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Egyptian Armed Forces

The EN currently owns two supply ships
The ship "Halayeb 231" of the German "Westerwald-class", with a displacement of 3,469 tons.
The German ship "Schlaten 230", "Type 701E", with a displacement of 4,000 tons
Both ships were acquired by Egypt, used as well, and they are still in service today

Specifications of the British "Rosalie Class" ship
*Displacement: 23,482 tons
*Length: 185 meters
*Width: 24 meters
*Speed: 21 knots
*armament :
- 2 Phalanx CIWS 20 mm automatic cannon for close combat
- 2 20 mm cannon
- 4 7.62 mm machine guns

It is expected that the two ships will be operating from among the combat groups of the Mistral ships in the Northern and Southern Fleets during the coming period until the completion of the development of the capabilities of manufacturing this category of ships locally within the framework of efforts to localize the maritime industries..

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Large displacement carrying dry supply The fleet entered upgrades in 2007 to change the engine, operating panels and reverse osmosis water plant .. And the EN has asked for a new upgrade again..

It is the one on the left..

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I've always thought the Lancer as a fine piece of heavy murican machinery, how does it stack up against the tu 160? Since its just a russian copy of the lancer

Not sure how either stack up against the other TBH. I bet both have their ups and downs. That leaking I mentioned? Check it out. Under the engines in this pic.

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Take a look at the side of the left engine panels, and right above on the bottom of the aircraft right behind the bomb door bay opening, the seam on that panel and how it's soaked with fluid! Crazy.

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But it's very sleek looking and deadly without question. Looks like it basically has 4 F-15 engines lol.

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The Mustache was being escorted through Egyptian air space by a pair of EAF F-16s.

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I've seen the B1B Lancer up close several times (I've posted pics of it on my airshow thread) and the one thing I always remember about that aircraft is how it leaked fuel and oil like a bad faucet. They had to tape off the space below the engines and others where panels were stretching from supersonic speeds and fluids would leak out of those joints. Impressive aircraft.
It is an exercise, as a naval patrol carried out by the bomber for 5 continuous hours, which included Bahrain, the KSA, Egypt and Israel. All in the air..This exercise highlights capabilities, air control and operational integration, and is a continuation of joint cooperation between the Royal Saudi Air Force and the US Air Force to maintain the security and stability of the region..

Here with Saudi F-15-C

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Spain presents its new F-110 -class multi-mission frigate to the Egyptian Navy

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https://www.defensa.com/defensa-naval/entrevistamos-jefe-programa-f-110-navantia-carlos-lopez

F110-class frigate design and features

The F110-class frigate will feature an advanced design with a high degree of automation. It will have a length of 145m, a beam of 18m and a draft of 5m. The displacement of the vessel will be 6,100t while the frigate will be manned by 150 crew members.
The warship’s stern flight deck will accommodate a helicopter and unmanned aerial vehicles. The vessel will also have the capability to carry directed energy weapons in the future.

Armament

The Lockheed Martin 16-cell Mk-41 Baseline VII vertical launch system on board the frigate will launch RIM-162 Evolved SeaSparrow Missile (ESSM) Block 2 that serves as the primary anti-air self-defence system.
The VLS can also launch SAM Standard SM-2MR missiles. The frigate will be armed with RGM-84 Harpoon anti-ship missiles, a Leonardo 127/64 LW Vulcano 5in/64 naval gun, and two Mk-32 Mod torpedo tubes.
It will also have nine double torpedo launchers for Mk-54 Mod torpedoes and four 12.7mm remote-controlled machine guns.

Sensors on board F110-class frigates

The frigate will be equipped with advanced sensors, including Rigel i110 radar electronic defence and the Regulus i110 communications interception systems, which will improve the vessel’s situational awareness capability.
The integrated sonar suite on board the warship will include the TUUM-6 underwater communication system, the BlueMaster (UMS 4110), and CAPTAS 4 compact sonars and the BlueScan digital acoustic system.
The vessel will be installed with solid-state S-band radar, which will be a part of the Aegis Weapon System (AWS) and SCOMBA combat management system, which will combine data from all sensors and weapons on board the frigate. Prisma 25 X multifunction solid-state radar will support maritime surveillance and helicopter landing on the deck while tracking low-altitude aerial targets.

Navigation and communication systems

The Bonifaz-class frigates will be installed with SENDA navigation system, integrating multi-constellation satellite navigation technology compatible with civil / military signals and DGNSS corrections.
The time server of the navigation system will produce accurate and stable time signals, which will enable the ship’s systems to synchronise with GPS time.
The communications on board F110 frigates will be performed through R&S M3SR software-defined radios, including R&S Series4100 HF and R&S Series4400 VHF/UHF.

Propulsion and performance

The frigates will be powered by two GE LM-2500 gas turbine electric motors, four MTU 4000 diesel engines, and four 3MW diesel encapsulated generators.
The vessel will sail at a maximum speed of more than 25k and achieve a maximum cruising range of 4,100nm at 15k.


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I've always thought the Lancer as a fine piece of heavy murican machinery, how does it stack up against the tu 160? Since its just a russian copy of the lancer

Hard to tell but I would assume the Lancer is superior as the other is initially just a copy of it
 
Defence Minister witnesses ‘Majd-16’ artillery training by Second Field Army
The training was also attended by Lieutenant-General Osama Askar, Chief-of-Staff of the Armed Forces, leaders of the main army branches, members of the national security committee of the House of Representatives, and some media figures.

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Minister of Defense and Military Production Lieutenant-General Mohamed Zaki witnessed Sunday the operational training “Majd-16” implemented by artillery forces in the Second Field Army.

The training was also attended by Lieutenant-General Osama Askar, Chief-of-Staff of the Armed Forces, leaders of the main army branches, members of the national security committee of the House of Representatives, and some media figures.

The training is part of the annual combat training plan for Armed Forces formations and units.

At the beginning of the activities, Defence Minister Zaki visited an exhibition that included a number of weapons, equipment, fire management systems, and modern technical research on artillery management. Then, the Commander of the Second Field Army delivered a speech in which he stressed the full support given by the General Command of the Armed Forces to the tactical formations, the main branches and all specialized weapons to reach the combat readiness rates to the highest stages of readiness to carry out all the tasks entrusted to them efficiently and proficiently.

The training included topographical and tactical guidance, implementation of air reconnaissance, and air support work.

This comes as artillery is the main firepower in the modern Joint Weapons Battle, which provides support and fire ascension to the forces during the various stages of the battle.

In this regard, the Air Force is cooperating through the implementation of a number of clashes with ground targets by multi-model fighter jets, which have hit their targets with high accuracy in coordination with indirect and direct archery artillery to secure troop combat during the offensive battle.

The Air Defence Forces also carried out a number of clashes with hostile air targets.

The latest artillery reconnaissance methods and fire management preparation systems were used against hostile targets, quickly locating and destroying them using rocket artillery and self-propelled artillery with high firepower and destructive power, and the ability to deal with enemy targets in depth.

Chemical warfare elements carried out smoke blinding and smoke curtains using the latest missile systems, as well as opening gaps by military engineers.

The training showed the high quality of the participating elements in terms of combat skills, the use of the latest control and guidance systems for various weapons and equipment, and the speed in discovering and identifying field targets and dealing with them.

At the end of the training, Minister Zaki conveyed the greetings and appreciation of President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi to the participating elements.

He also praised the outstanding performance reached by the forces executing the training and the high level they achieved in maintaining the highest levels of combat efficiency for all weapons and equipment.

 
I wonder if the Sinai-23s are still in service. Do you guys have any info about them?
 
Spain presents its new F-110 -class multi-mission frigate to the Egyptian Navy

As nice as that sounds, but for their frigates, they need to stick to the FREMM line of the Berghaminis and stay there with whatever improvements that line of frigates offers. The variation in this case could add to the complications of sea activities. I don't see much benefit for them to switch from the Berghaminis whatsoever and introduce a Spanish line of frigates at this point TBH.

Not sure if this is folded but design is very interesting if it isnt.

Oh it's definitely folded. The one to the right is the same one with the radar erected.


This is very impressive. Reading about this and knowing they've been using it for a while now is just great news.

Port Said Gowind

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Rafale warming up.

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New pic of Su-35 in flight.

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Yes.. and pretty much modernized:

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Do you know how many are around? At first I thought the ZSU-23-4M4 might have replaced them but it looks like the Sinai still has it's qualities.
 
As nice as that sounds, but for their frigates, they need to stick to the FREMM line of the Berghaminis and stay there with whatever improvements that line of frigates offers. The variation in this case could add to the complications of sea activities. I don't see much benefit for them to switch from the Berghaminis whatsoever and introduce a Spanish line of frigates at this point TBH.
I'm with you on that.. mainly because most armament and systems are American...
Do you know how many are around? At first I thought the ZSU-23-4M4 might have replaced them but it looks like the Sinai still has it's qualities.
Hundreds..

The ZSU-23-4M4 don't carry anti-air missiles while the Sinai-23 does..
 
Hundreds..

The ZSU-23-4M4 don't carry anti-air missiles while the Sinai-23 does..

I disagree. ZSU-23-4M4 can actually fire anti-air missiles. They were specifically upgraded to be able to use 2 9K38 Igla Manpads on each side. Those silver bars are for mounting them. And even though I haven't seen Egyptian Shilkas ever use missiles, the Egypt has a significant amount of 9K38 Iglas so if they want they can mount them anytime.

Also I doubt there are as many Sinai-23s. I would rather believe they range in few examples, not more than 20. But I'm not an expert on Egyptian military so I wouldn't know better...
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