IT IS SUBMARINE FREE WEDNESDAY...Alexsa...please observe!The stern section, including A brackets, is on display away from the casing. If is from here parts were taken.
IT IS SUBMARINE FREE WEDNESDAY...Alexsa...please observe!The stern section, including A brackets, is on display away from the casing. If is from here parts were taken.
You ruin all my fun. By the way after market double hulling is always going to be difficult, not least of which is the effect of increase light weight of the ship (hence it maximum bending and shear force limits may go up or down) and if you weld a hell of a lot of steel into a ship it can........ err ........warp.IT IS SUBMARINE FREE WEDNESDAY...Alexsa...please observe!
This would be interesting as I imagine it would have to have either Forgacs or BAE (WA) as prime as I am not sure that the ship lift at ASC is large enough for such a ship. Interestingly most of the engineering, procurement, project management, project engineering, systems engineering, systems integration, build assurance, planning, scheduling, activation, test, logistic engineering, TLS planning, training systems and support systems, not to forget the vital production trades and expertise, are all in Adelaide at ASC.It took some time but more information has been added to the online public DCP with quite a few changes to the JP2048Ph4C including the all important “desirability” to have the build in Australia.
Inflation is just about a third of the $1.5 billion estimate. The key difference is having an Australian build rather than an import.
Yeah it would be a lot cheaper to build the JP2048Ph4C overseas but it wouldn’t be cheaper to do that and then build a 4th AWD. Building the JP2048Ph4C in Australia between AWD #3 and S5K #1 will keep everyone in work and allow for systems design for the S5K and so on.
That's I was asking about, but also any potential RN ships for example that are part of downsizing (i.e. like Choules).If you are referring to AORs the problem is the need for a double hull ship to meet international obligations. The RFA Fort Victoria class are single hulled and one of them, only 15 years old, has just been laid up. Otherwise it would be ideal. It could be an option with a second wrap around hull like fitted to HMAS Success.
Is that a fact? Is Success a write off?The navy does not have that time, double hulling Success broke her. Her shafts are misaligned and she will never sail again.
I agree completely that it is important to keep a viable shipbuilding industry going in the gap between the AWD's and the SEA5000 Future Frigates.It would almost certainly be cheaper to have an Australian vessel build overseas if the build is part of a foreign sealift ship build programme due to economies of scale. Whether it would be better or not would really depend on the capabilities of the ship design in question, how easily (or not) Australia could ramp up to produce such a design, what it would cost built in Australia vs. an overseas build, and also what the Australian yard would do to maintain a work force and skilling in between the AWD and SEA 5000 programmes.
On a net cost to Gov't basis, an Australian build can cost 30+% more than an overseas build but still have a net cost to Gov't lower than a foreign build. Then there is also the gap between the AWD construction and the SEA 5000 construction, by having the replacement Sealift ship build in Australia, the yard could maintain the work force and the skills build up by the AWD programme until the SEA 5000 programme starts. If the future build were not to be done in Australia, then the SEA 5000 programme cost could be higher, because the yard might need to upskill a work force again, depending on how Gov't manages the naval shipbuilding industry in Australia.
-Cheers
Well im taking my mate who is a Naval Hull Surveyor on his word.Is that a fact? Is Success a write off?
Oh, come on! I don't think I can take another unfolding saga. Apart from "significant impairment", I'm starting to display all the diagnostic symptoms of PTSD.Her shafts are misaligned and she will never sail again.
H&W are still open the Fort Victoria design is not however, they are instead working with Rolls Royce on their designs for replenishment ships for the MARS program which in terms of AOR ships come in two sizes 14k dwt and 25k dwt. Which are more to the size of the Fort I class than the Fort IIs which are about 30k dwt although those are only provisional numbers. Oilers in weight have been dropping regularly though due to reduced needs of fuel in modern warships, the Waves are a few ks shorter than the Ol- class for example. If Australia and New Zealand hoped onto this program it could be good for them; New Zealand could take a Wave class unit which is a tad bigger but has all of their armament requirements for the Endeavour replacement and Australia could have on of each to replace the existing two with the Sirius in back up if it still has a few more years in it at the time of replacement.I've mentioned this previously on the RNZN thread, but as a Success & Sirius replacement - would the RAN consider a new-build Fort Victoria class (suitably double hulled of course). Say 2 hulls, constructed in Korea to reduce cost, fitted out in Australia. Co-op in NZ (who need an Endeavour replacement) and perhaps South Africa (I think they are still in the market for a Drakensberg replacement) for 1 ship each. Initially I hoped Canada & Australia might strike up a joint AOR project but the Canadians remain intractable on building in Canada. The RNZN AOR could act as "third banana" for the RAN fleet (which would give the RNZN a useful role).
I believe both the yards that built the Fort Victoria class in the 1990s are now closed (Harland & Wolff and Swan Hunter), so it may be possible to buy the plans from them (or the RN) with relative ease. Perhaps ask the RFA & RN to act as consultants.
I've picked the Fort Victoria over the more recent Berlin & Cantabria classes due to the larger dry stores capacity (useful if you're supporting a small land force, ala East Timor, and don't have a large merchant fleet to call upon). Apart from double-hulling the Tanker section, relatively little of the design would need to be changed.
But if Captain Cook is full of LHD/LSD/AOR modules where would the Navy have their bottoms scoured and twirly things fiddled with?I would have though GI would be a great place to build ships with portions coming from all the states (QLD, VIC, SA). GI is mentioned as being upgraded as part of it.. (4C)
well, there's a uniform shop right near wolloomoolloo in between various pubs.But if Captain Cook is full of LHD/LSD/AOR modules where would the Navy have their bottoms scoured and twirly things fiddled with?
It is as bad as mentioned, if not worse. The general feeling onboard Success is they wont last long, and work ups has been continually pushed back, with fleet saying it will conduct them, and the crew laughing and saying nope!Oh, come on! I don't think I can take another unfolding saga. Apart from "significant impairment", I'm starting to display all the diagnostic symptoms of PTSD.
I hope someone paid attention to the contract they signed on behalf of the Navy, because I would like to know if it is covered by ST Marine or this is a ticking package held by the Navy.
Would I be correct in thinking it isn't an easy (AKA quick and cheap) fix? I suppose an assessment is being/has been made regarding whether the Success is worth the cost of repairs. I would have thought that the capability is worth more than the scrap value, but...
Isn't ST Engineering one of those Singapore government majority-owned entities that are supposed to be held at arms length?
Idle thought. Spain is almost broke, the bills are starting to pile up, the Catabria is only a year old, and the Choules set a precedent...
Ohh...Genius moment crazy). Juan Carlos I is pretty close to Canberra/Adelaide in most respects and is only a year old, and Méndez Núñez (F104) is only a few years old and the last of class Cristobal Colón (F105) is currently fitting out, and those BAMs are quite fancy...
Make the right offer and the half the Armada could be yours!
On the joint needs on the RAN and RNZN, it may be so and Rolls-Royce (among others no doubt) is offering a design that will scale in size, I think the NZG has gone to the joint-acquisition well so many times only to refuse to drink that I'm not certain it will be seen as worth the trouble.
The Cross is just up the hill.fiddling will have to happen at the rocks...
bugger climbing those stairs. PITA unless you're into physicalsThe Cross is just up the hill.
:devil
Well THALES have finally f**Ked off GI, as most of their operations moved out leaving a few empty buildings, although ive got no idea whats going on with them. The base is planning a overhaul before the LHDs get in, with FSU getting shifted and new work shops put in elsewhere. but with this base review Shite they will put it on hold, decide to keep the base in sydney, then build 10years late, and at half the original cost...We could spread that out to a number other yards around the country (for the 12 months period the modules are speedily being assembled). I would imagine basic naval ship maintenance is fairly similar to commercial maintenance, while military building would require pretty specific knowledge. Actually more money could be saved by not doing any maintained while the ship is being built. GI is mentioned as being upgraded so I would assume the big build is happening there.. Long term this would be good as the upgrades are proberly needed so GI can do the bum scrubbing and twirly fiddling (while the crew is up at the cross, not the rocks).
Cockatoo is now in the hands of the almighty trust. It might be turned into an "aerial adventure park" with the bow of HMAS success permanently installed (as a folly?).