40 deg south
Well-Known Member
TodAs a result of WWII experience, the USN likes to have extra crew dedicated for damage control. Other navies I know have a different approach, but at some point personnel making recommendations on which particular vessel is most suitable would also look at the crewing arrangement to determine what sort of numbers are actually reasonable and feasible. If the crew gets too small (a la LCS) then some of the crew maintenance functions need to be transferred to dock personnel, and/or require the vessel to spend more time alongside so that shore-based personnel can perform maintenance.
Good points as always.
I'd suggest a slightly different explanation for the USN's more generous crewing. It seems likely to me the the RN and others would have come out of WWII with similar experience - that spare bodies are useful in combat.
I suspect the real difference is that the USN hasn't (until now) been subjected to the same level of budget stress as other western navies, and that is changing in front of our eyes.
I'd expect any future post-LCS designs to have a strong focus on automation and keeping crews to a minimum. The LCS may have been a step too far and too soon, but the trend will continue.