Ironically the AWD and ANZAC projects have shown Australia can do the platform side very well, where it fell down was procurement from overseas and initial coordination of subcontractors which they never caught up from. ASMD has shown that CS development is well on it's way as well. It really is to bad the government of the day didn't order a batch of stretched ANZAC FFGs or DDGs to follow the ANZACs instead of upgrading the FFGs and then following them with the AWDs later.Different hullforms do indeed perform differently. Of course the systems fitout has a larger role in most case, the hull everything gets packed into is important.
One of the British frigates, either the Type 21 or Type 23 (I forget which design) has been noted as being particularly quiet in the water. Part of the reason is that the design was to have an ASW focus, so that steps were taken to reduce the amount of radiated noise from the vessel, to improve the performance of sonars which would be used to hunt for subs.
Now a great hullform will not make up for a poor choice in machinery/mounting, but everything else being equal, one hullform can be better for ASW, one for speed, another for fuel efficiency, another for launching/recovery of smallcraft, etc.
Given the AAD focus of the AWD, a 'quiet' hull would not matter so much. However, if the follow-on frigate to replace the ANZAC-class is likely to have a greater emphasis on ASW, then IMO the design should get every potential advantage possible. To my way of thinking, this means a quiet hull and machinery setup, capacity for two helicopters, hull-mounted and towed sonar arrays, ship-mounted LWT's, and VLS sized to launch ASROC and the follow-on, in addition to the regular frigate features for GP operations.
As for Australian naval shipbuilding... If I had the option, I would place an order for a 4th AWD (likely too late by now...) which would provide a batch of 4 AWD's in service, and might, just might, shave a year or two off the shipbuilding Valley of Death. That might be enough time to either bring the frigate replacement programme forward, or an OPV/OCV build programme. In either case, the vessels should be ordered in lots of four.
As for resuming construction of large vessels in Australia... I have to ask if there is really going to be sufficient need to justify investing in the infrastructure necessary to do so? AFAIK there is at present no operational dockyard in Australia large enough to build a vessel on the scale of a desired AOR or LHD.
-Cheers
Now the best option would be a class of OPVs but I think the government is set on more patrol boats. An OPV is more expensive to buy up front but more durable, capable and better value for money through life. Wait and see.
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