swedish NSM [i think thats the name of the steathy of swedish Anti-ship missile] that could be carried internarnaly on the F35 and would be vauble to the F35 for Anti-ship strikes.Something to hope for is a return for the RN of a truly offensive punch in the form of the F35. Im not sure what the plans are for an anti ship capability but I would assume Harpoon could be integrated?
A link to sadden the heart is from blackburn-buccaneer.co.uk. This gives a glimpse of what the Fleet has been missing. A strike package of 6 buccs with 4 Sea Eagles each could split into two groups of 3, fly 40 miles apart and co-ordinate 24 missiles to arrive from multiple access, all in a 10 second window. Now that was an aircraft!!! They should have made a Bucc 2.
By the time the carriers arrive it will be close to 40 years since we had that kind of punch so despite the sceptics, things are looking up, hopefully we will have a sufficient force to win air superiority and to carry out deep strikes on land targets and destroy surface groups. A stealthy anti ship missile would be nice but overall I think there is much to cheer about. If we can entagle ourselves from Iraq more money should become free for various tweeks and upgrades to the Fleet.
I'm sure some anti-ship missiles will be integrated. I wouldn't be surprised if Harpoon is, & IIRC Lockheed Martin & Kongsberg issued a joint press release a while ago about NSM & F-35.Something to hope for is a return for the RN of a truly offensive punch in the form of the F35. Im not sure what the plans are for an anti ship capability but I would assume Harpoon could be integrated?
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Just a point of clarification/correction. The NSM is of Norweigan origin, not Swedish, and a product of Kongsberg, the makers of the Penguin AShM.swedish NSM [i think thats the name of the steathy of swedish Anti-ship missile] that could be carried internarnaly on the F35 and would be vauble to the F35 for Anti-ship strikes.
In terms of usage, it could be argued that the USN considers the ESSM a "point-defense missile". Take a look here at the specs for the DDG-51 Flight I and Flight IIA (why they are called "flights" escapes me though). On the Flight I destroyers, the CIWS is provided by two Mk 15 20mm Phalanx systems. The Flight IIA destroyers instead have ESSM. Given that the Phalanx in the past had some trouble with availability, as well as the number of potential threats it would no longer be appropriate to use against, it seems the USN chose a different class of weapon as a point defense weapon.Why do people claim the ESSM is a "point-defense missile"? It's a limited area AAW weapon with its range.
Examples for a point-defense missile system would be Sea Wolf, VL Mica, Sadral/Tetral/Simbad, or RAM. ESSM fits a AAW envelope layer between those and full theater medium-/long-range AAW systems like Aster 15, Aster 30 or SM2, and in this role serves as just what it is - the successor to NSSM.
And that is why it is only fully armed when it goes on deployment, when not on deployment it has a reduced load of SM-2's and ESSM's.An Arleigh Burke must bust the bank just to arm it.
No worse than traditional magazines. Mk-41's like regular magazines have a deluge system, eductors and can flood individual cells to help prevent damage.Having fore and aft VLS's packed with TLAMS, Scalp and missiles must make a ship vulnerable to battle damage?
They do consider it a point defense missile.In terms of usage, it could be argued that the USN considers the ESSM a "point-defense missile".
I've never been able to figure that out either.Take a look here at the specs for the DDG-51 Flight I and Flight IIA (why they are called "flights" escapes me though).
Some of the Flight IIA's have Phalanx installed, some have 2, some have just one and some don't have any.On the Flight I destroyers, the CIWS is provided by two Mk 15 20mm Phalanx systems. The Flight IIA destroyers instead have ESSM. Given that the Phalanx in the past had some trouble with availability, as well as the number of potential threats it would no longer be appropriate to use against, it seems the USN chose a different class of weapon as a point defense weapon.
1. No.Hi, AegisFC. Could you help me on these questions please?
1. Is there any plan to mount the Phalanx Block 1Bs on the Flight IIAs without any Phalanx currently installed?
2. Will all the Phalanx mounted ABs be retrofitted with Block 1B upgrades?
3. Are those Flight IIAs with Phalanxes also capable of firing ESSMs?
4. Is the radar data output from the Phalanxes fed into the AEGIS system? Or is it standalone?
Thanks..
AFAIK at IOC JASSM will be the USAF and RAAF's primary anti shipping weapon for the F35A, and a feasome one. As for the RN's options i'm sure JASSM is a posibility if it gets of the ground. However there are a few more options. The norwegans did a study with the RAAF on the feasability of an airdropable version of their Naval Strike Missile (NSM) to be named Joint Strike Missile for the F35. It sounded like a very capable system, passive IR seeker, 3 didgit km range and LO provided by Lockheed Martin. The study found it could be droped from the internal bay of an F35A/C, although i'm not to sure about an F35B, but it could always be carried externally on the 'B. So far there has been no funding though. As for harpoon I cant see any reason why it cant be carried externally if not internally. Also for low end threats JSOW C III will be a very atractive option, 500kg warhead and IR seeker, especially given the capability and low cost. The combination of JSOW C and an expencive passive cruise missile seems to be a very atractive option and one that the USAF/USn is persuing. Does Storm Shadow have an anti shipping capability????Something to hope for is a return for the RN of a truly offensive punch in the form of the F35. Im not sure what the plans are for an anti ship capability but I would assume Harpoon could be integrated?
In a training scenarion or one were there was no air threat i'm sure the two strike packages could co-ordinate a simultanious launch at the same range from different barings. However if they were flying balls to the wall, at low altitude trying to get under a CAG, i seriously dount they would be able to co-ordinate to that extent.A link to sadden the heart is from blackburn-buccaneer.co.uk. This gives a glimpse of what the Fleet has been missing. A strike package of 6 buccs with 4 Sea Eagles each could split into two groups of 3, fly 40 miles apart and co-ordinate 24 missiles to arrive from multiple access, all in a 10 second window. Now that was an aircraft!!! They should have made a Bucc 2.
A pair of CVF's will put the RN clearly in the no 2 spot world wide, (considering the number of dairings being built). The ability to park a couple of squadrons of F35B's in someones back yard will give the RN the kind of international reach it has missed for so long, and give the PM the ability to persue the kind of "shotgun" diplomacy that currently only the US can. Definatly great news for the RN, i am Jelous!!!!By the time the carriers arrive it will be close to 40 years since we had that kind of punch so despite the sceptics, things are looking up, hopefully we will have a sufficient force to win air superiority and to carry out deep strikes on land targets and destroy surface groups. A stealthy anti ship missile would be nice but overall I think there is much to cheer about. If we can entagle ourselves from Iraq more money should become free for various tweeks and upgrades to the Fleet.
Not that I know of. The only major engagement I can remember where the RN took part in either 1941 or 1942 was the Battle of the Java Sea - the IJN won that. Then there's the Indian Ocean raid, which also went Japan's way.Did the RN have any successful navel engagements against the Japanese Imperial navy during WWII? That question is aimed more towards '41 / '42 era than when the carriers where involved latter.
Sorry for the delay in replying - No I do not anticipate Russia and China having carriers equiped with aircraft more capable than F35B's but carrier to carrier strikes have not happend since WWII. However, I am sure the Kuznetsoz and Varyag (or whatever it is called now) are, or will be, potent ships and the SU-33 is a formidable aircraft.Cak - Can you quantify the following statement: "The current carrier design though, is more than capable for the vast majority of designed missions but if Cold War 2 were to start they would not be Champions League."
Do you anticipate Russia and China having carriers equiped with aircraft more capable than F35B's, and escorted by DDG escorts more advanced than the T45 when the QE and POW become operational. If so please expand on your research?
Sorry for the delay in posting -Unless they are going to produce de gaul/nimitz esk carrier's with catapaults, AEW and a navalised PAK FA then I think CVF should be sitting quite nicely. And considering the carrier programes of the nations envolved, even if cold war 2 breaks out, they should be the 2nd class of carrier on the planet. Hell i wouldnt mind one.
Depends on what you mean by IR smoke.Just one small question (I hope it's not too OT) by a non-professional.
I just read that NSM and JASSM rely on a passive IR seeker in their anti-ship role.
Shouldn't this be easy to counter with IR smoke launchers on ships?
Ships should have a rather big smoke discharging capability due to the available space on a ship and the relatively small size of smoke launchers.
TKWA MASS (on German, Norwegian, Finnish, Swedish, UAE ships) uses a multi-mode decoy (OMNI TRAP), which will create after launch:Ships should have a rather big smoke discharging capability due to the available space on a ship and the relatively small size of smoke launchers.
No, & I'm not aware of it being worked on.... Does Storm Shadow have an anti shipping capability????...