JulioCompactus
Member
the younger flight 1 are the same age as ANZAC and it is important to note that the surface fleet looks after its ships a lot better than the gator navy
Sold. Can you and/or @Volkodav put together a proposal to govt please? (only kind of joking)Operational cost (including crewing cost) is one of the key supporting reasons as to why both I and others support a ‘GP Frigate’ being built simultaneously with Hunter ASAP and most likely at Henderson.
The ANZACs already absorb a huge amount of fleet sustainment costs - and that’s only going to grow as they age.
The fact is, there’s multiple ship designs in the market which can provide more capability than the current Anzacs with both lower sustainment costs and far less core crew.
you are right but that option will take many years - probably longer than the AWD upgrade unless you build overseas which isn't a realistic option. The sad fact is the ONLY option to quickly supplement the surface fleet with useful capability is 2nd hand ships preferably from a nation that uses common systems.Operational cost (including crewing cost) is one of the key supporting reasons as to why both I and others support a ‘GP Frigate’ being built simultaneously with Hunter ASAP and most likely at Henderson.
The ANZACs already absorb a huge amount of fleet sustainment costs - and that’s only going to grow as they age.
The fact is, there’s multiple ship designs in the market which can provide more capability than the current Anzacs with both lower sustainment costs and far less core crew.
I’m not saying I have anything. I’m saying it is entirely reasonable to have more than one passport and not have nefarious motives.Isn’t there? So you have one “real” passport and one of convenience - convenience to you that is?
If so is the Australian one the real one or the convenient one?
I think you have a fundamental misunderstanding of the nature of citizenship, and the responsibilities (not just rights) that come along with it.
Edit: Apologies mods, this probably belongs in the ADF thread rather than here.
To show how old the Flt 1 Burkes are getting, since the USN laid down USS Arleigh Burke, Australia has built, commissioned, operated for over 20 years, decommissioned and sold 2 Adelaide class FFGs which are now in the 2nd year of service in the Chilean Navy.the younger flight 1 are the same age as ANZAC and it is important to note that the surface fleet looks after its ships a lot better than the gator navy
Why? There will still be a need for border security, illegal fishing boats to chase, drug runners to intercept, idiots in leaky sailing vessels to save and probably refugees/illegal immigrants to pull out of the water. Using patrol frigates to do that would be ridiculously expensive on every level including taking too much RAN resources from elsewhere.I think it is safe to assume that when the time comes to replace the Arafura it will be with a larger more capable ship.
Just a fairly minor (IMO anyway...) quibble. If the Arafura-class OPV design had included space for a hangar and therefore permitted embarked helicopter operations, that would have improved the range and depth of overall capabilities. Yes, a flex space mission module for USA might provide extra surveillance and area sea search capabilities (like an embarked helicopter) but for SAR ops, the ability to rapidly respond via manned aviation assets could literally be the difference between life and death.Why? There will still be a need for border security, illegal fishing boats to chase, drug runners to intercept, idiots in leaky sailing vessels to save and probably refugees/illegal immigrants to pull out of the water. Using patrol frigates to do that would be ridiculously expensive on every level including taking too much RAN resources from elsewhere.
I'm not inclined to push all that to border force either, the least of the reasons being the role of small vessels in giving young RAN officers a first experience in independent command, and career development in other ranks.
Why we keep rehashing this is beyond me. The Arafuras are *exactly* what we wanted for the task at hand, which will still exist even if we're fighting WW3 in the Pacific.
Just not what we need for very different roles. And not "cool"....needs more guns and missiles on every flat space!
oldsig
Good platform as a 'mothership' for unmanned platforms, a command and control ship, can host a company-sized landing force with vehicles and still do standard GP frigate duties. They would cover the loss of hulls from the Anzac/Hobart upgrades. It would have to be built overseas, but that means they will be cheaper. Build 3. They would cover the loss of hulls from the Anzac/Hobart upgrades. It's too good an idea, it'll never get legs.In regards to discussion in a GP frigate and some advocating for the AH140 what are the thoughts on the Absalon class out of Denmark? If I recall on previous thread going back idk 5 years now there had been some minor discussion about it but that at the time was in reference to it as a replacement for the Anzacs. Times being what they are today compared to then would such a ship be suitable for a GP role? If memory serves a big draw back in eyes of the blue man group was the stanflex modules but looking at its potential growth margin, and that the design in particular could theoretically provide a big boost in distributed HADR while being more heavily defended and armed then the Anzacs it's got me wondering again.
I agree that there will always be a need for patrol vessels but still each and every generation of patrol vessel seems to be bigger and more capable than the previous. Now the patrol fleets biggest challenge might be fishing vessels and smugglers but by the 2030s, when the navy might only have a handful of serviceable frigates at its disposal, they might find themselves challenging Chinese warships as well.Why? There will still be a need for border security, illegal fishing boats to chase, drug runners to intercept, idiots in leaky sailing vessels to save and probably refugees/illegal immigrants to pull out of the water. Using patrol frigates to do that would be ridiculously expensive on every level including taking too much RAN resources from elsewhere.
I'm not inclined to push all that to border force either, the least of the reasons being the role of small vessels in giving young RAN officers a first experience in independent command, and career development in other ranks.
Why we keep rehashing this is beyond me. The Arafuras are *exactly* what we wanted for the task at hand, which will still exist even if we're fighting WW3 in the Pacific.
Just not what we need for very different roles. And not "cool"....needs more guns and missiles on every flat space!
oldsig
I agree that Australia does need patrol vessels, but one also has to remember that the taskings for Australian patrol vessels has varied widely over time, as has their capabilities, or in some cases the options available in terms of capabilities.I agree that there will always be a need for patrol vessels but still each and every generation of patrol vessel seems to be bigger and more capable than the previous. Now the patrol fleets biggest challenge might be fishing vessels and smugglers but by the 2030s, when the navy might only have a handful of serviceable frigates at its disposal, they might find themselves challenging Chinese warships as well.
I am not sure I would go as far as to advocate for a ship as large as the Arrowhead 140 but maybe something in the 3000 ton range with basic air defence and the potential of being fitted with more capable weapons could be the next logical progression from the Arafura.
You been sniffing the coffee grinds again?ignore double post made a cock up
Disagree. Though the size of patrol vessels have risen, so too the size of every other class of escorts.I agree that there will always be a need for patrol vessels but still each and every generation of patrol vessel seems to be bigger and more capable than the previous. Now the patrol fleets biggest challenge might be fishing vessels and smugglers but by the 2030s, when the navy might only have a handful of serviceable frigates at its disposal, they might find themselves challenging Chinese warships as well.
No, between glasses of Merlot. I was trying to write a bit about the Arrowhead 120 which was a design concept by Babcock prior them coming up with the Arrowhead 140. Based on the same Danish hull design has all the bells and whistles of the 140 only smaller somewhere between 3000 and 4000 tonn and a crew of about 90. A number of members have been commenting on this thread that they like the Arrowhead 140 for a patrol frigate etc, well this one would make a good light frigate or Corvette etc. By the time i had finished writing it sounded like an advert for Babcock and a fantasy fleet i so deleted it.You been sniffing the coffee grinds again?