t68
Well-Known Member
IMHO fitting at least one of the reworked Collins Class with the French Azipod propulsion system so as to 'test' if for faults could be a huge blessing for the RAN.
:fly
Gee I had to read that a couple of times :hul
IMHO fitting at least one of the reworked Collins Class with the French Azipod propulsion system so as to 'test' if for faults could be a huge blessing for the RAN.
:fly
The ships are designed to run hard. All RAN ships are required to complete periodic Full Power Trials, usually quarterly or before a docking, so that if problems are found they can be rectified.Assail wrote about his experience on the old HMAS Anzac going flat strap for 8 hours. I had a friend who pretty much said the same thing when he was serving on the Fremantle boats. It seems the navy does like to flog its ships pretty hard.
While I kind of understand the necessity of training hard it is ultimately the taxpayer that picks up the bill when they break something.
Yep it's a warranty job anyway, the only real cost to the ADF is stuffing up the training scheduleThe ships are designed to run hard. All RAN ships are required to complete periodic Full Power Trials, usually quarterly or before a docking, so that if problems are found they can be rectified.
As others have stated the whole point of operational testing and evaluation (OT&E), and Initial and Final Operating Capabilities is to find any shortfalls in equipment and procedures before accepting the ship to be available for operations. The LHDs have not been accepted as fully operational yet.
I think that the question that is going through many minds at present is:Yep it's a warranty job anyway, the only real cost to the ADF is stuffing up the training schedule
So Siemens and others build these for the majority of modern cruise ships so why would they become a continuing problem? The commercial sector are far more sensitive to cost than the RAN.I think that the question that is going through many minds at present is:
"..... is this a systemic problem with the LHDs' propulsion and will it continue to plague the class?"
Yes it is a warranty issue at present, but that is little comfort if the ships become dock queens
MB
Yep and its all ASCs fault, we should have listened to Johnston when he said he wouldn't trust them to build a canoe. All would be well is BAE were the prime and an existing design was used.So Siemens and others build these for the majority of modern cruise ships so why would they become a continuing problem? The commercial sector are far more sensitive to cost than the RAN.
Any new equipment being introduced to replace legacy shafts and props, jet v diesel, turbine v reciprocating, any quantum change brings challenges and takes time to understand the intracies of both operation and maintenance.
Leave the hand wringing until proper assessments have been made and the results promulgated.
Sky News is reporting Lemons the ABC is on the bandwagon and we're well on the way to repeating the atrocious and ill informed "dud subs" saga.
Hang on a minute - I can understand that there might be issues relating to a first of class RAN ship - teething problems if you will - but the problem has occurred in both ships at virtually the same time.So Siemens and others build these for the majority of modern cruise ships so why would they become a continuing problem? The commercial sector are far more sensitive to cost than the RAN.
Any new equipment being introduced to replace legacy shafts and props, jet v diesel, turbine v reciprocating, any quantum change brings challenges and takes time to understand the intracies of both operation and maintenance.
Leave the hand wringing until proper assessments have been made and the results promulgated.
Sky News is reporting Lemons the ABC is on the bandwagon and we're well on the way to repeating the atrocious and ill informed "dud subs" saga.
Reference for you post ? this is rubbish, it has been clearly stated that Canberra had an issue and when inspected that Adelaide had an "Emergent" issue of the same type, anything other than that is pure speculation and conjecture, so unless you have firm references or you are working on the actual problem first hand, how about you show some respect to a member of the forum who has a wealth of knowledge and experience !Hang on a minute - I can understand that there might be issues relating to a first of class RAN ship - teething problems if you will - but the problem has occurred in both ships at virtually the same time.
Yes there is no reason that if there are so many of these on modern cruise ships that there should be continuing problems - I agree.
But the fact of the matter is that they both clapped at the same time. There is one dry dock to accommodate repairs and the other ship must wait until there is space for it
MB
I'll just add to aussienscale's post.Hang on a minute - I can understand that there might be issues relating to a first of class RAN ship - teething problems if you will - but the problem has occurred in both ships at virtually the same time.
Yes there is no reason that if there are so many of these on modern cruise ships that there should be continuing problems - I agree.
But the fact of the matter is that they both clapped at the same time. There is one dry dock to accommodate repairs and the other ship must wait until there is space for it
MB
The only possibility I see for a third LHD would be as a replacement for the Choules sometime around the mid 30's.But part of me thinks 3 LHD ships would allow more frequent maintenance, a whole other hull to wear, tear, repair and flexibility regarding deployment, certification and training. It would certainly help with the availability of ARG capability.
Of course I know that would likely mean 3 ships would currently be tied up dockside. But the 3 ships would have less hr on each and one would be nearly new.
I am somewhat cynical of the new tech and lower maintenance and higher availability and such promises.
its not new tech though. its tried and tested commercially - the main difference is around tempo and hours per journey between commercial and military utilityI am somewhat cynical of the new tech and lower maintenance and higher availability and such promises.
Hoping the Canberra sea trials were successful today. Any idea when we'll know if Canberra is definitely OK for TalSaber?HMAS Adelaide has been pulled from TalSaber
Choules I don't think will be around forever and would be the logical asset to give up. I would assume the Navy could handle a swap, crewing wouldn't be identical, but may be workable. If another regional navy was very interested in Choules it might even happen before it's shagged. While mid 2020's sounded far off in the future back in 2006/7 it now only a few years away.its not new tech though. its tried and tested commercially - the main difference is around tempo and hours per journey between commercial and military utility
besides, its v early days on even trying to establish what the problem is and which is why all ships are IOC and not FOC
the only way that there will be a 3rd in class is for RAN to lose an equiv capital asset to allow for the shift in requirements
ie one for one replacement against another asset. and thats unlikely as the next decay date for a large asset is mid 2020's (optimistic)
unless the balloon goes up in the SCS earlier than expected, a 3rd phatship is a pipedream - and even then I could not see it happening