Shane I think you need to read this.
Whilst it is not about things naval, it is a good backgrounder. I also think you need to read back through this thread to gain an understanding of the NZ context.
The hull shape is extremely important. The max velocity of the hull through the water is a function of the length and width of the hull at the water line. It’s a matter of wave theory. This also means that the larger and the heavier the hull the greater the energy required to move it through the water.
Why would a frigate want four helos? They take up weight and space. Too much weight above the waterline makes a ship top heavy and prone to capsizing, which is very deleterious to a COs promotion chances. Space is at an absolute premium on a warship especially a frigate-sized one. Then you have to take into account the extra crews, maintenance crew, four times the required fuel storage and magazine storage, for no significant gain.
The Type 26 is going to be too expensive for NZ and may not necessarily meet NZs requirements, nor Australias’ for that matter. The ANZAC FFH replacement that the RAN does build may, for all intents and purposes, not be suited to NZs requirements because the RAN will have a very high tech and expensive requirement, including such things as VLS Tomahawk Cruise Missile capability, ESSM and or RAM, and possibly close to AEGIS capability. Whereas the NZ requirement will be more for a GP Patrol Frigate with good ASW some AA capability and hopefully good ASuW capability that more than likely will not include Tomahawk. We do need to have a good ASuW weapon which we don’t at the moment on our frigates and I think this
Kongsberg Defence & Aerospace NSM Naval Strike Missile - JSM Joint Strike Missile would be truly ideal. We have just acquired their AGM 119 Penguin with the ex-RAN Seasprites. However we’d be dreaming just to get Harpoons. I think at the moment the Absalon class is more suited to our needs. The UK Type 45 Daring Class are destroyers and very expensive, plus we don’t have any requirement for them.
A fighting ship is different to an amphibious ops vessel in many ways. The LPD/LPA/LHD/LSD etc., by their nature are not fighting ships. Weapons and sensors take up room so what do you drop in capability so you can include those weapons in such a vessel? Do you carry less troops, avfuel, IFVs, landing craft, ammo, water etc., instead? You can’t keep increasing the size of the ship because it becomes plainly uneconomic and just creates another easier skimmer target.
The BAE CV is the RN QE carriers. Overall your idea won’t work because it is an unworkable concept at sea especially for a small navy like the RNZN. Big ships like that are not agile and make nice fat skimmer targets for fullas who wear dolphins or wings and for smart missiles. Why do you think that large ships, even in the USN, have escorts and that if what you propose was a viable concept then navies like the USN or RN would have tried it.
Another two important concepts you must understand are the political and economic aspects of NZ defence policy and how this policy is arrived at. The reality in NZ is that defence is not a priority and hasn’t been for two generations. Defence spending of 1%GDP is not enough and it has been two generation since defence spending was at 2% GDP.
Hi Ngati,
In terms of the thread and also the RN, RAN, USN and the anglophile and Russian threads generally they consume more of my time than the missus thinks healthy (accuse her of the same on Pinterest and its mighty response back and ice cold looks for an hour). With OPSSG's Air power 101, had read that previously but will read it again shortly. As with all his pieces its well put together and informative (as with pretty much everybodies work here frankly). I'm yet to verify it with GF and Feanor I am with the Army reserve and ex regular and have a number of friends who are current and ex navy so I have a little (no expert though) exposure to navy. We use their facilities in Town for our company lines now.
My work history is pretty varied but for a brief period I worked for a firm that made hull forms for racing rowers and Kayaks, wing forms and some flow analysis type work . I am far from an expert. Really far.But have a good appreciated for hydrodynamics and understand that finding a good wetted hull shape would require some talent but not impossible.
Also for my sins I worked in a govt ministry under labour and national in a policy role. I haven't paid fully my debt to society for that one yet but became pretty aware of the fickle nature of the politcal system we live under and worked with treasury abit when whole of government was still really popular (I am told its not so much now, too expensive apparently). So I was bitten by their involvement a couple of times. Having said that I came to respect them for the skills they bring to the table.
So yeah on those two points alone this concept is a non-starter and I acknowledge that.
And also the physical performance of such a ship with the weight distribution and Centre of balance and gravity issues would mean it would not (I would think) handle like a more typical frigate so you definitely have me on that one I think. It could be doable might you'd need a better engineer than me.
In terms of energy generation and propulsion to move an 8,000 tonne vessel at combat speeds I think we are going to have to pay that price soon anyway to stay inter-operable. Everybody else is going larger seemingly. To go smaller (which could happen) might relegate us further down the table of relevance.
Regarding four helo's I would have thought having to risk say one or two helos at say 100 mil a pop is better than risking a 1 billion warship and the strategic balance for our small navy that goes with it.
Additional helo's give you additional area coverage, time on station and concurrency.
Additional sensor coverage and convergence in the immediate action, over the horizon coverage, personal and material movement just a greater degree of flexibility.
IF you could make more helicopters operate of a platform without compromising the vessel I don't see why you wouldn't. I think any surface captain would love to have a greater extension of influence if his government saw fit to equip him so (which won't happen). But I concede making it fit is the issue and I think you are right.
I did mock up something on a CAD programme awhile back ( I can send you stills if you wanted but its pretty amateurish and not pretty) and the volume seemed to be there. But that is done with my ignorance of these things and with cutaways of say mk45 and turret, VLS images and pretty roughly scaled.
Regarding the RN's CVF no I wasn't referencing those. I was referencing a concept put forward by BAE that I believe amounted to nothing more than a paper tiger (probably for good reason which probably relate to this concept of my own). If you are not familiar with it google BAE CVX and there should appear an image of a ship with two decks angled 15-25 degrees of centreline with a conventional bow and VLS arrangment forward. That is more what I am thinking of. But kept with a through deck cruiser or sea control ship kind of arrangement.
The Type 45 reference in my post wasn't to highlight an option for us to purchase but to highlight the design trend in modern warships with a high mounted sensory emplacement and correspondingly wider margin in beam to length to bear them.
High mounted AESA's for example in the ANZAC CEA refit and the F-100 AEGIS panels (correct me there though if I am wrong on any of that). I wouldn't advocate a British purchase just yet till their defence project management shows signs of systemic improvement.
But I'll concede (if that is even necessary) that I think you are right. The top weight and distribution imbalances probably make this a physical non starter and politically we will be lucky to get replacements given the performance from a screaming minority over the last two vessels we'll be lucky to have a service with which to commission them into.
We really are in danger though of like the skyhawks and centurions of having a fit for purpose and capable defence force after we needed it ( no combat air and no armour). Like 1945, when we needed it in 1941. That little concept of mine was an thought of desparation to fit everything into a budget of as you say 1% (notional) when we have the commitments of 1.5% or more. It is rather ominous I think given how the last decade has changed things so greatly so quickly. And I would agree with you completely regarding two generations if not more.
If I sought to be realistic (a dangerous thing to do) and looked for something off the shelf from a reputable supplier I agree the Absalon would be a good fit and could be made to fit the electorates expectations if presented correctly. And the Seasprite purchase could be a real decider in our nations history to come.
A fighting ship is different to an amphibious ops vessel in many ways. The LPD/LPA/LHD/LSD etc., by their nature are not fighting ships. Weapons and sensors take up room so what do you drop in capability so you can include those weapons in such a vessel? Do you carry less troops, avfuel, IFVs, landing craft, ammo, water etc., instead? You can’t keep increasing the size of the ship because it becomes plainly uneconomic and just creates another easier skimmer target.
Absolutely. My current career is all about finding the optimal mix of customer directed compromises. This for someone alot better than me would have to be found at some intersection point aswell with quality customer input to determine where that would be. But yes on the face of it, it is asking alot from one design.
Actually just looking back. The Absalon could as a design suffer the same issues really as my little thought excercise. Absalon's are 6,600 tonnes, armed similar to a fighting vessel, 6 m draught, 20 beam 140 ish long and take two AW101's so its not too dissimilar in those basics except for shape and the consequences that come with it I guess (as addressed above).
I wonder what damage control the Absalon is designed around compared to Iver Huitfeldt's?
Anyway hope all is good
Cheers
Shane