John Fedup
The Bunker Group
Lurassen is also a very successful mega yacht builder. Having an Australian operation would help them serve the booming Asian market. Besides, I think they running out of Russian billionaires.
That's it, I am barracking for the SeaAxe 1800. In combination with the advance hull form (if that is what is offered) at least it has a decent sized hanger ..... and I am a bit of the fan of the Knotch for the boats.The family-owned Lurssen Werft, which has been building ships since the 1870s, is one of three contenders for the OPV project through a version of the *Darussalam Class corvette it built for the Royal Brunei Navy.
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Luckily for the RAN I'm not in any way involved in the choice, but of the three options this one is the least desirable in my opinion for the simple absence of a hangar, fixed or retractable.Lurssen wants to export warships from Australia to regional allies. Also confirmation that their proposal will be based on the Darussalam Class corvette..
I got the Damen information from this site which had the following Damen tender press release:The Damen site is hard to access at the moment (probably being bombed by journos looking for information) . .
Would it be more poor design work, or poor quality-control during construction?As the LCMs were designed specifically to work from the two LPA's and presumably the designers knew that they would be craned on and off the ships it beggars belief that this wouldn't have been 'built in' to the design. There was an excuse for not designing them for the Abrams as they were not in the ADF 'shopping list' at that time.
I expect answers will be sought by the ADF but it would be pure speculation for me to suggest where things might have gone wrong. The failure of the LCMs may actually get the ADF off the hook as they won't have to explain to the media why their newest LCMs can't carry their newest tanks!
Cheers
What a pathetic and lazy pitch, I could have thrown a rock in any direction and come up with a better design.Luckily for the RAN I'm not in any way involved in the choice, but of the three options this one is the least desirable in my opinion for the simple absence of a hangar, fixed or retractable.
We shall no doubt be able to guess some of what was most prized in the tender evaluation only when a winner is announced, and even then not be terribly sure due to commercial confidence vis a vis comparative pricing etc.
oldsig
Fassmer have some interesting options ... although I suspect they will end up offering the OPV80.What a pathetic and lazy pitch, I could have thrown a rock in any direction and come up with a better design.
No hanger is an obvious.
What is fassmer likely to submit?
So they might get a few workers that are willing to risk there careers for extra money on a gamble they Canadians will actually go ahead with the program as advertised, by the time they start we will have acquired most of the personnel in the RCN and RCAF
I was thinking the same thing. By the time Canada gets to the point where it is ready to start building frigates Australia's own frigate program will be in full swing.So they might get a few workers that are willing to risk there careers for extra money on a gamble they Canadians will actually go ahead with the program as advertised, by the time they start we will have acquired most of the personnel in the RCN and RCAF
Its dual fuel with the diesels able to run on LNG as well. The trouble with Fassmer is their tie up with Austal, a yard with no experience in building steel ships and a track record of delivering poor quality and design on or ahead of schedule and within budget.Does anyone else have the feeling that the RAN will have to acquire more RHIB's to deal with the number of possible RHIB's on each proposal being higher than 2 RHIB's on each ship. Could this be an issue for the RAN or will it simply operate less RHIB's on the ships? Also would the ADF float the idea of purchasing more SF RHIB's to base on the OPV's if possible depending on the selected design.
On a side note the Faster OPV 2020 would be a very good asset for the RAN and appear's to have sufficient growth margins. But what use would LNG tanks have? Pardon my naiveness.
Austal, Great opportunity for some one to buy out and completely replace management. Has all the right locations and capabilities, But crappy people in charge apperantly unwilling to listen to any advice that has been given to them.Its dual fuel with the diesels able to run on LNG as well. The trouble with Fassmer is their tie up with Austal, a yard with no experience in building steel ships and a track record of delivering poor quality and design on or ahead of schedule and within budget.
I would wait until its clear what exactly Lurrsen is putting forward. Saying based off Darussalam-class might mean anything and they are just trying to push RAN familiarity (it was out here for the fleet review for example), that is certainly how it reads. I can't imagine they a putting forward a proposal with no hanger. That would be insane. But apparently it is based off the OPV 80 concept (not even the 85 or 90).That's it, I am barracking for the SeaAxe 1800. In combination with the advance hull form (if that is what is offered) at least it has a decent sized hanger ..... and I am a bit of the fan of the Knotch for the boats.
Wait, I thought requirements were sub 80m or 2,000t - when did this change?I would wait until its clear what exactly Lurrsen is putting forward. Saying based off Darussalam-class might mean anything and they are just trying to push RAN familiarity (it was out here for the fleet review for example), that is certainly how it reads. I can't imagine they a putting forward a proposal with no hanger. That would be insane. But apparently it is based off the OPV 80 concept (not even the 85 or 90).
The Damen 1800 sea axe would have everything I would be looking for:
* Hanger for UAV/Heliopters
* Big enough to have decent flex space
* Able to handle rough seas and make good speed in open ocean conditions, suitable for southern ocean to the south china seas.
* Fast, for pursuit or transits or to keep distance between threats.
* Some ability to be upgunned support larger and more capable systems.
It would allow Australia to project power over a very wide area. They could go to the Gulf, they could do southern patrols, keeping an eye on Japanese whalers, chinese fishing fleets and seashepard as well as southern rescues.
But apparently everyone was told to submit proposals of 1,500t. So everyone is probably submitting the boring stuff that exists at 1,400-1,500t. <80m.No hangers, no guns, no missiles, minimal flex space, minimal crewing, not really suitable for deep blue water patrols, minimal endurance, minimal speed, etc.
The Fassmer 2020 is vapourwareFassmer have some interesting options ... although I suspect they will end up offering the OPV80.
https://www.fassmer.de/fileadmin/us...80m-offshore-patrol-vessel-technical-data.pdf
Although by they may want to push the somewhat more capable Fassmer OPV 2020
https://www.fassmer.de/fileadmin/us...ssmer-opv2020-navy-vessels-technical-data.pdf
Yes I have seen that, I was trying to get the summer draft of the enlarged ship and sea Axe versions of the 1800 to figure out how much the forefoot added. There are a few metres in it.I got the Damen information from this site which had the following Damen tender press release:
Damen Shipyards Group Submits Tender for Australian OPV
Where did you get the information that everyone was told to submit proposals of 1400 to 1500 tonnes???I would wait until its clear what exactly Lurrsen is putting forward. Saying based off Darussalam-class might mean anything and they are just trying to push RAN familiarity (it was out here for the fleet review for example), that is certainly how it reads. I can't imagine they a putting forward a proposal with no hanger. That would be insane. But apparently it is based off the OPV 80 concept (not even the 85 or 90).
The Damen 1800 sea axe would have everything I would be looking for:
* Hanger for UAV/Heliopters
* Big enough to have decent flex space
* Able to handle rough seas and make good speed in open ocean conditions, suitable for southern ocean to the south china seas.
* Fast, for pursuit or transits or to keep distance between threats.
* Some ability to be upgunned support larger and more capable systems.
It would allow Australia to project power over a very wide area. They could go to the Gulf, they could do southern patrols, keeping an eye on Japanese whalers, chinese fishing fleets and seashepard as well as southern rescues.
But apparently everyone was told to submit proposals of 1,500t. So everyone is probably submitting the boring stuff that exists at 1,400-1,500t. <80m.No hangers, no guns, no missiles, minimal flex space, minimal crewing, not really suitable for deep blue water patrols, minimal endurance, minimal speed, etc.
I probably should have phrased that to be less official than it was, it was an attempt at being flippant.Where did you get the information that everyone was told to submit proposals of 1400 to 1500 tonnes???