-N-8157C-066 The Japanese destroyer JDS Inazuma (DD 105) passes Hospital Point in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.jpg
JS Inazuma on 25 June 2004
History
Japan
Name
  • Inazuma
  • (いなづま)
Ordered1995
BuilderMitsubishi, Nagasaki
Laid down8 May 1997
Launched9 September 1998
Commissioned15 March 2000
HomeportKure
Identification
StatusActive
General characteristics
Class and type Murasame-class destroyer
Displacement
  • 4,550 tons standard,
  • 6,200 tons hull load
Length151 m (495 ft 5 in)
Beam17.4 m (57 ft 1 in)
Draft5.2 m (17 ft 1 in)
Propulsion
Speed30 knots (35 mph; 56 km/h)
Complement165
Sensors and
processing systems
Electronic warfare
& decoys
Armament
Aircraft carried1 × SH-60J/K anti-submarine helicopter

JS Inazuma (DD-105) is the fifth ship of Murasame-class destroyers. She was commissioned on 15 March 2000.[1]

Construction and career[]

Inazuma was laid down on May 8, 1997 by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries at Nagasaki as part of the 1995 plan and launched on September 9, 1998. Commissioned on March 15, 2000, the destroyer was incorporated into the 4th Escort Corps and deployed to Kure.

From August 26 to October 30, 2018, Inazuma participated in the Indo-Pacific dispatch training with the escort vessels JS Kaga and JS Suzutsuki, and visited India, Indonesia, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Sri Lanka, and the Philippines. On September 13, she joined the submarine JS Kuroshio in the South China Sea and conducted anti-submarine warfare training. On September 26, a joint training between Japan and the United Kingdom was conducted with HMS Argyll heading for the South China Sea with Kaga in the sea and airspace west of Sumatra.[2]

On May 21, 2019, she departed for the "Reiwa first year pelagic practice voyage" with the training ship JS Kashima. The vessels visited 13 ports in 11 countries in 157 days with about 580 people, including about 190 people who completed the 69th General Executive Candidate Course (including 1 Ensign of the Royal Thai Navy), in Yokosuka on October 24.

Gallery[]

Citations[]

  1. ^ "DD-101 Murasame Class". globalsecurity.org. Retrieved 1 November 2020.
  2. ^ https://www.mod.go.jp/msdf/release/201809/20180927-02.pdf

References[]

  • Saunders, Stephen. IHS Jane's Fighting Ships 2013-2014. Jane's Information Group (2003). ISBN 0710630484
  • Heihachiro Fujiki (August 2003). "Development of multi-purpose DDs for "8-8 escort flotilla". Ships of the World (in Japanese). Kaijinn-sha (614): 94–99.
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