Strategic Sealift Conversion Ships Class Parts

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Filter By: Alternating Current Motors
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Part Number
NSN
NIIN
00781568104453 Alternating Current Motor
013641717
01MAN22116 Alternating Current Motor
014374717
325-215-002 Alternating Current Motor
014239451
342146-5 Alternating Current Motor
013912036
352-215-002 Alternating Current Motor
014239451
5N306 Alternating Current Motor
013641717
706521-517 Alternating Current Motor
014315674
706535-607 Alternating Current Motor
014232780
8-173459-01 Alternating Current Motor
013912036
B400-600-094 Alternating Current Motor
014232780
B400-600-165 Alternating Current Motor
014315674
B400-600-175 Alternating Current Motor
014259712
B78U9965N Alternating Current Motor
014239031
E217 Alternating Current Motor
013641717
E820 Alternating Current Motor
013641717
E887 Alternating Current Motor
013641717
E920 Alternating Current Motor
013641717
EM3211T Alternating Current Motor
013641717
G81431 Alternating Current Motor
014239451
NIK 0-506378M7 6 P N90L FR Alternating Current Motor
014259726
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Strategic Sealift Conversion Ships Class

Picture of Strategic Sealift Conversion Ships Class

Strategic sealift ships are part of the United States Military Sealift Command's (MSC) prepositioning program. There are currently 49 located in the Indian Ocean at Diego Garcia and the Western Pacific Ocean at Guam and Saipan.

The MPS ships in each squadron have sufficient equipment, supplies and ammunition to support a Marine Air-Ground Task Force for 30 days. The MPS ships are self-sustaining, with cranes to unload at sea or pierside. MSC chartered the first two ship classes in the MPS role (the Corporal Louis J. Hauge Jr. and Sergeant Matej Kocak classes) from civilian shipping lines and converted them. Later ships were purpose-built.

The Sergeant Matej Kocak Class, the second class of MPS ships chartered by MSC, also gained 157 feet (48 m) amidships and a helicopter deck after conversion. These ships, delivered to MSC in the mid-1980s, built at Sun Shipbuilding & Drydock Co., Chester, Pennsylvania and converted at National Steel and Shipbuilding Company, San Diego. They were previously owned by Waterman Steamship Corporation but recently sold to MSC and now operated by Keystone Shipping Co.

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