The Royal Navy Discussions and Updates

StobieWan

Super Moderator
Staff member
Eagle had a full angle deck, Type 984 radar and a cat capable of launching Spey Phantoms (used for the Spey Phantom carrier qualification), as such was superior to Ark prior to her Phantom mod. She was also in better condition materially and would have required far less extensive mods to have allowed her to operate Phantoms as part of her air group.

I am not sure of F-4Js could have flown from Ark or Eagle but the USN did assure the RAN that they could be operated from a suitably modified Essex when they were investigating replacing HMAS Melbourne in the early to mid sixties.

It really is too bad the RN couldn't find a way to upgrade Eagle as well and extend either or both into the mid 80s as this would likely have detered Agentinas invasion of the Falklands. Had the smaller carriers been extended with a fixed wing airgroup it would likely have had a similar deterance, even if it didn't include Phantoms. Ironically, even had the entire 1960's fleet of five carriers been available with a hundred odd Seaharriers and Seaking AEW as well as Bulwark and Albion each lifting a RM Commando it would probably not had as great an effect on convincing Argentina it was a bad idea to invade as even a single CTOL carrier.
Ah, okay - was it just water cooled jet blast deflectors and some internal changes to make the Eagle Phantom compatible then?

I can't find much information to suggest the Spey brought much to the table compared to the standard Phantom engines when the extra drag they induced was allowed for so I did wonder if the work was worth doing with hindsight.

Ian
 

Volkodav

The Bunker Group
Verified Defense Pro
Ah, okay - was it just water cooled jet blast deflectors and some internal changes to make the Eagle Phantom compatible then?

I can't find much information to suggest the Spey brought much to the table compared to the standard Phantom engines when the extra drag they induced was allowed for so I did wonder if the work was worth doing with hindsight.

Ian
The F-4K was a make work sop to UK industry to make up for cancelled projects and stuffed work flow. RAF 74 Sqn were reportedly very happy with their F-4S (modernised Js) and were likely disappointed when they were repleced with F-4Ms once the Tornado F-3 began freeing them up.

Ironically the Spey made a massive improvement to the A-7 Corsair in USN and USAF service and was also offered to the RN in an improved F-8 Crusader concept that lost out to the F-4K. The Crusader would probably have been perfectly capable of replacing the Sea Vixen on any carrier it was operating from without expensive modifications. Unfortunately by the time CVA-01 was cancelled the Crusader was out of production and not an option.
 

vivtho

New Member
Im sure that the spey was required to enable the phantom to operate off the Ark.
in which case not fitting the Spey to the Phantom is a non starter.
From what I've heard, the Speys were more a political exercise rather than a RN requirement. The Spey reduced the top speed of the Phantoms but did result in them having amongst the best climb rate (and acceleration too IIRC) of the family.
 

Hambo

New Member
Not the exact place but following 1805s belief that the UK can somehow follow US production methods I took a look at Huntington Ingalls and Newport News Shipbuildings webpages (now one of the same). Quite extraordinary.

NNS has built over 30 carriers since 1934, all the Nimitz class and all future builds.

The Gerald R Ford will be completed by 2015, but work started on the JFK in December 2010,( so not actually end on end.)

At the same time they also maintain scheduled work on all the Nimitz class , including 4 year refuelling processes on each of the carriers in turn and from 2013 will also be handling the inactivation of Enterprise.

Some 19,000 people work at newport alone, HI employs 38,000 people with a current backlog of orders of $22.4 billion dollars!!!

The last Nimitz will retire in 2058, so potentially 10 Ford classes will be built, knocked out one every 5 years upto 2040, averaging $9 billion each and with a crew of 4600 each.

Not only that they make the america and San Antonio class. Add the subs and destroyers to the order books for other yards, a 20 year build of 60 Burkes for instance.

Compare the UK situation of trying to keep an industry alive on two carriers, an escort force of less than 20 and an amphib here and there.
 

kev 99

Member
In shipbuilding you need to be building several hulls to a mature, fixed design before you start to see any savings. When you are talking about a clean sheet design there will be numerous changes during construction of the first ship just to get it built, as the first ship undergoes trials more changes will be identified, some will be incorporated into the second ship but others will have to wait until ship three or four. Add to this obsolescence of components and systems and you will see further changes and don’t forget operational experience and the resulting requirements that will also affect the design.

We are not talking a thousand cars a day off a production line or even a couple of hundred tanks over a period of years, we are talking a couple of ships built over nearly a decade or in some cases decades, it is more like construction of buildings, roads, ports etc than production, the more stuff you buy up front before you need it the more stuff you will have to scrap and replace due to changing circumstances / requirements, and the more time and money you waste.
I'm not arguing against this, what 1805 was suggesting was building 1 carrier then building another carrier years later at the same ship yard with amphibs built in between over a 24 year cycle, which sounds like a very good way of getting no economies of scale and 2 half sisters (like Eagle and Ark) at a greatly increased cost.

I know how procurement works in construction, I used to work in the industry, on large projects materials are usually costed for the length of the contract, in 1805's world the contract consists of 1 carrier, years later there might be another contract for another carrier with a substantial gap between construction of the 2.

Edit - Spot on Hambo, not even the US actually buys its carriers in the way 1805 suggests, I'd forgotten that they've actually started on the new JFK already.
 

Volkodav

The Bunker Group
Verified Defense Pro
Not the exact place but following 1805s belief that the UK can somehow follow US production methods I took a look at Huntington Ingalls and Newport News Shipbuildings webpages (now one of the same). Quite extraordinary.

NNS has built over 30 carriers since 1934, all the Nimitz class and all future builds.

The Gerald R Ford will be completed by 2015, but work started on the JFK in December 2010,( so not actually end on end.)

At the same time they also maintain scheduled work on all the Nimitz class , including 4 year refuelling processes on each of the carriers in turn and from 2013 will also be handling the inactivation of Enterprise.

Some 19,000 people work at newport alone, HI employs 38,000 people with a current backlog of orders of $22.4 billion dollars!!!

The last Nimitz will retire in 2058, so potentially 10 Ford classes will be built, knocked out one every 5 years upto 2040, averaging $9 billion each and with a crew of 4600 each.

Not only that they make the america and San Antonio class. Add the subs and destroyers to the order books for other yards, a 20 year build of 60 Burkes for instance.

Compare the UK situation of trying to keep an industry alive on two carriers, an escort force of less than 20 and an amphib here and there.
BIW virtually has a DDG 51 production line, or as close to it as you can get with a major surface combatant. There are in a bit of quandry at them moment as they are the lead yard on the DDG 1000 program that has been cut to 3 ships and had previously hand the lead for the DDG 51 over to Ingalls. Whoops looks like the production line is going to run out of work now the USN is doing the DDG 51 program restart. Sad really as the DDG 1000 was ahead of schedule and below cost before the Pentagon and USN started cancelling hulls and fiddling with the ships systems to save money, just like the Daring really, government engineered change blows the schedule and the cost and the contractor wears the blame.
 

Volkodav

The Bunker Group
Verified Defense Pro
I'm not arguing against this, what 1805 was suggesting was building 1 carrier then building another carrier years later at the same ship yard with amphibs built in between over a 24 year cycle, which sounds like a very good way of getting no economies of scale and 2 half sisters (like Eagle and Ark) at a greatly increased cost.

I know how procurement works in construction, I used to work in the industry, on large projects materials are usually costed for the length of the contract, in 1805's world the contract consists of 1 carrier, years later there might be another contract for another carrier with a substantial gap between construction of the 2.

Edit - Spot on Hambo, not even the US actually buys its carriers in the way 1805 suggests, I'd forgotten that they've actually started on the new JFK already.
I have been at the coal face trying to sort out what to do with multiple ship sets of material that has been bought in advance and then found to be unsuitable on the first ship. The procurement people achieved their KPIs, got their bonuses and saved lots of money upfront, while production and engineering have had their KPIs, budgets and bonuses blown to kingdom come as they try to fix things.

Shipbuilding is different from production and even construction in this way. It can actually be argued that if you are only going to build a couple of ships you may actually be better off spacing out the build in a single yard. Start building the blocks you are most confident are stable first and leave the blocks most likely to be changed until last, only buy the commodities you know you will need in bulk, leaving anything you are not sure on until the last possible minute.

In these cases you make your savings in skilling your work force, make sure they are adaptable and can through their experience and skill save you time and money on each new project you give them. It doesn't really matter what the work is just so long as you keep them busy and practicing their skills on job after job.
 

kev 99

Member
I have been at the coal face trying to sort out what to do with multiple ship sets of material that has been bought in advance and then found to be unsuitable on the first ship. The procurement people achieved their KPIs, got their bonuses and saved lots of money upfront, while production and engineering have had their KPIs, budgets and bonuses blown to kingdom come as they try to fix things.

Shipbuilding is different from production and even construction in this way. It can actually be argued that if you are only going to build a couple of ships you may actually be better off spacing out the build in a single yard. Start building the blocks you are most confident are stable first and leave the blocks most likely to be changed until last, only buy the commodities you know you will need in bulk, leaving anything you are not sure on until the last possible minute.

In these cases you make your savings in skilling your work force, make sure they are adaptable and can through their experience and skill save you time and money on each new project you give them. It doesn't really matter what the work is just so long as you keep them busy and practicing their skills on job after job.
Just to clarify when I'm say buy in bulk I'm not saying buy everything in one go, that's just stupid and certainly not what happens in construction either (unless the company involved is stupid or has an enormous warehouse available), you get a price for your materials nailed down with you're supplier for the length of the contract and you order in lots as and when they are needed, this prevents unpleasant surprises when you're supplier puts prices up and blows you're costings out of the window.

And the commodities are the things that I'm really talking about here, steel, fixtures and fittings, computer terminals etc.
 
Does anyone have any idea when we will see the first carrier looking like a proper ship? I'm assuming even after the outside is finished and it's in the water the work of fitting out will take quite a while.
 

StobieWan

Super Moderator
Staff member
But we don't know the take off weight.

Look at the difference in angle of attack between an RN F4K and USN F4, even without considering differences in engine power :daz :
Google Images
Well, you'd definitely need the extending nose gear and the rework on the control surfaces to get them to be useful around the Ark and Eagle. I'm just unsure if the Spey's were a definite "can't do without" or just the make work for industry they seemed. The Phantom had a similar spot factor to the Bucc overall, just needed a longer cat stroke and better arrester gear to cope with the 150 knot touch down plus on the shorter Ark, water cooled JBD's.

Certainly the manufacturers were keen to assure the RAN that the Phantom could operate off an Essex class without new engines when talks came up in the 60's with Australia.

I'd be really interested if someone could point at a definite indication that it really was a "must have" thing to fit Speys as the program was very costly and did reduce the numbers available to both the RAF and RN.

Ian
 

JoeMcFriday

New Member
Well, you'd definitely need the extending nose gear and the rework on the control surfaces to get them to be useful around the Ark and Eagle. I'm just unsure if the Spey's were a definite "can't do without" or just the make work for industry they seemed. The Phantom had a similar spot factor to the Bucc overall, just needed a longer cat stroke and better arrester gear to cope with the 150 knot touch down plus on the shorter Ark, water cooled JBD's.

Certainly the manufacturers were keen to assure the RAN that the Phantom could operate off an Essex class without new engines when talks came up in the 60's with Australia.

I'd be really interested if someone could point at a definite indication that it really was a "must have" thing to fit Speys as the program was very costly and did reduce the numbers available to both the RAF and RN.

Ian
Ian,
The page at the end of this link McDonnell F-4K Phantom FG.Mk.1 has an interesting look at what changes [and why] were required by the RN specifically to operate off their smaller carriers.

Cheers,
Mac
 

1805

New Member
Dassault successfully lobbied to have the Jaguar M project teminated in favour of the Super Etendard, the official reason was the Jaguars carrier lauch, recovery and fly around performance with one engine out was insufficient. One wonders how the vastly inferior, significantly more expensive, single engined Super Etendard would have performed with its one and only engine out.

The Jaguar was more manuverable than the Phantom and had superior land based TO and landing performance, was lighter than the Phantom so therefore it is difficult to believe that the Jaguar M would have had inferior carrier launch or recovery performance. The Jaguar M was launched and recovered from Clemenceau, which I don't believe was able to operate anything as large and heavy as a Buccaneer, so I would suggest the Jag could have easily operated from the RNs existing carrier.
‪SEPECAT Jaguar M trials aboard Clemenceau‬‏ - YouTube
Thanks for posting this, I did know the Jaguar was considered by the MN, I was not aware it had actually flow off the decks of a carrier. An interesting might have been, if the RN/UK Gov had show interest would this have seen a joint model in RN/MN services; more interesting still where would this have lead to with it’s ultimate replacement?

Would there have been a greater chance of French continued participation in what became the Eurofighter rather than development of the Rafale.

Certainly with no Sea Harrier the RN’s interest in VSTOL would have been limited, it always looked like a reluctant convert, so participation in an F35B project would have been unlikely. RN and French MN/Ad’A orders would surely have reduced the per unit cost of the Typhoon (c250 more planes?).

I don’t think fitting a radar is such an issue as is made out (finding a suitable one might have been). The argument in their "in service" role, that there were a competitor to the Bucc, is l feel less relevant for a naval service, as with limited aircraft multi role is more justified.

However I am very fond of the Harrier; it’s ability to operate off very small platforms, I think in USMC/USN comparisons Harriers performed well against F4s and demonstrated they were able to launch in far more challenging conditions, with a higher sortie rate.
 
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Volkodav

The Bunker Group
Verified Defense Pro
Ian,
The page at the end of this link McDonnell F-4K Phantom FG.Mk.1 has an interesting look at what changes [and why] were required by the RN specifically to operate off their smaller carriers.

Cheers,
Mac
Very interesting, thanks for that.

It reads as if Victorious was intended to be a Phantom platform as well, I wonder if this was the case and the F-4K could have flown from her. It would explain the extensive (and expensive) mods made to the K even though the J was able to launch and recover from Ark and possibly Eagle.

I haven’t heard this anywhere else but it would make sense and if it is the case I wonder if Vic was capable of flying Phantoms following her last refit or if a further modernisation was required.

Some further references would be good.
 

swerve

Super Moderator
I can't find much information to suggest the Spey brought much to the table compared to the standard Phantom engines when the extra drag they induced was allowed for so I did wonder if the work was worth doing with hindsight.

Ian
IMO the Spey modification probably wasn't worth the cost, but AFAIK it did give improvements in range (due to greater fuel efficiency more than offsetting drag), low-atitude performance (thrust more than offsetting drag), & take off performance (ditto). More reliable too, I think.

High altitude performance was worse - and it cost a lot more.
 

StobieWan

Super Moderator
Staff member
IMO the Spey modification probably wasn't worth the cost, but AFAIK it did give improvements in range (due to greater fuel efficiency more than offsetting drag), low-atitude performance (thrust more than offsetting drag), & take off performance (ditto). More reliable too, I think.

High altitude performance was worse - and it cost a lot more.
Definitely more reliable - the Spey was used all over the place as a non reheat unit and was the first commercial engine to be permitted to fly for 10K hours without a major tear down as far as I understand it.

Plus, I guess some of the bits and servicing knowledge would have been familiar to anyone working on the Buccs at the time (same core, just no reheat etc)

Hard to tell what else the FAA would have been able to go for at the time (1966) given we'd cream crackered our home industry and the lighter competitors never got a decent air to air radar. Crusader, as used by the French would have fit the deck but no BVR and an unreliable gun armament (by all accounts, loading them was an art, and a black one)

Ian
 

1805

New Member
Just to clarify when I'm say buy in bulk I'm not saying buy everything in one go, that's just stupid and certainly not what happens in construction either (unless the company involved is stupid or has an enormous warehouse available), you get a price for your materials nailed down with you're supplier for the length of the contract and you order in lots as and when they are needed, this prevents unpleasant surprises when you're supplier puts prices up and blows you're costings out of the window.

And the commodities are the things that I'm really talking about here, steel, fixtures and fittings, computer terminals etc.
The commodities such as steel are the really cheap items. Computer kit you want to buy as you need, as they get dated quickly, a call off preferred supplier arrangement works well for this stuff, no need for a volume commitment. I was suggesting running one after the other not random orders, to avoid the very gaps in orders you are suggesting. For clarity, 3 x 8 years (50k tonner full load) with a 40 year cycle the other 16 years could be spent building 3 x 25t LPD. Alongside this 12 cruiser/destroyer types built at 3-5 a decade.
 

1805

New Member
Not the exact place but following 1805s belief that the UK can somehow follow US production methods I took a look at Huntington Ingalls and Newport News Shipbuildings webpages (now one of the same). Quite extraordinary.

NNS has built over 30 carriers since 1934, all the Nimitz class and all future builds.

The Gerald R Ford will be completed by 2015, but work started on the JFK in December 2010,( so not actually end on end.)

At the same time they also maintain scheduled work on all the Nimitz class , including 4 year refuelling processes on each of the carriers in turn and from 2013 will also be handling the inactivation of Enterprise.

Some 19,000 people work at newport alone, HI employs 38,000 people with a current backlog of orders of $22.4 billion dollars!!!

The last Nimitz will retire in 2058, so potentially 10 Ford classes will be built, knocked out one every 5 years upto 2040, averaging $9 billion each and with a crew of 4600 each.

Not only that they make the america and San Antonio class. Add the subs and destroyers to the order books for other yards, a 20 year build of 60 Burkes for instance.

Compare the UK situation of trying to keep an industry alive on two carriers, an escort force of less than 20 and an amphib here and there.
The USN has far greater spend than the RN, but the principle of building from one yard in a cycle is broadly what they do. They have more orders so can have more under construction than just one.
 

kev 99

Member
The commodities such as steel are the really cheap items. Computer kit you want to buy as you need, as they get dated quickly, a call off preferred supplier arrangement works well for this stuff, no need for a volume commitment. I was suggesting running one after the other not random orders, to avoid the very gaps in orders you are suggesting. For clarity, 3 x 8 years (50k tonner full load) with a 40 year cycle the other 16 years could be spent building 3 x 25t LPD. Alongside this 12 cruiser/destroyer types built at 3-5 a decade.
Putting aside the procurement arguement for 5 minutes, you've yet again decided to increase the size of the fleet by an aircraft carrier and an LPD against Government plans, and yet you constantly state the size of the MOD budget is too large and have stated that you want to see it reduced. Where is the extra money coming from to buy these additional ships and where is the money coming from for their running costs?
 
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