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Hermes Class
Hermes Class LPD
Class overview
Name: Hermes Class Landing Platform Dock
Builders: Arthuristan Dynamics
Operators: Arthuristan People's Navy
General characteristics
Type: LPD
Displacement: 24,000 tonnes
Length: 208m
Beam: 32m
Draught: 7m
Installed power:

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1 x Arthuristan Dynamics N27 compact reactor (40MW), two shafts
or

Four sequentially turbocharged New Bristol Marineworks D-11 diesel engines, two shafts, 31 megawatts
Speed: In excess of 24kn
Range: Theoretically unlimited
Boats & landing
craft carried:
2 x LCAC of 1 x LCU, 14 x AAVs or EFVs
Troops: 700 troops
Complement: 28 officers, 320 crew
Sensors and
processing systems:

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Thales Herakles multifunction radar,
navigation radar

AN/SQQ-28 LAMPS III Shipboard System
Armament: list error: <br /> list (help)
24 x Arthuristan Dynamics V90 VLS cells
2 x Goalkeeper CIWS
6 x 12.7mm Browning HMGs
Armour: steel shrapnel sheets, kevlar spall liners
Aircraft carried: 4 x heavy or 6 x medium helicopters

The first examples of the Hermes Class were commissioned in the early-2000s, as the long-overdue replacement for the 60s-era Fearless-class landing platform dock. The Hermes is a substantially larger design, capable of deploying a battalion-sized battlegroup of Arthuristan People's Marines, sending them ashore in an over-the-horizon assault in landing crafts, amphibious fighting vehicles and heavy-lift helicopters.

As a cost-reduction measure, the Hermes was designed from the outset to be easily built by civilian shipyards. Nevertheless, survivability was a paramount consideration throughout the design process and it retains many of the vital damage-control measures standard among warships, including automatic fire-fighting foam sprays watertight doors, self-sealing compartments and floodable magazines. Similar to most current-generation of Arthuristan warships, extensive efforts were made into decreasing the vessel's radar-signature. The Hermes also has a relatively heavy complement of defensive armaments, usually being equipped with 24 V90 VLS cells armed with quad-packed AD-16 Sea Adder anti-air missiles, which can be increased to 48 if necessary. The ship also has a pair of Goalkeeper CIWS for additional anti-missile protection, with a secondary role in countering small-crafts and "suicide boats" in irregular littoral fighting which an amphibious warfare ship is likely to be involved in.

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