2. What is Warship?
A Warship is the modernized Weapon
that Uses in Wide Ocean. It is used
to perform Naval Exercises, Naval
Border Security, and Reconaissance.
Warship has many types. From
Submerging, Icebreaking and
Patrolling. The next slides is all about
Different Types of Warship.
4. Frigate
In modern navies, frigates are used to protect
other warships and merchant-marine ships,
especially as anti-submarine warfare (ASW)
combatants for amphibious expeditionary forces,
underway replenishment groups, and merchant
convoys.
Ship classes dubbed "frigates" have also more
closely resembled corvettes, destroyers, cruisers and
even battleships.
5. Frigate
Frigate is any of several types of
warship, the term having been used
for ships of various sizes and roles
over the last few centuries.
7. Destroyers
Destroyer is a fast and maneuverable yet long-
endurance warship intended to escort larger
vessels in a fleet, convoy or battle group and
defend them against smaller, powerful, short-
range attackers.
Destroyers, originally called torpedo-boat
destroyers in 1892, evolved from the response of
navies to the threat posed by the torpedo boat.
8. Destroyers
Modern destroyers, also known as Guided Missile
Destroyers, are equivalent in tonnage but vastly
superior in firepower to cruisers of the World
War II era, capable of carrying nuclear missiles.
Guided missile destroyers such as the Arleigh
Burke class are actually larger and more heavily
armed than most previous ships classified as
guided missile cruisers, due to their massive size
at 510 feet (160 m) long, displacement (9200 tons)
and armament of over 90 missiles.
10. Corvette
A small, maneuverable, lightly armed warship,
originally smaller than a frigate (2000+ tons) and
larger than a coastal patrol craft or fast attack
craft (500 or fewer tons).
Although many recent designs resemble frigates in
size and role. During the Age of Sail, corvettes
were smaller than frigates and larger than sloops-
of-war, usually with a single gun deck.
11. Corvette
Although almost all modern navies use ships
smaller than frigates for coastal duty, not all of
them use the term corvette (via Middle French,
from a Dutch word corf, a type of boat) or
equivalent.
The rank "corvette captain", equivalent in many
navies to "lieutenant commander", derives from
the name of this type of ship.
13. Submarine
A watercraft capable of independent operation
underwater. It differs from a submersible, which
has more limited underwater capability. The term
submarine most commonly refers to a large crewed
autonomous vessel.
However, historically or colloquially, submarine can
also refer to medium-sized or smaller vessels
(midget submarines, wet subs), remotely operated
vehicles or robots.
14. Submarine
Most large submarines consist of a cylindrical
body with hemispherical (and/or conical) ends and
a vertical structure, usually located amidships,
which houses communications and sensing devices
as well as periscopes.
Military usage includes attacking enemy surface
ships or submarines, aircraft carrier protection,
blockade running, ballistic missile submarines as
part of a nuclear strike force, reconnaissance,
conventional land attack, and covert insertion of
special forces.
16. Icebreaker
A special-purpose ship or boat designed to move
and navigate through ice-covered waters. Although
the term usually refers to ice-breaking ships.
It may also refer to smaller vessels (e.g.,
icebreaking boats that were used on the canals of
Great Britain in the days of commercial carrying).
For a ship to be considered an icebreaker, it
requires three traits most normal ships lack: a
strengthened hull, an ice-clearing shape, and the
power to push through ice-covered waters.
17. Icebreaker
To pass through ice-covered water, an
icebreaker uses its momentum and power to
drive its bow up onto the ice, breaking the ice
under the weight of the ship.
Because a buildup of broken ice in front of a
ship can slow it down much more than the
breaking of the ice itself, the speed of the ship
is increased by having a specially designed hull
to direct the broken ice around or under the
vessel.
19. Aircraft Carrier
A warship designed with a primary mission
of deploying and recovering aircraft, acting
as a seagoing airbase.
Aircraft carriers thus allow a naval force
to project air power worldwide without
having to depend on local bases for staging
aircraft operations.
20. Aircraft Carrier
They have evolved from wooden vessels
used to deploy balloons into nuclear-
powered warships that carry dozens of
fixed wing and rotary-wing aircraft.
Aircraft carriers are typically treated as
the capital ship of a fleet and are
extremely expensive to build and important
to protect border security.
22. Helicopter Carrier
An aircraft carrier whose primary purpose
is to operate helicopters. Helicopter
carriers have been used as ASW carriers
and amphibious assault ships.
Helicopter carriers can either have a full-
length aircraft deck like HMS Ocean, or
have a large helicopter deck, usually aft, as
in the Soviet Navy's Moskva class or RFA
Argus.
23. Helicopter Carrier
A full-length deck maximises deck space
for helicopter landing spots. Such a design
also allows for a hangar deck.
25. Cruiser
A type of warship. The term has been in
use for several hundred years, and has had
different meanings throughout this period.
During the Age of Sail, the term cruising
referred to certain kinds of missions –
independent scouting, raiding or commerce
protection – fulfilled by a frigate or sloop,
which were the cruising warships of a
fleet.
26. Cruiser
Currently only three nations, the United
States, Russia, and Peru (BAP Almirante
Grau (CLM-81) while still in service with
the Peruvian Navy), operate cruisers,
though the line between cruisers and
destroyers is once again blurred. New
models of destroyers (for instance the
Zumwalt class) are often larger and more
powerful than cruiser classes they replace.