Type 052C destroyer
The Type 052C destroyer, designated by NATO as the Luyang II class, is a guided-missile destroyer class serving in the People's Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) of China, notable for introducing indigenous active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar and vertical launch systems (VLS) for long-range surface-to-air missiles.[1][2] These ships, displacing approximately 7,000 tons fully loaded, measure 155 meters in length with a beam of 17 meters and achieve speeds exceeding 30 knots via combined diesel or gas (CODOG) propulsion.[3][4] Equipped with the Type 346 AESA radar and 48-cell VLS for HQ-9 air-defense missiles, the Type 052C provides area air-defense capabilities, marking the PLAN's first such warships and enabling multirole operations including anti-air, anti-surface, and anti-submarine warfare.[1][5] Armament further includes eight YJ-62 anti-ship cruise missiles, a 100 mm main gun, close-in weapon systems, and facilities for Z-9 helicopters, enhancing its versatility in fleet air defense and strike roles.[3][6] Six vessels were constructed at Jiangnan Shipyard in Shanghai from 2002 to 2015, with the lead ship Lanzhou (hull 170) commissioning in 2004; all remain in active service, undergoing mid-life upgrades to extend operational life and integrate modern systems amid the PLAN's transition to newer Type 052D classes.[7][8] These destroyers have participated in international exercises like RIMPAC, demonstrating interoperability while bolstering China's blue-water naval ambitions through proven empirical performance in radar-guided intercepts and missile engagements.[4][8]Development
Program Origins
The People's Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) recognized the need for advanced air-defense capabilities in the early 1990s, as earlier destroyer classes like the Type 051 and Type 052 lacked effective area air defense against modern aircraft carriers and regional threats, particularly during the 1995–1996 Taiwan Strait Crisis when U.S. carrier groups demonstrated unchallenged dominance.[9][2] This prompted conceptual development of a follow-on guided-missile destroyer emphasizing phased-array radar and vertical-launch systems to enable true fleet air defense, shifting from point-defense limitations.[1] Program initiation occurred around 1999–2000, prioritizing indigenous design over complete foreign imports despite influences from observed Western Aegis systems and Russian S-300 missile technology, which informed the domestic HHQ-9 surface-to-air missile and Type 346 active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar.[2][10] Approval aligned with China's 10th Five-Year Plan (2001–2005), which supported naval modernization amid double-digit defense budget increases.[11] Construction began in late 2002 at Jiangnan Shipyard in Shanghai, with the first two hulls (Lanzhou and Haikou) laid down there as lead units; subsequent vessels followed at the same facility, marking a departure from prior reliance on mixed foreign designs.[1][2] The integration of the domestically developed Type 346 radar represented a key technological breakthrough, enabling multi-target tracking without foreign dependency.[1]Design and Construction
The lead ship of the Type 052C class, Lanzhou (hull number 170), had its keel laid down in late 2002 at Jiangnan Shipyard in Shanghai, was launched in April 2003, and entered commissioned service in July 2004.[5][4] The second vessel, Haikou (171), followed a similar timeline with construction beginning in 2002 and commissioning in 2005, also at Jiangnan Shipyard.[1] In total, six ships were constructed in two batches at the same facility, with the initial pair serving as prototypes and the remaining four completed between 2013 and 2015, the last being Xi'an (153) commissioned in February 2015.[7][12] A primary engineering decision for the class involved adopting a fixed vertical launch system (VLS) for the HHQ-9 surface-to-air missiles, departing from the hot-launch, revolver-style systems of prior designs like the Type 052B and enabling cold-launch capabilities with individual cell lids for improved reliability and modularity.[4] This was paired with the integration of fixed active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar panels, representing an advancement over the Type 052B's limitations in phased-array technology and missile storage, though the fixed-panel configuration posed challenges in field-of-view coverage compared to rotating alternatives.[1] Construction faced hurdles in balancing imported and domestic components, notably the combined diesel or gas (CODOG) propulsion system incorporating Ukrainian DA80 gas turbines alongside MTU diesel engines, where turbine blade reliability issues necessitated adjustments during integration.[13] The small-batch production approach allowed for iterative refinements, described as an experimental process of incremental progress to address integration complexities and domestic subsystem maturation, extending overall timelines but facilitating rapid capability gains.[8][14]Testing and Commissioning
The lead ship of the Type 052C class, Lanzhou (170), commenced sea trials in late 2003 following her launch on 29 April 2003 at Jiangnan Shipyard. These trials encompassed evaluations of propulsion systems, structural integrity, and the integration of the ship's advanced Type 346 active electronically scanned array radar and vertical launch system, representing the People's Liberation Army Navy's (PLAN) initial implementation of such technologies for area air defense.[4][5] Lanzhou completed trials and was commissioned in July 2004, joining the South Sea Fleet and achieving early operational validation of her command, control, communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (C4ISR) architecture for networked fleet operations.[4] The second vessel, Haikou (171), launched on 30 October 2003, underwent comparable sea trials and entered service in 2005, also assigned to the South Sea Fleet.[5] Subsequent Type 052C destroyers from later production batches at Jiangnan Shipyard followed similar testing protocols to confirm system reliability and interoperability. Changchun (150) was commissioned on 31 January 2013 to the East Sea Fleet; Zhengzhou (151) on 26 December 2013; Jinan (152) on 22 December 2014 to the East Sea Fleet; and Xi'an (153) on 9 February 2015.[15][3][16] By mid-2005, the initial ships had demonstrated sufficient performance in trials to support the class's transition to full operational capability within the PLAN's surface fleet.[4]Design Features
Hull and Displacement
The Type 052C destroyer utilizes a steel hull derived from the design of the preceding Type 052B class, with principal dimensions measuring 155 meters in length, 17 meters in beam, and 6 meters in draft.[3][1] This configuration provides a full load displacement of approximately 7,000 tons, representing a significant increase over the roughly 4,800 tons of the earlier Type 052 class and enabling enhanced blue-water operational endurance while suited to the littoral environments of the East and South China Seas.[3] Key structural advancements include an enclosed mast superstructure housing the primary radar arrays, which contrasts with the open lattice masts of predecessor classes and contributes to a reduced radar cross-section through minimized protrusions and integrated design elements.[8] The hull form emphasizes forward positioning of major systems to facilitate comprehensive sensor coverage, bolstering survivability in high-threat aerial environments without compromising overall seakeeping qualities for extended deployments.[4]Propulsion and Performance
The Type 052C destroyer utilizes a combined diesel or gas (CODOG) propulsion arrangement, integrating two gas turbines for high-speed boosts with diesel engines for efficient cruising speeds.[5] This hybrid setup comprises two Ukrainian-sourced DA80/DN80 (UGT-25000) gas turbines delivering a combined 48,600 shaft horsepower, paired with two MTU 20V 956 TB92 or equivalent Shaanxi diesel engines rated at approximately 5 MW each.[17] [3] Early batches relied on imported Ukrainian turbines, while later production shifted to domestically produced QC-280 gas turbines to address supply chain vulnerabilities stemming from geopolitical tensions.[3] The system drives two controllable-pitch propellers, achieving a maximum speed of 29 knots or greater under gas turbine power, suitable for rapid response in fleet escort and interception roles.[18] [3] Cruising range stands at around 4,000 nautical miles at 18 knots on diesel, emphasizing operational flexibility for blue-water missions despite the constraints of conventional fuels.[3] Endurance is thus finite compared to nuclear-powered surface combatants in select peer navies, necessitating logistical support for extended deployments, though the CODOG design supports high-speed sprints critical for carrier group protection.[1] Fuel consumption reflects the integration challenges of foreign and domestic components, with gas turbine operation prioritizing power over efficiency during combat transits; mid-life overhauls have focused on enhancing overall system reliability rather than radical propulsion redesigns.[8] Performance trials confirmed effective mobility for area air defense tasks, underscoring the class's role in transitioning the People's Liberation Army Navy toward sustained at-sea presence.[5]Sensors and Electronics
The Type 052C class incorporates the indigenous Type 346 active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar, designated Dragon Eye by NATO, operating in the S-band with four fixed planar arrays mounted on the superstructure to enable 360-degree coverage and simultaneous air and surface tracking. This multifunction radar supports detection ranges up to 400 km against aerial targets, facilitating fire control for long-range surface-to-air missiles through integrated beam steering and low-probability-of-intercept modes.[19] Complementary systems include Type 343 X-band radars for precision illumination and tracking of incoming threats, alongside dedicated fire-control radars for the HQ-10 close-in weapon system, enhancing layered defense coordination without reliance on external illuminators.[1] The underwater sensing suite features a hull-mounted, medium-frequency sonar array optimized for anti-submarine detection in littoral environments, with reported capabilities for active and passive modes to classify submerged contacts.[1] Variable-depth sonar deployment is supported via stern handling gear, allowing adjustable depth for improved performance against deep-diving threats, though the system's resolution lags behind contemporary Western counterparts in signal processing sophistication. Integrated combat management systems, derived from digital data fusion architectures, process inputs from radar, sonar, and electro-optical sensors to form a unified battlespace picture, enabling linkage to the People's Liberation Army Navy's broader C4ISR network for data sharing and cooperative targeting.[1] Electronic warfare support elements include radar warning receivers and direction-finding antennas for intercepting and geolocating enemy radar emissions, providing early threat alerts and emitter identification. These measures integrate with the ship's data links for real-time electronic order of battle updates, though mid-life upgrades have addressed initial signal processing latencies observed in early Type 346 deployments.[8]Armament Systems
The Type 052C destroyer is equipped with a 48-cell vertical launching system (VLS) configured in eight sextuple modules—six forward and two aft—exclusively loaded with HHQ-9 surface-to-air missiles (SAMs) for primary air defense roles.[1][3] The HHQ-9, a naval variant of the indigenously developed HQ-9 system inspired by the Russian S-300 but adapted for improved integration with Chinese phased-array radars and command systems, has an engagement range of up to 200 km against aerial targets at altitudes reaching 30 km.[4][20] These fixed, hot-launch VLS cells lack at-sea reload capability, limiting sustained engagements to the initial 48-missile loadout without port access.[3] Surface warfare armament includes eight YJ-83 (also designated C-803) anti-ship cruise missiles deployed in four twin-arm angled launchers, providing subsonic-to-supersonic terminal attack profiles with ranges exceeding 150 km, though these are not VLS-compatible in the original configuration.[3][4] The main gun is a single-barrel H/PJ-87 100 mm dual-purpose mount forward, capable of firing 25 rounds per minute to 17 km against surface or air targets.[3] Close-in defense relies on two Type 730 30 mm gatling-style CIWS mounts, each with seven barrels delivering up to 5,800 rounds per minute effective to 3 km, optimized for intercepting incoming missiles or aircraft.[4][3] Anti-submarine warfare (ASW) systems feature two triple 324 mm torpedo tubes loaded with Yu-7 lightweight torpedoes, each with wire-guided homing and ranges up to 10 km for engaging submerged threats.[3] Supporting rocket-assisted ASW is provided by two Type 75 240 mm multiple rocket launchers, though their unguided nature and 1.2 km range limit utility to shallow-water or close-range applications.[3] Unlike subsequent classes such as the Type 052D, the Type 052C's VLS does not accommodate land-attack cruise missiles like the CJ-10, reflecting a design emphasis on area air defense for carrier task groups rather than multi-role strike versatility.[4] All Type 052C ships share this standardized loadout, with no reported variants in missile capacities across the class.[1]Operational Capabilities
Primary Air Defense Functions
The Type 052C destroyer's primary air defense function revolves around providing area air defense for task groups via the HHQ-9 surface-to-air missile system integrated with four fixed-face Type 346 active electronically scanned array radars. These radars offer 360-degree coverage and enable simultaneous tracking of multiple airborne targets, including aircraft and incoming missiles, while the vertical launch system houses 48 HHQ-9 missiles with a reported range of up to 100 km.[1][21] The HHQ-9 employs inertial guidance with mid-course updates from the radar and active radar homing in the terminal phase, allowing the ship to engage several simultaneous threats, such as sea-skimming anti-ship missiles and high-altitude bombers.[4] This configuration marked the first implementation of phased-array radar and vertical launch missiles in the People's Liberation Army Navy, providing coordinated defense capabilities akin to advanced Western systems.[22] In operational scenarios, the Type 052C supports layered air defense within carrier strike groups, where it acts as a forward screen against aerial incursions, relaying target data to other assets via datalinks. The system's synergy between radar and missiles facilitates rapid salvo launches to saturate incoming threats, with exercises demonstrating intercepts of subsonic cruise missiles and supersonic targets simulating real-world anti-ship threats.[23][24] The HHQ-9 also offers limited terminal-phase cues for ballistic missile defense, though its effectiveness is constrained by missile kinematics and sensor integration compared to subsequent designs.[1] Despite these strengths, the baseline HHQ-9 lacks sufficient velocity and seeker agility for reliable intercepts of hypersonic threats maneuvering at Mach 5 or higher, a vulnerability evident in analyses of evolving missile technologies. Mid-life upgrades, including enhanced processors and potentially improved missiles, aim to address such gaps, underscoring the Type 052C's role as a bridge to more advanced platforms like the Type 052D.[8][25] Without these modifications, the destroyer's air defense remains optimized for conventional subsonic and supersonic engagements rather than next-generation high-speed weapons.[1]Surface Warfare and Anti-Submarine Roles
The Type 052C class provides surface warfare capabilities through eight YJ-62 (C-602) anti-ship cruise missiles deployed in two quad-canister launchers located forward of the hangar. These subsonic, turbojet-powered missiles employ inertial navigation with active radar terminal guidance, achieving a range of 150 nautical miles (approximately 278 km) and delivering a 300 kg high-explosive warhead suitable for engaging large surface vessels.[1][26] Anti-submarine warfare is supported by two triple 324 mm torpedo tubes firing Yu-7 lightweight torpedoes, which utilize wire-guided and active/passive acoustic homing for engagements beyond 30 km. A hull-mounted medium-frequency sonar aids submarine detection, though its effectiveness is limited in shallow or noisy littoral environments prevalent in potential operational areas.[27][1] The stern hangar and flight deck accommodate one ASW helicopter, such as the Kamov Ka-28 or Harbin Z-9C, equipped with dipping sonar, sonobuoys, and lightweight torpedoes or depth charges to extend the ship's sensor and strike range against submerged threats. This single-aircraft capacity constrains endurance and redundancy compared to Western contemporaries supporting dual helicopters, reflecting design trade-offs favoring radar and VLS integration over expanded aviation facilities.[4][5] Overall, these secondary roles emphasize opportunistic strikes and localized threat neutralization rather than sustained offensive operations, aligning with People's Liberation Army Navy doctrine prioritizing sea denial in near-seas contingencies through integrated multi-domain fires.[28]Electronic Warfare and Support Systems
The Type 052C destroyers incorporate an electronic countermeasures (ECM) suite designed to disrupt incoming threats through jamming and deception. This system employs phased array jammers to target enemy radar and missile guidance frequencies, enabling active electronic attack capabilities integrated with the ship's combat management system.[5] Complementing the ECM jammers, the vessels feature chaff and flare launchers for passive defense against radar- and infrared-guided missiles. Specifically, four Type 726-4 decoy rocket launchers, each with 18 barrels in a 3×6 arrangement mounted on the aft deck, dispense countermeasures including chaff, infrared decoys, and potentially anti-submarine rockets for multi-role utility.[2][29] The electronic warfare support measures (ESM) include direction-finding antennas and signal interceptors that feed data into the command and decision subsystem, facilitating threat assessment and coordinated responses across networked assets.[5][4] Select units operate in flagship roles, leveraging datalinks and satellite communications to relay offboard sensor data for distributed targeting and fleet-level electronic warfare coordination.[5] Mid-life overhauls, initiated as early as the mid-2010s for initial batches, have upgraded ECM components to enhance spectrum dominance and integration with newer networked warfare architectures, addressing limitations in early models' jamming effectiveness against advanced threats.[8]Fleet Composition
List of Commissioned Ships
The Type 052C class comprises six commissioned destroyers, all constructed by Jiangnan Shipyard in Shanghai between 2002 and 2014.[3][7] These vessels serve as the backbone of the People's Liberation Army Navy's early Aegis-equipped surface combatants, with pennant numbers reflecting initial assignments and subsequent reassignments.[3] No ships have been lost or decommissioned as of 2025, though periodic maintenance and upgrades occur.[30][7]| Ship Name | Chinese Name | Pennant Number | Commission Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lanzhou | 兰州 | 170 | 18 July 2004[30][3] |
| Haikou | 海口 | 171 | 30 December 2005[31][3] |
| Changchun | 长春 | 150 | 31 January 2013[3][12] |
| Zhengzhou | 郑州 | 151 | 26 December 2012[3] |
| Jinan | 济南 | 152 | 6 December 2014[16][32] |
| Xi'an | 西安 | 153 | June 2015[33][34] |
Operational Status and Decommissionings
As of October 2025, all six commissioned Type 052C destroyers—Lanzhou (170), Haikou (171), Changchun (150), Zhengzhou (151), Jinan (152), and Xi'an (153)—remain in active service with the People's Liberation Army Navy (PLAN), with no reported decommissionings or retirements.[8] The class, with initial commissions dating to 2004–2005, has entered mid-life overhaul phases following approximately 15 years of service, consistent with PLAN protocols for destroyers over 5,000 tons built after 2000.[8] These refits, underway since around 2020 for the earliest hulls, focus on sustaining operational readiness amid the phasing in of successor classes like the Type 052D, with projected service extensions to 30–35 years total, potentially into the mid-2030s.[8] Propulsion maintenance poses ongoing challenges, stemming from reliability issues in the Ukrainian-sourced DA-80 gas turbines, including documented blade erosion problems that affected early installations.[13] Fleet-wide readiness is inferred from sustained participation in PLAN exercises, though precise availability metrics remain classified.[35]Service History
Initial Deployments and Exercises
The lead ship of the Type 052C class, Lanzhou (170), was commissioned on 18 July 2004 after completing sea trials that commenced in late 2003, marking the People's Liberation Army Navy's (PLAN) entry into operationally deploying advanced Aegis-like guided-missile destroyers equipped with active electronically scanned array radars and vertical launch systems.[2] Assigned initially to the East Sea Fleet, Lanzhou undertook early post-commissioning deployments centered on regional patrols and training in the Yellow Sea and East China Sea, emphasizing system integration and crew familiarization with the platform's multi-mission capabilities.[36] The second vessel, Haikou (171), followed suit upon its commissioning in 2005, joining the South Sea Fleet for similar initial activities focused on operational readiness in contested maritime areas.[2] Initial exercises prioritized validation of the HHQ-9 surface-to-air missile system, with live-fire drills conducted against aerial targets including drones to demonstrate the destroyers' area air defense proficiency, achieving intercepts at ranges up to 100 kilometers.[21] These tests, performed from the class's 48-cell vertical launch arrays, confirmed the missiles' cold-launch mechanism and guidance integration with the Type 346 radar, essential for countering low-altitude threats during fleet operations.[37] Domestic formation maneuvers in the mid-2000s further tested data-link interoperability among PLAN surface combatants, with Type 052C vessels often serving as flagships to coordinate networked air defense scenarios.[38] By 2010, Type 052C destroyers had progressed to integrated exercises simulating escort duties for emerging carrier operations, incorporating anti-submarine and surface warfare elements to build blue-water proficiency ahead of the PLAN's first aircraft carrier commissioning.[1] These activities highlighted the class's role in transitioning the PLAN from coastal defense to task group-centric operations, though early incidents in the South China Sea underscored challenges in high-seas maneuvering amid territorial disputes.International Operations and Incidents
Type 052C destroyers have participated in China's anti-piracy escort missions in the Gulf of Aden since the People's Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) initiated operations on December 26, 2008, marking the service's first extended blue-water deployment.[39] The destroyer Haikou (DDG-171) formed part of early task forces, including the third escort group deployed in April 2010, where it conducted vessel escorts, patrols, and training exercises alongside frigates and supply ships to protect international shipping from Somali pirate attacks.[39] These missions involved verifying over 1,000 merchant vessels and apprehending pirate groups, demonstrating the destroyers' multi-role capabilities in sustained overseas operations without direct combat engagements.[40] In multinational naval exercises, Type 052C vessels have represented the PLAN as observers and limited participants. The Haikou (DDG-171) joined Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) 2014, the world's largest international maritime exercise hosted by the U.S. Pacific Fleet, where it integrated with allied ships for port visits and observational activities focused on interoperability and humanitarian scenarios.[41] Similarly, Xi'an (DDG-153) attended RIMPAC 2016, engaging in maritime interdiction operations and anti-submarine drills alongside U.S. and partner nation forces, highlighting the destroyer's air defense systems in a cooperative setting.[42] These deployments underscored China's growing naval outreach while adhering to observer status amid geopolitical tensions. Notable incidents involving Type 052C destroyers during international operations include close-quarters shadowing of U.S. warships asserting freedom of navigation in the South China Sea. In October 2015, Lanzhou (DDG-170) trailed the destroyer USS Lassen within 12 nautical miles of reclaimed features in the Spratly Islands, issuing warnings and maneuvering aggressively to contest the passage, though no collision or weapons use occurred.[43] Such encounters reflect escalatory risks in disputed waters but have remained non-kinetic, with the PLAN emphasizing defensive responses to perceived territorial infringements.[44]
Mid-Life Upgrades and Modernization
Since approximately 2022, the People's Liberation Army Navy has commenced mid-life overhauls on Type 052C (Luyang II-class) destroyers, such as the Lanzhou (hull 170), which had accumulated 17 years of service by that point, to extend operational lifespan to 30-35 years for vessels of this displacement built after 2000.[8] These refits focus on resolving technical deficiencies in legacy systems, including data processing overloads and overheating in the Type 346 active electronically scanned array radar, thereby enhancing detection and tracking reliability.[8] Upgrades aim to mitigate the capability disparities with the successor Type 052D class, incorporating variant-specific improvements to radar performance and integration without wholesale redesigns, though detailed missile or sensor retrofits remain limited in public disclosures.[8] Challenges persist in execution, including engineering complexities from the class's experimental phased development and the PLAN's accelerated production of newer hulls, which strains maintenance infrastructure and elevates costs for sustaining a growing fleet.[8] Post-refit, the destroyers exhibit bolstered air defense efficacy through refined radar operations, supporting incremental advances in anti-surface warfare and ballistic missile defense roles via better sensor fusion, yet inherent design constraints in stealth profiling and endurance continue to limit parity with peer competitors like U.S. Arleigh Burke-class vessels.[8]Strategic Assessments
Role in PLAN Modernization
The Type 052C class destroyers signified a pivotal transition in the People's Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) toward indigenous development of advanced surface combatants, incorporating active phased array radar, vertical launch systems (VLS) for surface-to-air missiles, and reduced radar cross-section features that represented historic technological leaps for Chinese naval engineering.[8] These vessels, with the lead ship Lanzhou ( hull number 170) commissioned on July 7, 2004, were the first PLAN warships to achieve genuine area air defense capability through integrated systems like the Type 346 radar and HHQ-9 missiles launched from 48 VLS cells.[1] This marked the operational debut of universal VLS and active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar in the Chinese fleet, building on prior experimental efforts and enabling rapid iteration in warship design.[45] By providing mobile platforms for long-range air defense with HHQ-9 surface-to-air missiles (range up to 200 km), the Type 052C class directly supported the PLAN's anti-access/area-denial (A2/AD) strategy, particularly in contested regions like the South China Sea, where these destroyers extend defensive coverage beyond fixed land-based assets.[46] The class's six commissioned units between 2004 and 2015 formed the backbone of early fleet air defense, allowing the PLAN to integrate sensor fusion and missile guidance for networked threat engagement in exercises simulating real-world denial operations.[1] This capability fostered crew proficiency in data-linked command and control, laying groundwork for subsequent classes like the Type 052D that scaled these features for larger formations.[8] The deployment of Type 052C destroyers accelerated the PLAN's modernization from a green-water navy reliant on coastal patrols to a blue-water force with power projection potential, as evidenced by their role in escorting carrier groups and participating in far-seas maneuvers by the mid-2010s.[7] These ships demonstrated empirical effectiveness in joint exercises, where VLS-enabled missile salvos and AESA tracking validated integrated air defense tactics against simulated aerial incursions, informing doctrinal shifts toward expeditionary operations.[1] Overall, the class's success in fielding domestically produced high-end systems reduced dependence on foreign technology transfers, propelling serial production of next-generation destroyers and cruisers essential to the PLAN's strategic expansion.[8]Comparative Capabilities
The Type 052C destroyer equips 48 vertical launch system cells for HHQ-9 surface-to-air missiles, providing area air defense capability but fewer cells than the 96 in the U.S. Navy's Arleigh Burke-class destroyer, which supports a broader mix of missiles including anti-submarine and land-attack variants.[47] The HHQ-9 achieves a range of up to 200 km against aerial targets, offering competitive tracking via the ship's Type 346 active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar, yet falls short of the Arleigh Burke's RIM-174 SM-6 missile, with an estimated range exceeding 370 km for extended anti-air and ballistic missile defense engagements.[48][49]| Feature | Type 052C | Arleigh Burke-class |
|---|---|---|
| VLS Cells (SAM-focused) | 48 (HHQ-9) | 96 (mix incl. SM-6/SM-2) |
| Primary SAM Range | ~200 km | >370 km (SM-6 est.) |
| Radar | Type 346 AESA | AN/SPY-1 (phased array; SPY-6 in Flight III) |
| Propulsion | Gas turbines (~30 knots) | Gas turbines (~30+ knots) |