Type 903 replenishment ship

Gaoyouhu
Class overview
Builders
Operators People's Liberation Army Navy
Preceded byType 908 replenishment ship
Succeeded byType 901 replenishment ship
In commission2004
Completed9
Active9
General characteristics
TypeReplenishment oiler
Displacement23,369 tons (full load)[1]
Length178.5 metres (586 ft)[1]
Beam24.8 metres (81 ft)[1]
Draught8.7 metres (29 ft)[1]
Propulsion
  • 2 x SEMT Pielstick 16PC2 6V400 diesel engines;[1]
  • 2 shafts[1]
  • Total output: 24,000 hp (18,000 kW)[1]
Speed19 knots (35 km/h; 22 mph)[1]
Range10,000 nautical miles (19,000 km; 12,000 mi) at 14 knots (26 km/h; 16 mph)[1]
Capacity10,500 tons of fuel oil, 250 tons of fresh water, 680 tons of cargo and ammunition[1]
Complement130[1]
Armament4 x twin 37 mm[1]
Aircraft carried1 Harbin Z-8[1] or Changhe Z-18[2]
Aviation facilitieshangar and flight deck[2]

The Type 903 (NATO reporting name: Fuchi) is a class of replenishment oiler (AOR) built for the People's Liberation Army Navy by the People's Republic of China.[1] They resemble HTMS Similan, an AOR built by China for Thailand and delivered in 1996.[1][3]

Two Type 903s entered service in 2003. Construction of the Type 903A, a slightly modified design, began in 2010; the first Type 903As entered service in 2013.[1]

Development

According to Zhang Gang, chief designer of Similan, China started development of a new AOR in 1988. Development was delayed due to cost, leading China to buy a Komandarm Fedko-class oiler, renamed Qinghaihu, from Ukraine in 1992. The new design was completed for Similan, which became the basis for the Type 903.[4]

Design

The Type 903 is a flush-decked development of the Type 905 AOR resembling the French Durance.[5]

There are two liquid and one sliding-stay solid transfer stations per side. Refuelling may also be conducted from the stern.[5]

Ships of the class

Name Hull No. Builder Launched Commissioned Fleet Status
Type 903
千岛湖 / Qiandaohu (ex-Fuchi)[1] 886[1] Hudong Shipyard[1] 29 March 2003[1] 30 April 2004[1] East Sea Fleet[1] Active[1]
微山湖 / Weishanhu[1] 887[1] Guangzhou Shipyard International[1] June 2003[1] 2004[1] South Sea Fleet[1] Active[1]
Type 903A
太湖 / Taihu[1] 889[1] Guangzhou Shipyard International 22 March 2012[1] 18 June 2013[1] North Sea Fleet[1] Active[1]
巢湖 / Chaohu[1] 890[1] Hudong Shipyard[1] 6 May 2012[1] 11 September 2013[1] East Sea Fleet[1] Active[1]
东平湖 / Dongpinghu[6] 960[6] Active[6]
洪湖 / Honghu[6] 963[6] Active[6]
骆马湖 / Luomahu[6] 964[6] Active[6]
高邮湖 / Gaoyouhu[6] 966[6] Active[6]
可可西里湖 / Kekexilihu[6] 968[6] Active[6]

Gallery

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq Saunders 2015, p. 160.
  2. ^ a b Tate, Andrew (11 June 2015). "China launches third Type 903A". IHS Jane's 360. Archived from the original on 2015-12-22. Retrieved 16 December 2015.
  3. ^ Saunders 2015, p. 840.
  4. ^ Sheldon-Duplaix 2017, p. 100.
  5. ^ a b Wertheim 2013, p. 133.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o United States Navy Office of Naval Intelligence (19 February 2020). PLA Navy Identification Guide (Report). Archived from the original on 27 February 2020. Retrieved 29 July 2020.

Sources

  • Saunders, Stephan, ed. (2015). Jane's Fighting Ships 2015-2016. Jane's Information Group. ISBN 978-0710631435.
  • Sheldon-Duplaix, Alexandre (2017). "China's Auxiliary Fleet: Supporting a Blue-Water Navy in the Far Seas?". China's Evolving Surface Fleet. CSMI Red Book. Vol. 14. United States Naval War College. ISBN 978-1-935352-45-7.
  • Wertheim, Eric (2013). The Naval Institute Guide to Combat Fleets of the World: Their Ships, Aircraft, and Systems (16 ed.). Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1591149545.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Type 903 replenishment ships
Type 903
  • Qiandaohu
  • Weishanhu
Type 903A
  • Taihu
  • Chaohu
  • Dongpinghu
  • Gaoyouhu
  • Luomahu
  • Honghu
  • Kekexilihu
  • v
  • t
  • e
Nuclear
ballistic missile (SSBN)
Nuclear attack (SSN)
Conventional
ballistic missile (SSB)
Conventional
attack (SS/SSK)
Air-independent propulsion
equipped (SSI/SSP)
Hunter-killer (SSK)
Medium (SS)
Unclassified miscellaneous (IXSS)
Aircraft carriers (CV)
Destroyers (DDG)
  • Project 956EM Sovremenny II class
  • Project 956 Sovremenny I class
Frigates (FFG)
Coastal warfare vessels
Corvettes (FS)
Submarine chasers (PCSC)
Armed merchantmen (SP)
Missile boats (PCM)
Torpedo boats (PT)
Gunboats (PG)
Patrol boats (PB)
Seagoing
Port security boat (PSB)
Reconnaissance patrol combatant (PGR)
Landing helicopter dock (LHD) or
Landing helicopter assault (LHA)
Amphibious transport dock (LPD)
Dock landing ship (LSD)
Landing ship helicopter (LSH)
Landing ship tank (LST)
Landing ship medium (LSM)
Landing craft (LC)
Landing craft tank (LCT)
Landing craft utility (LCU)
Air-cushioned
landing craft (LCAC)
Minelayers (ML)
Auxiliary minelayers (MMA)
Minehunters (MH)
Minesweepers (MS)
Minesweeping
drone (MSD)
Auxiliary Minesweepers (MSA)
Ammunition
ships (AE/AEM)
Ammunition ship (AE)
Ammunition ship, Missile/Rocket (AEM)
Buoy tenders (AGL)
Cable layers (ARC)
Cargo ships (AK)
Reefer ships (AF)
Cargo ships (AK)
Float-on/float-
off ships (AKF)
General stores
issue ships (AKS)
Roll-on/roll-
off ships (AKR)
Container ships (AKX)
  • Converted/militarized container ships
Self-propelled
lighters/barges (YF)
Crane ship (AB)
Degaussing /
deperming ships (ADG)
Dive tenders (YDT)
Dredgers (AGD)
Engineering
ships
  • Engineering ships of unknown class/type: Bei-Gong 275 & 276
Environmental
research ships (AGER)
Fleet Replenishment
ship (AEFS)
Floating pile drivers (YPD)
General purpose
research ships (AGE)
Harbor utility
craft (YFU)
Hospital ships (AH)
Hospital ships (AH)
Medical evacuation ships (AHP)
  • Zhuanghe
Ambulance transports (APH)
Ambulance craftd (YH)
Hydrographic
survey ships (AGS)
Icebreakers (AGB)
Museum ships
Oceanographic
research ships (AGOR)
Oceanographic
surveillance ships (AGOS)
Personnel
transport (AP)
Barracks ships (APB)
Dispatch boat (YFB/YFL)
Transport ships (AP)
Troopships (APT)
Range support &
target ships (AGT)
Repair ships (AR)
Repair dry
docks (ARD)
Repair ships (AR)
Rescue and
salvage ships
Heavy-lift ship (YHLC)
Rescue ships (ARS)
Salvage ships (ATS)
Spy ships (AGI)
Submarine
support ships
Submarine
rescue ships (ASR)
Submarine tenders (AS)
Submersibles (X)
Deep-submergence
rescue vehicle (DSRV)
Deep-submergence
vehicle (DSV)
Other
Submersibles (X)
Diver propulsion
vehicles (DPV)
Tankers
Replenishment tanker (AOR)
  • Hua Chuan
Transport oiler (AOT)
Water tanker (AWT)
Technological
research
ships
Sonar trials ships
Technical research
ships (AGTR)
  • Mirage Hunter
Unclassified Miscellaneous
Submarine (IXSS)
Torpedo trials craft
Torpedo retrievers
(TR/TWR)
Torpedo trials ships (YTT)
Tracking ship (AGM)
Training ships (AX)
Training ship (AX)
Training ship, sail (AXS)
Onshore stationary
training facilities
Tugs (AT)
Harbor tug (YT)
Large harbor tug (YTB)
Rescue Tug (ATR)
Sea-going Tug (ATA)
Tugs of unknown class/type
  • Bei-Tuo 153, 651, 704, 728, Dong-Tuo 845, 861, Nan-Tuo 142, 163, 168, 176, 187, 188
UAV mothershps (ATLS)
Unmanned surface
vehicles (USV)
Unmanned underwater
vehicles (UUV)
Autonomous
underwater vehicle (AUV)
Benthic landers
Bottom crawlers
  • Aquadrobotman series
  • CSSC series
  • Deepinfar series
  • JUST series
  • Robosea series
  • SBSS series
  • Sea Crab
  • Sea Star
  • THLMT unmanned vehicles#Underwater series
  • VVLAI series
Hybrid UUVs (Autonomous remotely
-operated vehicles, ARVs)
Remotely operated
underwater vehicle (ROUV)
Underwater gliders
  • Flying Wing
  • Petrel series
  • Sea Soar series
  • Deepinfar Sea Wing series
  • THLMT series
Wave gliders
  • CSSC series
  • Hydrovo series
  • Ostar series
  • THLMT Black Pearl
Weapon trials
ships (AVM/AGM)
* = Under construction or procurement, CG= Classified as guided missile cruiser by NATO, FF= Classified as light frigate by PLAN