HE HE
Stop stirring the pot ! true enough though, commonality would be the smart thing to do and probably get a good price from the Spanish if you threw the carrot at them for a 3rd.
If a 4th AWD was on the cards (and not saying it is) you would do it on the back of the current program. To do a 4th in the middle of Anzac II would be a nightmare, very expensive, could have already lost skill sets and the ripple effect on the Anzac II program could be catastrophic and I believe a huge ask on the Australian ship building industry to cope.
now on the other hand you could bundle a 4th with the 3rd Canberra to be built side by side at Ferrol ? But I won't be holding my breath, hopefully we will find out their intentions soon enough when things have settled down with Largs aquisition etc
Its interesting how the debate has evolved from talk of a possible 3rd LHD (now more probable that the latest DCP has increased the "budget" for JP2048Ph4C from a range of $300-$500m to now $1Billion-$2Billion, which is a 400% increase on what was budgeted, I mentioned that on the Largs Bay page yesterday). To now also of the "often talked" about 4th AWD and how it could be done at, either the end of the AWD run or at the beginning, or in between, production of the ANZAC II's.
The Government has said it wants a much larger ship to replace the Anzacs, so what if the 8 ANZAC II's were "non AEGIS" versions of the AWD's?
If we went to our "Spanish" friends and said, apart from the current purchase of 2 LHD's and 3 AWD's, how about adding an additional LHD and start planning on making 8 non Aegis versions of the AWD's (Anzac II's) for us, bulk discount??
Same hulls, same machinery, many common systems, apart from the combat systems, seems like a very cost effective way to go to me.
If we had 3 x LHD's, probably only 2 at sea or in service at the one time, have two crews that can swap from to the other at anytime, no "retraining" just get in and start it and sail off!
The same with the escorts, if we eventually had up to 12 F100 hulls (3 AWD + possible 4th? + 8 ANZACII's).
Apart from the specific combat systems, the crews could reasonably easily transfer from one type to the other with very minimal re-training. Im sure there would be other major savings in the ongoing support and maintenance, same pool of spares, etc.
The US Navy has now had the DDG-51's in the water since 1991, thats 20 years, and plans to from what I have read, keep construction of Flight III Arleigh Bourkes going for another 20 years or so, must be big savings in both contruction costs and training of crews too.