Royston Vasey? Are you local?Yeah - I must admit, despite a massive attack of bah humbug on my part, I was at a village fete over in Royston on the Sunday night, .
Royston Vasey? Are you local?Yeah - I must admit, despite a massive attack of bah humbug on my part, I was at a village fete over in Royston on the Sunday night, .
Well, Barkway, near Royston - I'm over in Bedfordshire. Last time I was in Reading was for the half marathon (tottered over the finish line in 2:20 on the nail.)Royston Vasey? Are you local?
You might want to duck, I think something went straight over your headWell, Barkway, near Royston - I'm over in Bedfordshire. Last time I was in Reading was for the half marathon (tottered over the finish line in 2:20 on the nail.)
Spazsinbad gets into numbers on that and he's just joined here - ex A4 driver so he's got a good perspective on Naval aviation. Gist of it, a ski jump gets you into the air with a potentially higher MTOW - B's limit is internal fuel so the range isn't affected greatly. It does help get the thing into the air with more stuff hanging off of it so with a Day One VLO config and internal weapons and fuel only, no gain. Carrying stuff on pylons, you can get off with more gear, but of course, that's more to dump if you have to come back as the SRVL landing has limits to bring back weight that are much lower than the MTOW with a ski jump - meaning an immediate go around/abort will see lots of expensive stuff being dumped.I was a little miffed at the Swordfish didn't do it's fly-by.
Does anyone have any information regarding what the stats of the F35B might be for the Royal Navy? After all, in USMC service it won't be using a ski-ramp like the RN and from my understanding it improves the effective take off weight for the aircraft?
Or are the numbers being tossed around pretty much it?
I caught the Royston Vasey thing but took the "are you local" at face value.You might want to duck, I think something went straight over your head
http://mtpt.files.wordpress.com/2010/02/local.jpegI caught the Royston Vasey thing but took the "are you local" at face value.
The place might have been *twinned* with Royston Vasey in that case -I was given strict instructions not to photograph the web-toes and not to start rattling out anything *like* the intro to battling banjos in case it got the natives excited.
You can hardly blame the Telegraph for calling CEC a "missile system", after all, it's main use could be described as such I reckonA lot more right than wrong in this one if you get past the daft title given that CEC isn't a missile.....
Cutting missile system leaves warships at risk - Telegraph
The article later mentions that HMS Trenchant will be the 'shark' in an ASW exercise, hopefully they might publish a bit on about how she did, after all, they did with HMS Astute's duel with USS Virginia (I think that was the boat, not 100% so don't quote me on that!)With the visitors gone, Trenchant can think about deploying; she's due to take over from HMS Triumph as the Silent Service's permanent presence east of Suez, ready to respond to global events if needed, and supporting the wider international naval mission to keep sea lanes open to merchant traffic.
I have noted a lot of people speculating on V22 Osprey operating as an AEW platform of late, I can see the attraction but for bang for your dollar I cannot see how it will ever takeoff. You cannot model it on a E2 Hawkeye as the fuselage has no way of accepting a radome without compromising its ability operate in its intended role from vertical flight to horizontal plus stowage on board a carrier, It might accept the same systems being planned for Merlin. Unless the Americans picture a V22AEW version replacing Hawkeye in the future it I believe will stay in the realms of wishful thinking.- - The adoption of V22 Osprey in the AEW space, and maybe logistics, even SF roles (ideally cancel the Chinook order).
Yeah - we've already traded way too many escorts for CVF as is.No to V22, it's an expensive maintenance pig.
Good luck trying to get a £2b ship as a replacement for a £350m (approx) one.
I am not sure I understand you arguement around escorts, the number of ASW escorts would increase by 1 over the current Type 26 planning. What will the GP version bring....crusie missile capability that could be achieved with the Type 45 & ASW Type 26.Yeah - we've already traded way too many escorts for CVF as is.
We badly need more escorts in the water, so trimming Type 26 is a bad idea.
I'm interested in the Black Swan as an MHPC (or whatever way the letters go around) replacement as it could be tolerably flexible but using it as a replacement in any numbers for a Frigate is bonkers.
And definitely no to V22 - it's expensive to buy and to run, if it was free, yes please, otherwise, no ta...
£2bn for a 65,000 ships, with no significant design costs (they have been paid for), schedule completely around the requirements of the UK ship building industry with a contribution for the employment created in depressed regions. Compared with 4 Type 26 say 1.5bn - 1.6bn.No to V22, it's an expensive maintenance pig.
Good luck trying to get a £2b ship as a replacement for a £350m (approx) one.
I am not sure I understand you arguement around escorts, the number of ASW escorts would increase by 1 over the current Type 26 planning. What will the GP version bring....crusie missile capability that could be achieved with the Type 45 & ASW Type 26.
On the V22, yes more expensive, but you have to balance with the very significant capability increase over Merlin in the key areas for an AEW platform: range/ceiling. I find this a similar case to CEC debate; we spend millions on expensive kit and then cut on really vital equipment that makes it really perform. We are talking about the eyes of the fleet
You have to balance capability this is an increase in ASW capability which is worth paying for, what will the GP ones bring that can not be done by the Black Swans more cost effectively?You've suggested cutting Type 26 from 13 to 9, that's 4 less escorts.
Current planning is 8 ASW using 2087 and other kit pulled through from Type 23, and 5 GP, also using kit pulled through from Type 23.
Cutting it to 9 ASW and no GP means buying a further 2087 TAS, and binning four sets of Artisan and other associated kit that had been fitted to Type 23.
So, instead of 8 ASW plus 5 GP Type 26, we'd have 9 Type 26 ASW. That's *less* escorts, at least in terms of major surface combatants.
AFAIK the only real difference between the GP and ASW T26 is that the GP just doesn't have the specific ASW kit, but everything else is the same but they still have the capacity to handle the ASW gear if the situation demanded itI am not sure I understand you arguement around escorts, the number of ASW escorts would increase by 1 over the current Type 26 planning. What will the GP version bring....crusie missile capability that could be achieved with the Type 45 & ASW Type 26.
I thought the 4 Type 26s you want to cut is paying for your increase in the survey/MCM/OPV fleet that comes from your 30 Black Swans?£2bn for a 65,000 ships, with no significant design costs (they have been paid for), schedule completely around the requirements of the UK ship building industry with a contribution for the employment created in depressed regions. Compared with 4 Type 26 say 1.5bn - 1.6bn.
This arrangement would give the RN a positive PR image. How much of the CVF costs are related to: design , delay, split construction locations and F35b & c study?
In truth allowing for inflation you could probably get one for less than £1.5bn.
I don't think we need more of the Black Swans than proposed (actually less than that document). But you would need some to entre service before the 4 Type 23s leave, so I was not counting the cost here. Also there is no rush for a 3rd CVF to be commissioned certainly the gap between Ocean going could be covered. One of the benefits of a high profile asset is the PR value, and the ability to get additional funding for the RN for the employment it offers (this does work it must have been a big consideration for the Labour party in the initial orders). The Enforcer would be a new design/construction, although not likely to be an expensive construction neither is the CVF both are large bulks of steel. BAE have outsourced some of their current workload to A&P (although this is being reduced). All the cost of the CVF is the delays and design, and set up, its all done.I thought the 4 Type 26s you want to cut is paying for your increase in the survey/MCM/OPV fleet that comes from your 30 Black Swanns?
I find it extremely debatable that you would get a third CVF for £1.5b.
Buying a third CVF as a dedicated Ocean replacement isn't a particularly good idea, it would make more sense to buy something like an Enforcer LHD, in fact you could probably get 2 for less money.