Super Nimrod
New Member
So they are going to buy a crane to build them. I understood that originally they were trying to avoid having to do so (I have family in Rosyth). It would be a sensible investment regardless
and i mite overdue as this kind of thing should have been done in the 1960s for the CVASo they are going to buy a crane to build them. I understood that originally they were trying to avoid having to do so (I have family in Rosyth). It would be a sensible investment regardless
Well said harryriedl!and i mite overdue as this kind of thing should have been done in the 1960s for the CVA
im not wild about the design of the CVA its the Alaskan highway which i have the largest trouble with and the size of the Island. but they were allot better than the Invisiables.Well said harryriedl!
What a pity the planned fleet of at least three of the original Queen Elizabeth (CVA-01) class carriers was not built. It remains one of the great 'what ifs?'!
Great info on CVA-01 and RN carrier policy can be found on:
http://navy-matters.beedall.com/cva01.htm
Tas
Systems Addict or Swerve will be able to answer this better than I, but i'll have a crack.Hi this is my first post here i like to keep up to date with the navy as most of my relatives have served in it at one point, and i think its a shame what successive governments have done to the navy.
My question is about the new carriers planned. Where are the aircraft for them going to come from? I know they will ever operate the F-35b or c but the original order of around 70 units for the navy has been cancelled long ago, and the number of RAF units has been cut, I find it worrying that we are building 60,000ton carriers which according to navy matters will only have available 12 F-35b/c, the navy imo needs its own aircraft or the joint force needs enough aircraft for the navy and raf but this seems unlikely. I have copied below the expect carrier air group in standard operations.
9 - 12 x Harrier GR.9 or F-35B STOVL Joint Strike Fighters;
4 x Maritime Airborne Surveillance and Control
aircraft/helicopters/UAVs
6 x Merlin HM helicopters
Total = 22 - 25
We're supposed to be getting 138-150 F-35B eventually for the joint force, which should be enough for full complements for two carriers, training, spares, & some left over for the crabs . I'm not as well-informed on this as I'd like to be, but I think that officially, we should have a single permanent carrier air group*, so that if both carriers are at sea in peacetime they might only have half a group each, or one might be serving as an LPH. Bloody waste, if you ask me. We may end up like now, with the carriers dependent on the RAF not wanting the aircraft. Back to the 1930s . . .Hi this is my first post here i like to keep up to date with the navy as most of my relatives have served in it at one point, and i think its a shame what successive governments have done to the navy.
My question is about the new carriers planned. Where are the aircraft for them going to come from? I know they will ever operate the F-35b or c but the original order of around 70 units for the navy has been cancelled long ago, and the number of RAF units has been cut, I find it worrying that we are building 60,000ton carriers which according to navy matters will only have available 12 F-35b/c, the navy imo needs its own aircraft or the joint force needs enough aircraft for the navy and raf but this seems unlikely. I have copied below the expect carrier air group in standard operations.
9 - 12 x Harrier GR.9 or F-35B STOVL Joint Strike Fighters;
4 x Maritime Airborne Surveillance and Control
aircraft/helicopters/UAVs
6 x Merlin HM helicopters
Total = 22 - 25
We are talking about a defense project, moreover, a British defense project, so I would guess anything is possible. Does even the USN enough aircraft to fill up the carriers up the maximum practical air wing strength?When that sucker is operational i'll bet they've got the full complement on board. If not then whats the point in building it?
They will be cunningly rebuilt into carrier capable aircraft and the CVF will become a proper carrier with a bloody catapult.it can be well questioned what to do with the RAF having +200 Eurofighters...
I don't see how anyone in the USA would know what our total order is going to be, when the British government hasn't even decided yet. IIRC we've only ordered two for testing so far...., I have heard that some people from America involved in the F-35 have said the British order has been reduced to 80 in total but obviously that might not be true. ....
debatable as the F35 is the more capable plane of cores everybody like CTOLThey will be cunningly rebuilt into carrier capable aircraft and the CVF will become a proper carrier with a bloody catapult.
In the CVF office in Glasgow they have drawings of the CVF with catapults launching the aircraft, when I asked about this I was told it's the French version and the one they wanted to build, the French are getting the better more capable version of this design I believe.
yeah it said on navymatters that some American insiders where saying the British provisional order was being reduced to 80 I don't know if its true its probably just a rumor.I don't see how anyone in the USA would know what our total order is going to be, when the British government hasn't even decided yet. IIRC we've only ordered two for testing so far.
I think they mean the french cvf will have more kit on it like better command and control center cats and traps and have a better weapon system. If are new carrier had proper cats and traps we could then operate the better C version of the F-35debatable as the F35 is the more capable plane of cores everybody like CTOL
That is the big worry to me. When WW2 began the RN lacked the capacity to operate its carriers effectively. The navy had only just regained control of the FAA from the RAF. Modern carrier capable aircraft were virtually non existent and even the obsolete types that were available were in short supply. The most modern carrier, Ark Royal, never operated its maximum airgroup and as the war progressed the size of its airgroup actually shrank. When the first of the Illustrious class joined in 1940 they operated only a handful of aircraft and it was not until US aircraft became available later in the war that they were able to operate with maximum effectiveness. The aircraft carried by Illustrious shown below are typical:We may end up like now, with the carriers dependent on the RAF not wanting the aircraft. Back to the 1930s . . .