Minerva-Class Cruiser

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Class overview
Name: Minerva-class cruiser
Builders: Royal Shipbuilders of Cacerta
Operators: CRNEnsign.png Cacertian Royal Navy
Preceded by: Valentina-class
Succeeded by: Vedette-class
In commission: 1979 – present
Planned: 20
Completed: 20
Active: 20
General characteristics
Type: Nuclear-powered guided missile cruiser
Displacement:
  • 10,770 tons standard
  • 13,156 tons fully loaded
Length: 186 meters
Beam: 21 meters
Draft: 8 meters
Propulsion:
  • 2 × CNRC Mk V nuclear reactors
  • 2 × CNRC steam turbines
  • 2 × shafts driving four-bladed controllable-reversible pitch propellers
Speed: 32 knots (59 km/h)
Range: Unlimited
Complement: 485 officers and crew
Sensors and
processing systems:
  • RN-RMVII multi-function radar
  • RN-RRAV air search radar
  • RN-RRSXII surface search radar
  • RN-RAX fire control radar
  • RN-RCFAVIII gun fire control radar
  • RN-SA6 sonar suite
Electronic warfare
& decoys:
  • RN-CL chaff countermeasures
  • RN-TD torpedo decoy dispensers
Armament:
  • Guns:
  • 4 × 140mm RN-SBIV guns (2 × 2)
  • Missiles:
  • 16 × RN-MSAN Arpione missiles
  • 1 × 64-cell vertical launch system
  • Other:
  • 2 × Strozzino quadruple torpedo tubes
  • 2 × 20mm Custode CIWS

The Minerva-class is a class of nuclear-powered heavy cruisers in service with the Cacertian Royal Navy. It is the first vessel of its type to be powered by nuclear reactors and is the result of a Cacertian initiative to create a nuclear fleet. As the first of a new age of cruiser in the Royal Navy, the Minerva-class cruisers are the test platform for the newly developed Fiocina anti-ship missile system.

Considering the distance between the Cacertian Home Islands and its bases in Andria and Shalum, Cacertian High Command began serious considerations into developing a self-sustaining nuclear fleet that could operate at long-periods on patrol. Development of these vessels began in the early 21st-century with the first unit seeing completion in mid-2006.

The Mark V nuclear reactors utilized in the Minerva-class would be further developed into the Mark VII reactors used on board the Queen Anelyn-class battleships.