I meant the dimensions of the F35 compared with Ark Royal'sCombat Fleets of the World says two 16.7 meters x 9.7 meters for the Invincible class carriers. I have not been able to find the Queen Elizabeth's size yet. While the Invincibles are rated for one Harrier each, 40 ton, , the Queen Elizabeth's two lifts are rated for two Lightning IIs and Harriers each, 70 tons.
Every graphic released by the Royal Navy shows two Lightning IIs on each lift. I assume the Royal Navy knows what they want and will get it. Why are you so interested in the exact size? The Royal Navy has probably added a fudge factor to include two Rafaels and/or two Hornets or Super Hornets too.
As i understand it, CAAM (Seawolf replacement) is based on the ASRAAM missile and is also supposed to be capable of being deployed on land as a Rapier replacement. So i could quite easily see it being constructed in a VLS form, possibly in a sylver VLS (for T23's) and Canister form similar to RAM (for land deployment + CIWS on T45's and FSC).The Mod has just signed an agreement with all of the Team Complex Weapons members, two contracts have been placed with MBDA (UK) Ltd and Thales UK to develop six Complex Weapons projects within the Assessment Phase, worth around £74 million for the first year. These include:
Indirect Fire Precision Attack Loitering Munition (MBDA-led with Team Loitering Munition);
100kg weapon family to meet first the Future Air-to-Surface Guided Weapon (heavyweight) requirement for Royal Navy helicopters (MBDA);
Light weapon family to meet first the Future Air-to-Surface Guided Weapon (lightweight) requirement (Thales UK);
50kg weapon family to meet the Selected Precision Effects At Range (SPEAR) requirement for fast jets and helicopters (MBDA);
The Common Anti-Air Modular Missile family to meet first the requirement for a Future Local Area Air Defence System (FLAADS) for the Type 23 frigate and the Future Surface Combatant (MBDA);and
An upgrade programme for Storm Shadow, currently used on the Tornado GR4 (MBDA)*.
One of the contracts refers to FLAADS, which I can only assume is a replacement for SEAWOLF, which also could make an appearance on future C2 or 3 assets (as an alternative to PAAMS on C1). If we are looking at a SEAWOLF replacement then the new design will have to be fairly compact to enable it to be installed in the space currently filled by the existing silo? This may also indicate the UK Governments intention to drag-out the life of the T23. Fit the system on the T23 first then transfer across to C2 or C3 as the former are decommisioned and the latter come online!
*Note: Info taken form MOD site.
seems to me a UK Mica system is what they are trying to develop with CAMM.As i understand it, CAAM (Seawolf replacement) is based on the ASRAAM missile and is also supposed to be capable of being deployed on land as a Rapier replacement. So i could quite easily see it being constructed in a VLS form, possibly in a sylver VLS (for T23's) and Canister form similar to RAM (for land deployment + CIWS on T45's and FSC).
Why not go with VL Mica? Already developed missile with dual seeker option? Is this industrial politics or really relevant development program?seems to me a UK Mica system is what they are trying to develop with CAMM.
That's what I call EU defense efficiency I wonder if MBDA in reality will develop just one system but will force governments to pay for development of four separate ones...Pure industry politics, the MoD wants a "British solution".
Note that MBDA is the official sales agent for both CAMM and VL Mica, and also develops LFK NG, IRIS-T SL and HFK for the same thing essentially.
As long as the jobs in x-shire (or wherever the pork is to be distributed) are kept I don't think British MoD will care.Can reuse components (e.g. launchers) if appropriate, and even sell it as an advantage (cost savings, interoperability, etc.), but don't you think someone might notice if their "Asraam-based" missile looked exactly like a Mica or IRIS-T, or any other similar substitution?
So it would have some capability of area air defense (not just goalkeeper). As for layman as me, capability of firing RF and IIR sensor missiles at same target at same time would appear to be a big plus.MBDA says 20 km range for VL Mica, not 10 km.
http://www.mbda-systems.com/mbda/site/ref/scripts/EN_VL-MICA-Land_94.html