Thats no longer a relevant mission. We aren't in the 1940s anymore. It would also be pointless as any kind of threat that could reach out to such a convoy (like an SSN) would easily overcome the Tier II 'Patrol Frigate' and sink it along with the merchants.A long ranged escort of Australian shipping lanes during war time but not in the war zone. That is a pretty important role considering Australia's involvement in previous conflicts. A non-upgraded ANZAC could perform this mission perfectly.
Sure but the threat is more complex. If you send a frigate to the MEAO to fight Somalis it may also have to fight Iranians. In which case the current ANZAC is a sitting duck. Small Navies like the RAN do not have the kind of luxuries of scale to have some frigates configured for low level threats and some for medium/high level threats.Another mission would be anti-piracy. The ANZAC's long range and relative high speed of the frigate design allows it to catch pirates. You don't need a high end weapon system for this role.
As a training asset yes and a force presence but in a real battlefield its just 150 sailors waiting to be dropped into the water. There are serious concerns in the RAN about sending ANZACs into the Gulf where they can't even tell if they are being attacked by the latest Iranian missile technology.A lightly armed frigate is highly valuable. Or in our case a highly armed frigate who's capabilities are now considered slightly light. An OPV is often considerably slower than a frigate.
And if you want a fast OPV its not a hard job to do! Much easier than giving a frigate speed as you have less weight and volume to push through the water.
I have no idea what you are talking about? AEGIS has very high levels of automation, so to do the combat systems on USN SSNs.High end, state of the art technology often has very low levels of automation due to many issues such as lack of computing power, lack of mature software and the goal of pure performance.
I think you are confusing where these kind of ships get their automation crew savings from. its not the combat system but the vehicle system and the at-sea sustain capability. Its easy to pull crew from a ship that will only spend two weeks at sea within 100km of the home port. They have no capability to repair themselves. Its a different proposition for a long range self-sustaining fleet like the RAN.There are plenty of modern "low end" combat systems that have extremely high levels of automation designed for the new corvettes and armed patrol boats. These systems by todays standards may be considered "low end" performance wise but they would offer performance improvements over older high end systems.
Wrong and wrong. The AWD is pretty much the crew size of a minimum self-sustaining surface combatant. Even LCS with the crew for the capability modules is close to the 150-180 level of the AWD.I do not see why our Frigates cannot have corvette sized manned levels considering they will perform a similar mission to a corvette once we get the AWD's.
The ANZACs and the next frigate will not be performing corvette roles once the AWD is in the fleet. Not unless we build 8-12 AWDs which I doubt will happen.