I was highlighting that both vessels perform well but aren't maintained to a standard where they can be effectively used. It's why ILS needs to be an integral past of ship selection. Everyone focuses on up front costs of vessels and less on the on going sustainment.
Hence one of the reasons why 10 -12 AWDs would be better and not necessarily that much more expensive than 3-4 AWDs and 6-8 Types 26s, the RAN will already have the support system in place for the AWD while the Type 26, especially if it is Australianised, will require another, quite different support system. Each FEG, each SPO each TLS or what ever contract is an additional overhead requireing substantial investment on money and personel (both in short supply).
Droves of people suffling paper and fighting battles every day to get the job done, professional engineers employed in "clerical" engineering roles, reviewing and approving documents rather than working as engineers solving problems and making things better.
At the end of the day would the RAAF ever consider running a mixed fleet of 1 sqn of F-22, 2 of Typhoons and 3 of Gripens? No, why not? well the support overheads would result in a massive reduction in capability vs what could be had when cncentrating on a single type.
What can a Type 26 or similar do compared to an AWD? Maybe it would be very slightly better at ASW, what can an AWD do that a Type 26 can't, well lets see anti air warfare, battlespace command and within in an available upgrade spiral ABM.
You pay more upfront for the platform but gain capability and save in training and other support costs.