USNS Spearhead (T-EPF-1)

USNS Spearhead is the first ship in the Spearhead-class Joint High Speed Vessel to be operated by the Military Sealift Command and christened on 17 September 2011.

History
Construction of Spearhead began on 22 July 2010, when the ship's keel was laid at the Austal facility in Mobile, Alabama in a ceremony that included officials from the US Navy, the US Army, the state of Alabama and the city of Mobile. At the time, Spearhead was intended for service with the US Army in the 7th Sustainment Brigade as USAV Spearhead.

Spearhead was launched on 8 September 2011, though she did not enter the water until several days later; her launch was the moving of the vessel from the shed where she was constructed onto a floating drydock. At the time, she was scheduled to be delivered to the navy in early 2012, a delay from the original target of September 2011.

Spearhead was christened on 17 September 2011. Her sponsor was a former army officer, Kenneth Wahlman; as part of the ceremony, his daughter Catherine Wahlman (Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Corps of Cadets class of 2013) broke a bottle of champagne across Spearhead's bow. Spearhead, after delivery to the navy in early 2012, will undergo sea trials and tests, and in the first quarter of fiscal year 2013 is planned to begin operations, homeported at Naval Amphibious Base Little Creek. She will be crewed by civilian sailors from the Military Sealift Command, and her first captain was Douglas D. Casavant, Jr.

In August 2012 Spearhead made a "clean sweep" of her acceptance trials.

Spearhead was formally delivered to the navy on 5 December 2012, eight months late and $31 million over budget. She will make her first deployment to Europe and Africa in early 2014, followed by a trip to Latin America.

On 7 March 2014, Spearhead visited Liberia, where marines conducted a rigid-hulled inflatable boat drill.

On 12 June 2014, the Spearhead was conducting routine testing off the coast of Key West. In the early morning, lightning struck an aerostat that was tethered to the vessel. The strike caused the aerostat to deflate and land in the water, where it sank.

Role
Spearhead, as well as other ships of her class, are built to a modular design that allows them to be rapidly refitted with various equipment within a 20,000 ft2 bay depending on the mission at hand. Spearhead is planned for non-combat missions, such as transportation of troops or equipment.

Specifications
Spearhead is 103 m long and 28.5 m in beam, and has a draft of 3.83 m. She has space for 41 crewmembers, though under normal conditions will sail with 22, as well as sleeping accommodations for up to 150 people and an additional 312 seats for troop transport. She is powered by four MTU 20V8000 M71L engines, each with a power of 9.1 MW, driving four Wärtsilä WLD 1400 SR waterjets through ZF 60000NR2H reduction gears. This allows for a maximum speed of 43 kn and a service speed of 35 kn. There are also facilities for one helicopter.