GetI would be seriously surprised if Australia looked at these 3 designs, they are all brand new designs, how much would Australia be prepared to gamble on an all-new design when we are doing it already with the Hunter.
I'm a bit lost in the figures.Not sure that it would really be much to beat. A vessel (whether classed as a corvette or a frigate does not matter at this point) that displaces ~3,600t has the same displacement that the ANZAC-class FFH's started out having, and with a length of 109m is possibly ~9m shorter that the FFH, with a beam of 15.3m might be 0.3m broader that current RAN FFH's. This becomes significant in that the ANZAC-class frigates have been found to be very limited in terms of what more can be done to them, with not much remaining in terms of growth margins as well as topweight issues which require careful management. Side note, I believe that the overall displacement of RAN FFH's which have been upgraded is now ~3,800t.
Going with a new class/design which is perhaps slightly smaller, but essentially the same displacement and with a possibly greater weapons loadout, I would naturally wonder what the range/endurance of the design currently is, as well as what margins remain for future growth.
Frankly, if someone wants me to be less excited about more Hobart-class or Hobart II-class vessels, they would really have their work cut out.
If the 'modified' version of the Hunter-class deletes the towed sonar array, particularly if done so in a way that would make it difficult to add back in later, then perhaps having Osborne do a simultaneous/split built. With the towed sonar getting removed, one of the significant ship-mounted ASW sonars is gone, and so to a fair bit of the ASW focus of the Hunter-class. At that point it might make more sense to also not spend all the coin involved in rafting and noise isolation for the more air defence oriented vessels.
I still think that the RAN will need a fair number of ASW frigates given the likely number of subs which will be operated by various powers in the Indo-Pacific region in the coming years.
Preserving the Hunters existing ASW capability. Towed array and two embarked helicopters parked in tandem in the hangar /mision bay.
What number of additional VLS could be added in the remaining space of the mission bay?
I'm guessing an addition 16 on either side of the forward helicopter for a total of 32.
A total of 64 VLS for the ship and it retains its ASW capability.
Does this sound correct?
Cheers S