The Royal Navy Discussions and Updates

RobWilliams

Super Moderator
Staff member
In a hot war with Iran ?

I'll take 19 destroyers and frigates every day of the week and twice on Sundays.

I've no idea why you're even asking the question - Visby can't self deploy as it has limited endurance, very limited AA capability, zero ability to take a hit. We'd never get 12 there as you'd have to transport them down then fly crews down. Visby is not and never will be what the RN needs - it's a coastal ship with limited range (about 2000nm at 15kts) Scotland might do well to license produce them if they get independence I guess. No hangar is a bit of a limitation for one of it's roles (ASW)

The RN is a blue water force, and those GP frigates can do the full spectrum of operations, including ensuring the safety of shipping in the area, doing the stop and check work, shelling the odd rocket battery, provide a deck for spec ops insertion and recovery, perform land attack. They have the defensive and offensive systems to take on a missile attack, defeat it, blow snot out of the offending missile battery before it can scoot away. They can go a long way, stay there for a long time and do a lot of missions, while remaining quite survivable.

I'm baffled why I have to explain this to you when you could just look at what the GP Type 23's are doing right now ?

You either have to preposition the Visby's in much the same way we do with the mine hunters or charter ships to piggy back them places. You're getting about 2.1-2.2 Visby's for the price of a Type 26 but getting them places is a chore.

MHPC I'm a lot more enthusiastic about as they look to be fairly large and capable OPV's but they need top cover and an AWD present in a shooting war (much as the current mine hunters do when plying their trade)

I honestly don't understand why Visby or the various short legged beasties like the Israeli corvette get dragged up when they're quite literally more trouble than they're worth to a blue water navy.

Ian
I agree, we appear to be thinking on VERY similar wavelengths.

T26 can perform a huge number more tasks than a Visby can for the RN as a blue-water Navy.

On another note, HMS Daring is on her way back to the UK

G'day, Diamond: Destroyer joins Australian warship East of Suez | Royal Navy
 

StobieWan

Super Moderator
Staff member
I agree, we appear to be thinking on VERY similar wavelengths.

T26 can perform a huge number more tasks than a Visby can for the RN as a blue-water Navy.

On another note, HMS Daring is on her way back to the UK

G'day, Diamond: Destroyer joins Australian warship East of Suez | Royal Navy
Don't get me wrong, the Visby and indeed the whole range of Swedish patrol and fast attack stuff is pretty good - they're just not blue water ships. And hey, a fully loaded Visby with AA was priced at about $184 m or about 150-160mill - that's about an 1/8 the tonnage of a Type 26 at near 2/5 the cost of a Type 26.
 

StobieWan

Super Moderator
Staff member
750mn per T45 is too high, most of the development costs for Sampson and Aster have already been spent.
http://www.rna-10-area.co.uk/files/NAO_type45.pdf#

Section 2.9, callout 12, £649 million in 2009 money for a single ship - stick that into an inflation calculator, and hey, let's use the bank of England one, here

Bank of England | Education | Inflation Calculator

That gives £714 million in 2011 pounds, which is as far forward as the calculator goes, then dial in two years inflation at 3% assuming you're ordering one for build in 2013 and you get £757 million.

Any questions ?
 

1805

New Member
It might be cheaper than building 5 GP frigates but those Frigates are already in the equipment programme and we have a use for them, we don't have a use for a third CVF no matter how you try and dress it up, and no we won't have the aircraft in the numbers that are required for HMS Extravagance's airgroup.

Last I heard the RN wasn't a job creation scheme either, which is just as well since your scheme involved robbing jobs used for 5 GP Frigates to create jobs for an unnecessary aircraft carrier. I would imagine the net gain in job terms would be not much if any.

I honestly can't see what your hard on for a third CVF is all about, especially since a number of people have already explained to you for a fraction of the cost we could get a couple of LPH/LHD which would provide a much greater utility.

Times are hard money is in short supply, the RN has to spend all of it's money as wisely as it can, should it be the beneficiary of additional funds there are numerous things they would rather spend money on than a prestige ship they have no use for that would just turn into an unused white elephant.
There are 2 different points here, mine is that a 3rd CVF could be used as a business case for additional money on the grounds of creating blue collar/trades employment. Employment has often been a driver for defence procurement, and this could be a positive point for the RN.

The second is the cost of 5 GP frigates could be better invested. I would not argue with the value of a 8th Astute, in fact I would before 3 SSBNs & 9 SSNs, however my preference would be the CVF.

On the finances of a CVF say: 1.3bn over 50 years would be near 800m over 30 years, less than 3 GP frigate at say c1bn, ignoring any additonal funding.

Blue collar job creation should be driven by tonnage; 65,000t CVF + say 10 x 2,000t OPVs = 85,000 of work v 5 x 6,000 = 30,000.
 

1805

New Member
The RN is a blue water force, and those GP frigates can do the full spectrum of operations, including ensuring the safety of shipping in the area, doing the stop and check work, shelling the odd rocket battery, provide a deck for spec ops insertion and recovery, perform land attack. They have the defensive and offensive systems to take on a missile attack, defeat it, blow snot out of the offending missile battery before it can scoot away. They can go a long way, stay there for a long time and do a lot of missions, while remaining quite survivable.

I'm baffled why I have to explain this to you when you could just look at what the GP Type 23's are doing right now ?

Ian
Most of these tasks can be done by an armed OPV, fitted with a 57mm cannon and bolt on/containerised packages. There are also grounds for heaver armed patrol craft, the Frigate/RHIB failed in the HMS Cornwall case.
 

Cadredave

The Bunker Group
Verified Defense Pro
Most of these tasks can be done by an armed OPV, fitted with a 57mm cannon and bolt on/containerised packages. There are also grounds for heaver armed patrol craft, the Frigate/RHIB failed in the HMS Cornwall case.
The same outcome would of occured with a OPV with the same crew, poor decision making with sub standard intel failed the crew of HMS Cornwall, blaming the frigate & the RHIB for the Cornwall mess is stretching it a bit too far dont you think, only a poor builder blames his tools for his shoddy workmanship.
 

Repulse

New Member
http://www.rna-10-area.co.uk/files/NAO_type45.pdf#

Section 2.9, callout 12, £649 million in 2009 money for a single ship - stick that into an inflation calculator, and hey, let's use the bank of England one, here

Bank of England | Education | Inflation Calculator

That gives £714 million in 2011 pounds, which is as far forward as the calculator goes, then dial in two years inflation at 3% assuming you're ordering one for build in 2013 and you get £757 million.

Any questions ?
Actually yes, you quote a number in a report that is a calculation of how much a T45 costed at the end of a poorly run project (which was cut in half) and claim that is how much it would cost next time. Please point me to the section which says how much additional vessels would cost in a well run / fully delivered project. By the way nice avoidance of the section that shows how the costs rose by 30% mostly due to delays.

Defence inflation is very difficult to calculate, and using a calculator which is based on normal good and services (including food etc) is an interesting approach. Having said that yes there will be inflation, please tell me what you think will be the inflation adjust unit cost for a GP T26?

I really do not get your absolute certainty that the only and best tool for the royal navy, which is struggling to meet it's peace time commitments, is 5 "high end and expensive" general purpose frigates.

I'm travelling at the moment but will reply later on your other posts.
 

StobieWan

Super Moderator
Staff member
Actually yes, you quote a number in a report that is a calculation of how much a T45 costed at the end of a poorly run project (which was cut in half) and claim that is how much it would cost next time. Please point me to the section which says how much additional vessels would cost in a well run / fully delivered project. By the way nice avoidance of the section that shows how the costs rose by 30% mostly due to delays.

Defence inflation is very difficult to calculate, and using a calculator which is based on normal good and services (including food etc) is an interesting approach. Having said that yes there will be inflation, please tell me what you think will be the inflation adjust unit cost for a GP T26?

I really do not get your absolute certainty that the only and best tool for the royal navy, which is struggling to meet it's peace time commitments, is 5 "high end and expensive" general purpose frigates.

I'm travelling at the moment but will reply later on your other posts.
It's irrelevant how badly the project was run when you're calculating how much in individual ship would cost to build. If you were calculating how much each destroyer had cost to build including project costs, then the way the project was run would be relevant. That number is how much turning a pile of steel and systems into a working warship would cost - it's got nothing to do with the project costs - please stop doggedly clinging to factors that have nothing to do with the numbers I've quoted.


We were not, we were discussing how much it would cost to build another two T45's.

I'd suggest 730-750 million is a tolerable estimate, not allowing for costs to restart production.

As to calculating inflation, do you think using the CPI would be more favourable or less favourable in terms of the final price? I ask because I suspect that 3% inflation is probably conservative and I selected that calculation because I thought we could agree it was reasonable and fair, not because I felt it would bolster my argument.If you have an alternate, sourced figure to use to adjust the 2009 figure for a unit price, run the numbers and show it to us.

And please stop with the straw man position that I've said anything about Type 26 being the "only" solution or the "best" - I've never said any such thing. Claiming the the other person's argument is based on some extreme point or another in order to undermine it in future hyperbole is one of the lowest forms of debate. And who were you quoting when you put quote marks around "high end and expensive" by the way? Sure weren't me....

Inflation adjustment for Type 26? Should be equivalent for anything else we selected so it's a level playing field. We're already agreed that we'd need to build 8 for ASW, so building another 5 simply spreads the program costs across more hulls. Additionally, Type 26 pulls through a lot of legacy or future legacy systems - which should reduce the margin for fumbling the ball by BAE or the MOD.

Either way, Type 26 will be every much a "done deal" as T45 is when it comes to building the GP variants. If you're accepting we build 8 ASW, then the remaining 5 GP variants come with no additional project or development costs, keep through life costs down by using a common training, spares and maintenance chain for all the major surface combatants.

Given T45 has a fairly limited set of potential roles right now, the Type 26 will be more widely capable on entrance to service - I'd like to see the 45's get some of that "fitted for" kit on board asap as it's fairly obvious they're going to spend a lot of time doing tasks other than air defence. Oddly, I suspect 26 will spend a lot of time doing tasks other than ASW as well.
 

StobieWan

Super Moderator
Staff member
The same outcome would of occured with a OPV with the same crew, poor decision making with sub standard intel failed the crew of HMS Cornwall, blaming the frigate & the RHIB for the Cornwall mess is stretching it a bit too far dont you think, only a poor builder blames his tools for his shoddy workmanship.
Very much so - the trigger for the Cornwall incident was by all accounts the lifting of a pair of Iranians in Iraq by SF - some sort of wider alert should have gone out as an all points warning that the Iranians might be looking for some sort of payback and that might have led to Cornwall shortening it's leash on it's patrols.

If an OPV plus patrol craft had been involved, they'd have been in *worse* trouble. Even if the OPV had been close enough to intervene, the Iranians could have just stuck two fingers up and held the OPV at risk rather than the reverse.

Cornwall was just one of those screwups that shouldn't happen, from start to finish. Pointing at the type of ship involved won't shed much light on how to stop it happening again.
 

kev 99

Member
There are 2 different points here, mine is that a 3rd CVF could be used as a business case for additional money on the grounds of creating blue collar/trades employment. Employment has often been a driver for defence procurement, and this could be a positive point for the RN.
Worthless, there is no positive business case for wasting £1.3b (you're rather optimistic figures) on something that nobody wants.

The second is the cost of 5 GP frigates could be better invested. I would not argue with the value of a 8th Astute, in fact I would before 3 SSBNs & 9 SSNs, however my preference would be the CVF.

On the finances of a CVF say: 1.3bn over 50 years would be near 800m over 30 years, less than 3 GP frigate at say c1bn, ignoring any additonal funding.

Blue collar job creation should be driven by tonnage; 65,000t CVF + say 10 x 2,000t OPVs = 85,000 of work v 5 x 6,000 = 30,000.
You want to create more jobs in the short term building a ship the RN don't want rather than stick with the current and funded plan of building 5 ships the RN does, assuming your rather crude metric is right then you're talking straight up boom and bust employment cycles.
 

StobieWan

Super Moderator
Staff member
The best single case I can think of for spot of solid job creation would be to bring MHPC forward a bit and expand it's proposed numbers up to 18 from 12 by just giving the navy a bit more cash slightly earlier and place that with Portsmouth to bridge whatever gap arose between CVF going out and 26 starting up - it'd keep an English yard open against the very slight possibility that Scotland voted for independence.

It'd be relatively cheap insurance, and we could sorely use the capability, plus the ships being bought would be quite low cost to run. In the life of this parliament, we'd be talking a few hundred million for 2-3 ships with good OPV capabilities, with the rest to run on into the 2020's . If you're playing "social workers paradise" with public money, I'd suggest that was at least passably useful activity.

Building a third CVF is one of the most bonkers ideas I've heard proposed yet, even at the imaginary bargain price of £1.3bn. I'm guessing nearer £3bn plus screwing up the build cycle for Type 26. Boom to bust is about right.

Plus,I doubt very much whether tax payers would have a lot of enthusiasm for what effectively is a grey elephant (like a white elephant, just much much more expensive)
 

kev 99

Member
The best single case I can think of for spot of solid job creation would be to bring MHPC forward a bit and expand it's proposed numbers up to 18 from 12 by just giving the navy a bit more cash slightly earlier and place that with Portsmouth to bridge whatever gap arose between CVF going out and 26 starting up - it'd keep an English yard open against the very slight possibility that Scotland voted for independence.

It'd be relatively cheap insurance, and we could sorely use the capability, plus the ships being bought would be quite low cost to run. In the life of this parliament, we'd be talking a few hundred million for 2-3 ships with good OPV capabilities, with the rest to run on into the 2020's . If you're playing "social workers paradise" with public money, I'd suggest that was at least passably useful activity.

Building a third CVF is one of the most bonkers ideas I've heard proposed yet, even at the imaginary bargain price of £1.3bn. I'm guessing nearer £3bn plus screwing up the build cycle for Type 26. Boom to bust is about right.

Plus,I doubt very much whether tax payers would have a lot of enthusiasm for what effectively is a grey elephant (like a white elephant, just much much more expensive)
Spot on, totally agree with all of that; advancing something we do want is a much more credible plan than wasting money on something we don't. There's also the chance that MHPC might have a chance at some exports so there's more chance of those extra bodies staying employed rather than going on the dole again at the end of the contract.
 

1805

New Member
The best single case I can think of for spot of solid job creation would be to bring MHPC forward a bit and expand it's proposed numbers up to 18 from 12 by just giving the navy a bit more cash slightly earlier and place that with Portsmouth to bridge whatever gap arose between CVF going out and 26 starting up - it'd keep an English yard open against the very slight possibility that Scotland voted for independence.

It'd be relatively cheap insurance, and we could sorely use the capability, plus the ships being bought would be quite low cost to run. In the life of this parliament, we'd be talking a few hundred million for 2-3 ships with good OPV capabilities, with the rest to run on into the 2020's . If you're playing "social workers paradise" with public money, I'd suggest that was at least passably useful activity.

Building a third CVF is one of the most bonkers ideas I've heard proposed yet, even at the imaginary bargain price of £1.3bn. I'm guessing nearer £3bn plus screwing up the build cycle for Type 26. Boom to bust is about right.

Plus,I doubt very much whether tax payers would have a lot of enthusiasm for what effectively is a grey elephant (like a white elephant, just much much more expensive)
I do agree with bringing the MHPC forward for all the reasons you mention.

I am certainly no socialst, however it is a powerful card the RN has, the employment case is often made around hi tech kit and is quite bogus, as it creates few jobs and normally only high skilled ones in demand commcerially. Big bulky warships have three massive advantages: they create more work /£, are at the right level, and largely in poor areas.

As to a 3rd CVF, if the RN thought it could get a third it would certainly want it, as to your £3bn, at the top end of any ones estimates; when you take design/set up and delays. The current 2 will only work out at c£6n. The CVFs should last 50 years, the frigates 30.

The whole contract would have to let on the clear basis of job creation/stimulus, built to the shipyards needs/schedule, work can stop when they like, they can use it as a cushion when more profitable work comes in. Build the most efficiently they can,. This would be the perfect contract for them ,guaranteed work in the background, and if when it got built it ended up getting sold to Brazil at a knocked down price to (cover the subsidy), tied into a nice frigate contract and getting the French out then no bad thing...we could then build a 4th.

Suddenly the politicians will start to think....really useful things these carriers they sort out all our foreign policy issues...create lots of employment in the right places...much better than expense IT kit. How far fetched is this...look at what is being spent of HS2 and some of the case for this is job creation. The RN needs to play the game better.
 

1805

New Member
Very much so - the trigger for the Cornwall incident was by all accounts the lifting of a pair of Iranians in Iraq by SF - some sort of wider alert should have gone out as an all points warning that the Iranians might be looking for some sort of payback and that might have led to Cornwall shortening it's leash on it's patrols.

If an OPV plus patrol craft had been involved, they'd have been in *worse* trouble. Even if the OPV had been close enough to intervene, the Iranians could have just stuck two fingers up and held the OPV at risk rather than the reverse.

Cornwall was just one of those screwups that shouldn't happen, from start to finish. Pointing at the type of ship involved won't shed much light on how to stop it happening again.
Its easy to blame poor intelligence, but these things happen, it could have as easily been completely out of the blue without any warning. I was not actually suggesting the OPV option in that case, more the Visby. I actually think these are to big and would rather have boats that could operate from a LPD/LSD, so they can be transported and maintained (c150-200t). Also it gives another use for LPD. But to your point, why would Cornwall be any better able to deal with a swam of boats than an OPV with a Wildcat?

Point is RHIBs are not for patrol work, even if you put an armoured box in them, they lack freeboard and armament.
 

StobieWan

Super Moderator
Staff member
Its easy to blame poor intelligence, but these things happen, it could have as easily been completely out of the blue without any warning. I was not actually suggesting the OPV option in that case, more the Visby. I actually think these are to big and would rather have boats that could operate from a LPD/LSD, so they can be transported and maintained (c150-200t). Also it gives another use for LPD. But to your point, why would Cornwall be any better able to deal with a swam of boats than an OPV with a Wildcat?

Point is RHIBs are not for patrol work, even if you put an armoured box in them, they lack freeboard and armament.
But the actual incident *didn't* come out of the blue - there was a definite case where Cornwall (and anyone else walking the fence that day) should have been on a state of heightened awareness. There then followed a chain of failures, including a fairly obvious failure to prepare the sailors against the event they were captured.

I can't fault the use of RHIB's for routine stop and check - it's more of a case that the mothership needed to have been closer to support operations on that particular day. They'd been tooling up and down the area without Iranian interference previously and things were *fairly* low key.


It's worth noting an Australian team had a similar brush with the Iranians few weeks or months earlier and their response was typically Australian, offering a brisk "stroll on mate" and ignoring all requests to stop and be boarded.

With respect to how much better a frigate would be vs a swarm of FAC's - I'm mindful of the fact that they were operating close to Iranian airspace, and near the coast - in point of fact, it's difficult at that part of the world to *not* be close to Iranian turf. Given that, if I were on the spot and had to get in among them, I'd be quite concerned about someone staging a supporting artillery strike, lobbing an ASM at me or scrambling a couple of jets just for giggles.

A decent size frigate with local area air defence, counter measures, plenty of cannon, some ASuW systems, a quick firing MCG, that's where I'd prefer to be. And the thing is, most days of the week, an OPV would be great for the work Cornwall was doing - make no mistake, this was after the end of the shooting war in Iraq and there wasn't much reason to think there'd be an exchange with the Iranians.

However, for that incident, you'd want a frigate, just in case you ended up taking on a chunk of the Iranian airforce while dodging missiles and shelling FAC's.

I know you'll suggest that an OPV could carry all that stuff, but if it did, it'd cost as much as Type 26 - but it'd be smaller, less resistant to damage, have less room for growth etc. My point is and remains, Type 26 is bargain basement price, mainly because so much of the technology and systems is being spread over both the Type 23 upgrades and the Type 26 builds.

I also expect 26 to more or less stay on budget, largely because so much of it will be stable and tested kit by the time it's deployed - this is not going to be another Type 45 where everything is new and nothing works without a lot of pennies chucked at it.
 

1805

New Member
A decent size frigate with local area air defence, counter measures, plenty of cannon, some ASuW systems, a quick firing MCG, that's where I'd prefer to be. And the thing is, most days of the week, an OPV would be great for the work Cornwall was doing - make no mistake, this was after the end of the shooting war in Iraq and there wasn't much reason to think there'd be an exchange with the Iranians.

However, for that incident, you'd want a frigate, just in case you ended up taking on a chunk of the Iranian airforce while dodging missiles and shelling FAC's.

I know you'll suggest that an OPV could carry all that stuff, but if it did, it'd cost as much as Type 26 - but it'd be smaller, less resistant to damage, have less room for growth etc. My point is and remains, Type 26 is bargain basement price, mainly because so much of the technology and systems is being spread over both the Type 23 upgrades and the Type 26 builds.

I also expect 26 to more or less stay on budget, largely because so much of it will be stable and tested kit by the time it's deployed - this is not going to be another Type 45 where everything is new and nothing works without a lot of pennies chucked at it.
Lots of reasons why they are cheaper: not carrying all the kit, diesels v GT, smaller crews, size of hull. Your view on CAMM seems to be it requires a ship not far short of a T45 and costs only marginally less...if it does it will not sell.
 

deepsixteen

Defense Professional
Verified Defense Pro
Hi

I would think that any reduction in the number of type 26 would be a mistake nineteen first rate escorts is about five short as far as I’m concerned and another CVF no way. Could see some merit in changing the Albion’s for LHD’s in the early 20’s when Ocean goes.

1805 if your political friends really meant what they said about reserves becoming increasingly important they would increase them proportionately as they draw down regular forces and if they want to get some +ve political credit via an economic stimulus a sloopy thing is the way to go.

Make around a billion available over ten years to allow a contract to be given to a shipyard in a depressed area to allow set up and production at a low rate of around 1 per year increased if any orders other than RN’s total of eight for the RNR prior to commencement of the MHCP program in the 20’s.

Draw down the Archers 2 at a time as the Sloop or whatever they want to call them become available to commission man them with 12 regulars and pad out with RNR as required for tasking, basing at the existing RNR headquarters attaching URNU as appropriate. This is cost neutral as per regulars but will require some uplift for RNR costs (peanuts compared to regulars) and the government scores a couple of quick wins re credibility and boosting the economy.

I would expect the Sloop thing to cost around 100m a pop give it a decent radar as flexible a CMS architecture as possible the 57mm as per LCS other than that I think pretty much as they have suggested only stretch it to just over the 100m mark as that helps improve accommodation sea keeping and speed all of which need to be improved slightly.

The RNR used to operate river class MCM and prior to that the Ton’s so plenty of precedent, adding the regulars should give continuity and enable deployability.
These substantial vessels would raise the profile of the RN in the ports that they are based, the areas they train/opperate/visit and provide a much needed asset to increase the utility of reserve forces, take on some constabulary work and help develop the MHCP concept all good positive stuff.

Deepsixteen
 
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StobieWan

Super Moderator
Staff member
Lots of reasons why they are cheaper: not carrying all the kit, diesels v GT, smaller crews, size of hull. Your view on CAMM seems to be it requires a ship not far short of a T45 and costs only marginally less...if it does it will not sell.
And with less crew and a smaller hull, they're less survivable. We've been down this route with the batch 1 Type 42's and the earlier type 23's that started out as more or less a place to park a TAS on. The reasons a GP frigate costs more is because it's better fitted to survive being shot at and being hit.

CAMM faces the same limitations as Aster, SM6, Mica etc - it's fitted with an active seeker with a relatively small field of view. I think CAMM looks to be a tolerably capable missile and certainly competitive with similar products. However, in a complex and difficult environment, I've read enough comments from people who seem to know what they're talking about to make me wonder if Artisan will cope.

CAMM is or will be, quite a bit cheaper than Aster, probably about 1/3 or 1/4 the price, and of course it quad packs - there's lots to say it'd be a hefty step forward from say, Rapier. Compared to SeaWolf, it's not limited by fire control channels or illuminators, plus you're getting rid of the heavy and expensive Mk99's into the job. That's all good stuff and with the refits, the Type 23's will give good service.
Where I'm a bit worried is that Artisan seems to be a bit underspec for service into the 2030's - it's a single face mechanically scanned AESA set, with some good capabilities but it scans at 30 rpm I believe, so you can do the arithmetic on how often it can give an update to a CAMM in mid flight. The more updates in mid flight, the nearer the seeker will be pointing at the target when it goes active and the less likely it is to be distracted or simply fail to find the target.

I think if you chuck that into San Carlos sound situation with a lot of chaff and low flying targets in choppy seas, Artisan may struggle.

I may be wrong and it's possible that the beam forming capabilities of the set can paper over the dwell time, giving a virtual target illumination of sorts - it's not something I understand well enough to hazard a guess about however.


There are some really nice looking multi panel radar sets out there - in an ideal "happy Christmas RN" moment, I'd prefer that type 26 got something more like CEAFAR, and the Artisan sets could be pulled through into the patrol craft, for which they'd be excellent sets.

CEAFAR:

CEAFAR Minor War Vessel Radar (CEAFAR MWVR)
 

1805

New Member
And with less crew and a smaller hull, they're less survivable. We've been down this route with the batch 1 Type 42's and the earlier type 23's that started out as more or less a place to park a TAS on. The reasons a GP frigate costs more is because it's better fitted to survive being shot at and being hit.

CAMM faces the same limitations as Aster, SM6, Mica etc - it's fitted with an active seeker with a relatively small field of view. I think CAMM looks to be a tolerably capable missile and certainly competitive with similar products. However, in a complex and difficult environment, I've read enough comments from people who seem to know what they're talking about to make me wonder if Artisan will cope.

CAMM is or will be, quite a bit cheaper than Aster, probably about 1/3 or 1/4 the price, and of course it quad packs - there's lots to say it'd be a hefty step forward from say, Rapier. Compared to SeaWolf, it's not limited by fire control channels or illuminators, plus you're getting rid of the heavy and expensive Mk99's into the job. That's all good stuff and with the refits, the Type 23's will give good service.
Where I'm a bit worried is that Artisan seems to be a bit underspec for service into the 2030's - it's a single face mechanically scanned AESA set, with some good capabilities but it scans at 30 rpm I believe, so you can do the arithmetic on how often it can give an update to a CAMM in mid flight. The more updates in mid flight, the nearer the seeker will be pointing at the target when it goes active and the less likely it is to be distracted or simply fail to find the target.

I think if you chuck that into San Carlos sound situation with a lot of chaff and low flying targets in choppy seas, Artisan may struggle.

I may be wrong and it's possible that the beam forming capabilities of the set can paper over the dwell time, giving a virtual target illumination of sorts - it's not something I understand well enough to hazard a guess about however.


There are some really nice looking multi panel radar sets out there - in an ideal "happy Christmas RN" moment, I'd prefer that type 26 got something more like CEAFAR, and the Artisan sets could be pulled through into the patrol craft, for which they'd be excellent sets.

CEAFAR:

CEAFAR*Minor War Vessel Radar (CEAFAR MWVR)
What are you going on about? We are talking about a patrol craft of c2,000 which might have to deal will a randon SSM fired from the shore, (aka INS Hanit). A 57mm combined with either a bolt on SeaRam or Phalanx, should be sufficient. Anything more hostile and you need carrier aircaft or an AWD.
 

StobieWan

Super Moderator
Staff member
What are you going on about? We are talking about a patrol craft of c2,000 which might have to deal will a randon SSM fired from the shore, (aka INS Hanit). A 57mm combined with either a bolt on SeaRam or Phalanx, should be sufficient. Anything more hostile and you need carrier aircaft or an AWD.[/QUOTE

No indeed - I was simply talking about why Artisan might not be viable in a high threat environment and what alternatives I'd possibly prefer something more capable. I'm disappointed you didn't apparently read any of that part of the post and chose to respond to an entirely tertiary matter instead.

At least we're finally agreed you can't send a patrol craft to do a frigate's job though, progress of sorts.
 
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