Following the reunification of Germany in 1990 at the end of the
Cold War, the
German Navy continued the construction program of the former
Bundesmarine (Federal Navy), which projected a fleet centered on
destroyers and
frigates. The
Sachsen class was the second group of frigates to be built in the post-unification era, following the s laid down in the early 1990s. The three
Sachsens were ordered to replace the old s that were then over thirty years old.
General characteristics and machinery in 2007 The ships of the
Sachsen class are
long at the waterline and
long overall. They have a
beam of and a
draft of , though the draft increases to at the sonar array in the
bulbous bow. They displace at
full load. Steering is controlled by a single roll-stabilized
rudder; the ships have a
turning radius of . The frigates have a crew of 38 officers, 64
petty officers, and 140 enlisted sailors. They have accommodations for an additional thirteen officers and sailors as part of a squadron commander's staff, and they have crew provisions for female sailors. The ships can remain at sea for 21 days at a time. The ships' hulls were designed on the pattern of the previous
Brandenburg class to allow for great commonality of parts to reduce maintenance costs; they were built using
MEKO modular construction and incorporate seven
watertight compartments. The primary improvement over the earlier vessels is the significantly reduced radar signature. The ships were designed with a capacity for an extra of weight, to allow for future additions of new weapons and sensors without compromising the ships' efficiency. The ships of the
Sachsen class are equipped with a
combined diesel and gas (CODAG) propulsion system. The two operating shafts work independently. The diesel engines are installed in a non-walkable sound-proof capsule. The shafts drive two five-bladed
variable-pitch propellers. The General Electric
LM2500 PF/MLG gas turbine is rated at and the MTU 20V 1163 TB93 diesels provide a combined . The total propulsion system provides a top speed of ; while operating the diesels only, the ships can cruise for at a speed of . The ships are equipped with four 1,000
kilowatt diesel generators that operate at 400
Volts (V) and 115 V. Steering is controlled via the Rudder Roll System, which communicates information about the ship's position and rudder dampening signals, allowing the ships to maintain "almost unprecedented stability" in as high as
sea state 5.
Armament These ships were optimized for the anti-air warfare role. The primary anti-air weapons are the 32-cell Mk 41 Mod 10
vertical launching system, equipped with twenty-four
SM-2 Block IIIA missiles and thirty-two
Evolved Sea Sparrow missiles. Point-defense against cruise missiles is provided by a pair of 21-round
Rolling Airframe Missile launchers. The ships are also equipped with two four-cell RGM-84
Harpoon anti-ship missile launchers. In 2013, the German Navy considered modifying the ships' long-range search radar to allow the SM-2 missiles to be used in an
anti-ballistic missile capacity. For defense against
submarines, the frigates carry two triple-launchers for the
MU90 Impact torpedoes. The ships also carry a variety of guns, including one
dual-purpose 62-
caliber gun manufactured by
OTO Melara. They are also armed with two
Rheinmetall MLG 27 remote-controlled autocannons in single mounts. In January 2003,
Hamburg had a modified
Panzerhaubitze 2000 turret with a gun fitted experimentally for the
Modular Naval Artillery Concept. The experiment was a feasibility study for the projected
F125-class frigate. The gun had a range of and a
rate of fire of 10 rounds per minute.
Sachsen and her
sister ships are equipped with a flight deck and hangar that can accommodate two
Super Lynx or
NH90 helicopters. The flight deck is rated to accommodate a helicopter in conditions up to sea state 6. The helicopter handling system from MBB-Förder und Hebesysteme uses laser guided and computer controlled manipulator arms to secure the helicopter after landing.
Sensors and countermeasures For this role the ships are equipped with an advanced sensor and weapons suite. The primary sensors for this role are the long range surveillance radar
SMART-L and the multi-function radar
APAR. The SMART-L and APAR sets are highly complementary, in the sense that SMART-L is an
L band radar providing very long range surveillance while APAR is an
X band radar providing precise target tracking, a highly capable horizon search capability, and missile guidance using the Interrupted Continuous Wave Illumination (ICWI) technique, thus allowing guidance of 32
semi-active radar homing missiles in flight simultaneously, including 16 in the terminal guidance phase. The ships are also equipped with two
STN Atlas 9600-M ARPA navigation radars.
Modernisation efforts In 2013, Atlas Elektronik and
Thales Deutschland were awarded a contract to modernize the frigates command system, with the project to be completed by 2017. In August 2021, the German armed forces' procurement agency (BAAINBw) awarded a contract to German and Israeli companies
Hensoldt and
IAI, under which the
Sachsen-class frigates will have their obsolete SMART-L long-range radar replaced by a new
AESA radar system designated as TRS-4D/LR ROT. It will be capable of tracking "very small and maneuverable" targets at distances of more than 400 km for air targets and up to 2,000 km for targets in earth orbit. This includes long-range ballistic missiles, allowing Germany to participate in NATOs
BMD (ballistic missile defence) efforts. It is not planned to fit an anti-ballistic missile such as the
SM-3 to the ships. The ships
IFF systems will also be modernised. Before installation of the three shipborne radars commences, an additional first unit will in 2023 be installed at a coastal facility near the Naval School of Technology at
Parow in the state of
Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania for purposes of training and evaluation. The first ship is planned to have its radar installed in 2024 and all three ships are to have been fitted with the new system by 2028. The same Hensoldt/IAI system has also been selected by the
German Air Force in order to replace its stationary HR-3000 - or HADR (
Hughes Air Defense Radar) - early warning radars. ==Ships==