Tag Archives: naval surface warfare center

Spiffing up the last DD in the fleet

The only surviving “Sprucan” has recently picked up a new paint job.

The ex-USS Paul F. Foster (DD-964), commissioned 21 February 1976 and struck in 2004 after a very busy 28 years with the fleet, is now simply referred to as the Naval Surface Warfare Center Port Hueneme Division’s Self Defense Test Ship, or the catchy NSWC PHD SDTS.

She has been at Naval Base Ventura County (Port Hueneme) receiving a fresh coat of haze gray as the conclusion of a $30 million Selected Restricted Availability package, awarded to Port Hueneme-based AdvantEdge Technology Inc, that has been taking place slowly since April 2024.

The repainting is slated to be completed later this month.

A worker with Ventura, California-based general contractor C.D. Lyon Inc. stands on a pontoon boat tied to the Self Defense Test Ship as he puts a primer coat on the hull to prepare it for painting Nov. 7 at Naval Surface Warfare Center, Port Hueneme Division. (U.S. Navy photo by Dana Rene White)

A worker with Ventura, California-based general contractor C.D. Lyon Inc. stands on a pontoon boat tied to the Self Defense Test Ship as he puts a primer coat on the hull to prepare it for painting Nov. 7 at Naval Surface Warfare Center, Port Hueneme Division. (U.S. Navy photo by Dana Rene White)

She returned to her homeport at Naval Base Ventura County last summer after 14 months at BAE San Diego, looking, well, kind of depressing.

Naval Surface Warfare Center, Port Hueneme Division’s Self Defense Test Ship (SDTS), ex-USS Paul F. Foster (DD 964), returns to Port Hueneme, California, from San Diego on June 12. The SDTS spent 14 months in the BAE Systems Ship Repair shipyard for maintenance and upgrades. (U.S. Navy photo by Dana Rene White)

The new paint should help.

Meanwhile, her veteran’s organization is preparing for her 50th anniversary in the coming weeks.

Daniel Still Getting Some Love from Crane

The Pentagon announced earlier this week that Georgia-based Daniel Defense has won a large contract issued through the Naval Surface Warfare Center’s Crane Division.

Located in Black Creek, Daniel Defense is no stranger to supplying high-speed components to the military’s most elite units, having delivered quad rails and the Rail Interface System II, or RIS II, to the U.S. Special Operations Command for years. Likewise, the company has been a supplier of barrels and gas blocks for SOCOM’s Upper Receiver Group-Improved program.

The URG-I, coupled with a standard M4 lower, is reportedly used by units as diverse as the U.S. Army Rangers and Special Forces. The latest contract for Daniel, a $9.1 million firm-fixed-price, indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity award, is for 11.5-inch and 14.5-inch cold-hammer-forged barrels for URG-Is. 

As the Navy’s FY22 workbook lists the price for these receiver kits- at $780, the contract could cover upwards of 11,000 URGs, enough for most of the trigger pullers in SOCOM.