Difference between revisions of "Akula class (SFC)"

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The [[United Federation of Planets (SFC)|Federation]]'s ''Akula'' class destroyer (DD) entered service in [[2250 (SFC)|2250]]. It was designed as a smaller and less expensive stablemate to the [[Constitution class (SFC)|''Constitution'' class]] heavy cruisers, but was less successful. While it carried cruiser armaments, it lacked the engine power of a cruiser, making full use of its complement of [[photon torpedo (SFC)|photon torpedoes]] impractical. While the ship lacked maneuverability, its large saucer section made it capable of taking considerable punishment without losing [[warp drive (SFC)|warp]] power. During peacetime, the class was expected to carry out essentially the same research and exploration missions as the ''Constitution'' class, resulting in the ''Akula'' class having comparable laboratory facilities. The class had a capacity of six [[shuttlecraft]], two [[transporter (SFC)|transporters]], and two [[tractor beam (SFC)|tractor beam]] emitters, as well as eight science labs. Armament included [[shipboard phasers (SFC)#Type-1|Type-1 phasers]] and four torpedo launchers with photon torpedoes. Production of the DD variant virtually ceased in [[2279 (SFC)|2279]], in favor of the [[Miranda class (SFC)|''Miranda'' class]] light cruiser.
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The [[United Federation of Planets (SFC)|Federation]]'s ''Akula'' class destroyer (DD) entered service in [[2250 (SFC)|2250]]. It was designed as a smaller and less expensive stablemate to the [[Constitution class (SFC)|''Constitution'' class]] heavy cruisers, but was less successful. While it carried cruiser armaments, it lacked the engine power of a cruiser, making full use of its complement of [[photon torpedo (SFC)|photon torpedoes]] impractical. While the ship lacked maneuverability, its large saucer section made it capable of taking considerable punishment without losing [[warp drive (SFC)|warp]] power. During peacetime, the class was expected to carry out essentially the same research and exploration missions as the ''Constitution'' class, resulting in the ''Akula'' class having comparable laboratory facilities. The class had a crew of 20, a capacity of six [[shuttlecraft]], two [[transporter (SFC)|transporters]], and two [[tractor beam (SFC)|tractor beam]] emitters, as well as eight science labs. Armament included [[shipboard phasers (SFC)#Type-1|Type-1 phasers]] and four torpedo launchers with photon torpedoes. Production of the DD variant virtually ceased in [[2279 (SFC)|2279]], in favor of the [[Miranda class (SFC)|''Miranda'' class]] light cruiser.
  
 
In [[2260 (SFC)|2260]], the guided weapons destroyer (DDG) variant was introduced. Inspired by encounters with the [[Kzinti (SFC)|Kzinti]], the class was deployed as a testbed for missile technology, but the experiment was abandoned because the missiles available at the time did not make up for the loss of two photon torpedo launchers. The DDG variant included an increased shuttle capacity of eight shuttlecraft, and remained in service until [[2281 (SFC)|2281]].
 
In [[2260 (SFC)|2260]], the guided weapons destroyer (DDG) variant was introduced. Inspired by encounters with the [[Kzinti (SFC)|Kzinti]], the class was deployed as a testbed for missile technology, but the experiment was abandoned because the missiles available at the time did not make up for the loss of two photon torpedo launchers. The DDG variant included an increased shuttle capacity of eight shuttlecraft, and remained in service until [[2281 (SFC)|2281]].

Revision as of 04:06, 1 October 2021

Akula class
Akula class (SFCGame)

Akula class (SFCGame)
Comissioned 2250
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The Federation's Akula class destroyer (DD) entered service in 2250. It was designed as a smaller and less expensive stablemate to the Constitution class heavy cruisers, but was less successful. While it carried cruiser armaments, it lacked the engine power of a cruiser, making full use of its complement of photon torpedoes impractical. While the ship lacked maneuverability, its large saucer section made it capable of taking considerable punishment without losing warp power. During peacetime, the class was expected to carry out essentially the same research and exploration missions as the Constitution class, resulting in the Akula class having comparable laboratory facilities. The class had a crew of 20, a capacity of six shuttlecraft, two transporters, and two tractor beam emitters, as well as eight science labs. Armament included Type-1 phasers and four torpedo launchers with photon torpedoes. Production of the DD variant virtually ceased in 2279, in favor of the Miranda class light cruiser.

In 2260, the guided weapons destroyer (DDG) variant was introduced. Inspired by encounters with the Kzinti, the class was deployed as a testbed for missile technology, but the experiment was abandoned because the missiles available at the time did not make up for the loss of two photon torpedo launchers. The DDG variant included an increased shuttle capacity of eight shuttlecraft, and remained in service until 2281.

The DD+ improved destroyer variant was introduced in 2273, in the hope of overcoming some of the shortcomings of the class. Half of the science labs were eliminated, and two banks of Type-3 phasers were added. Two years later, in 2275, a similar refit was introduced with the DDG+ improved guided weapons destroyer, which also saw four of the eight science labs removed and Type-3 phasers added. Additionally, faster missiles had become available, and more DD variants were converted into DDG+ variants, with the new missiles making the variant a more effective ship than the original DD specifications. The DD+ remained in service until 2292, and the DDG+ remained in service until 2288.

By this point, the Miranda class had effectively taken over the shipyard that had produced the Akula class' DD, DD+, DDG, and DDG+ variants, leaving a gap between the Miranda class light cruisers and the Okinawa class frigates that was starting to grow as the Akula class' numbers dwindled. To address this, the Federation commissioned two competing designs: the war destroyer (DW) variant and the Okinawa class' FFB variant, and the first DW prototype, the U.S.S. Humberto Ortega, was commissioned soon thereafter in 2287. The DW variant featured a capacity of seven shuttlecraft, three science labs, two transporters, two tractor beam emitters, three photon torpedo launchers and a single missile launcher, and a combination of Type-1 and Type-3 phasers. Two years later, in 2289, the DWD war drone destroyer variant was introduced, designed primarily for missile support. The DWD was used in direct combat and was considered operationally interchangeable with the standard DW. It had a capacity of nine shuttlecraft, and had four missile launchers and no photon torpedo capacity.

In the late 2280s, the CFF-type Okinawa class commando frigate, was found to be increasingly less capable of operating where interception might be a possibility. Unfortunately, there were many more missions than there were commando ships to perform them, resulting in several serious losses. The Fleet Marine officer campaigned for some of the new DW hulls to be converted into CDW commando war destroyers: larger, with better shielding, and faster than the CFF, the CDW was introduced in 2289 and would serve for a long period of time. The CDW featured a capacity of eight shuttlecraft, had three science labs, two transporters, two tractor beam emitters, and a combination of Type-1 and Type-3 phasers, but no torpedo or missile launchers.

Two years later, in 2291, the final variant of the Akula class — the heavier DWC command war destroyer variant — was built for duty as a squadron leader, though it never amounted to more than 20% of the total DW production. The DWC featured a capacity of eight shuttlecraft, had two science labs, two transporters, two tractor beam emitters, three photon torpedo launchers, a single missile launcher, and only Type-1 phasers.[1]

Akula class vessels

SFC Timeline

U.S.S. Adad NCC-515  • U.S.S. Ahriman NCC-513  • U.S.S. Akula NCC-278  • U.S.S. Akula NCC-278-A  • U.S.S. Alaric NCC-503  • U.S.S. Alexander NCC-511  • U.S.S. Arafat NCC-802  • U.S.S. Ardzinba  • U.S.S. Ares NCC-520  • U.S.S. Assad NCC-863  • U.S.S. Atilla NCC-523  • U.S.S. Azrael NCC-517  • U.S.S. Barzani  • U.S.S. Begin NCC-801  • U.S.S. Bush NCC-851  • U.S.S. Buthelezi  • U.S.S. Charlemagne NCC-530  • U.S.S. Chaudhry  • U.S.S. Chilingutila  • U.S.S. Chissano  • U.S.S. Clinton NCC-862  • U.S.S. Cristiani NCC-866  • U.S.S. Czar Alexander IV NCC-528  • U.S.S. Darius NCC-502  • U.S.S. Dostam NCC-837  • U.S.S. Dudayev  • U.S.S. Eisenhower NCC-534  • U.S.S. Etzel NCC-509  • U.S.S. Fadlallah  • U.S.S. Galtieri NCC-861  • U.S.S. Gemayal  • U.S.S. Genghis NCC-501  • U.S.S. Gorbachev NCC-853  • U.S.S. Grant NCC-869  • U.S.S. Gusmao  • U.S.S. Hamilcar NCC-518  • U.S.S. Hannibal NCC-512  • U.S.S. Hashishiyun NCC-516  • U.S.S. Hekmatyar NCC-832  • U.S.S. Hiawatha NCC-522  • U.S.S. Hun Sen  • U.S.S. Iskandarov  • U.S.S. Kennedy NCC-870  • U.S.S. King David NCC-540  • U.S.S. Kravchuk NCC-858  • U.S.S. Kublai NCC-507  • U.S.S. Landsbergis NCC-859  • U.S.S. Robert E. Lee NCC-536  • U.S.S. Leonidas NCC-538  • U.S.S. Lincoln NCC-868  • U.S.S. Lysander NCC-532  • U.S.S. Mandela  • U.S.S. Manuel  • U.S.S. Marcos NCC-860  • U.S.S. Marius NCC-539  • U.S.S. Massoud NCC-831  • U.S.S. Golda Meir NCC-525  • U.S.S. Mitterand NCC-857  • U.S.S. Mojadeddi NCC-836  • U.S.S. Daniel Morgan NCC-531  • U.S.S. Najibullah NCC-834  • U.S.S. Nasrallah  • U.S.S. Nebuchadnezzar NCC-541  • U.S.S. Nixon NCC-856  • U.S.S. Ocalan  • U.S.S. Humberto Ortega  • U.S.S. Pazuzu NCC-521  • U.S.S. Pompey NCC-506  • U.S.S. Prabhakaran  • U.S.S. Premadasa  • U.S.S. Pundy  • U.S.S. Israel Putnam NCC-533  • U.S.S. Rabbani NCC-835  • U.S.S. Rabin  • U.S.S. Rahman NCC-514  • U.S.S. Ramos NCC-864  • U.S.S. Reagan NCC-854  • U.S.S. Sadat NCC-527  • U.S.S. Saddam  • U.S.S. Safarov  • U.S.S. Saladin NCC-500  • U.S.S. Sargon NCC-504  • U.S.S. Shaitan NCC-519  • U.S.S. Shamir NCC-868  • U.S.S. Shevardnadze NCC-865  • U.S.S. Sihanouk NCC-867  • U.S.S. Skanderbeg NCC-529  • U.S.S. Suleiman NCC-508  • U.S.S. Sultan  • U.S.S. Suvarov NCC-535  • U.S.S. Talabani  • U.S.S. Tamerlane NCC-510  • U.S.S. Taylor  • U.S.S. Thatcher NCC-855  • U.S.S. Thurmost III NCC-537  • U.S.S. Tongogara  • U.S.S. Tudjman NCC-803  • U.S.S. Turabi  • U.S.S. Villalobos  • U.S.S. Xerxes NCC-505  • U.S.S. Yeltsin NCC-852  • U.S.S. Brigham Young NCC-526  • U.S.S. Zamora NCC-524  • U.S.S. Zoroaster NCC-524

Notes and References

  1. Bethke, Erik (Producer). Starfleet Command. Lead Designer: Erik Bethke. Senior Designer: Chris Taylor. Mission Scripting by Lance Watanabe. Campaign Mission Design by Scott Bennie. Game Design by Marc Hertogh and Tom Hughes. SFB Consultant: Tom Hughes. Interplay Inc.. 15 September 1999.