Well, Kirov did. Yesterday.I remember reading that both Kiev and Kirov were very close to making USN to go for equiuvalents, indeed.
Well, Kirov did. Yesterday.I remember reading that both Kiev and Kirov were very close to making USN to go for equiuvalents, indeed.
The USN is going to need ~30 of them. 1 for each carrier group (~11), 1 for each ARG (~11), 1 for each numered Fleet as Fleet flagships, and a few extras to stash around
Publicity stunt + space and tonnage reserve.Why try to field railguns on this design if they've been shown to be costly and ineffective?
Because Trump wanted big gun (so the proposal need to include this to get his enthusiastic support) + Japan demonstrated a viable naval railgun. From the Navy point of view, they lose nothing.Why try to field railguns on this design if they've been shown to be costly and ineffective?
Why try to field railguns on this design if they've been shown to be costly and ineffective?
Trying to come to terms with railgun technology has already failed as shown with the Zumwalt-class destroyers which are being retrofitted with hypersonic missiles instead.
Also, on the grounds of air defence it seems they're trusting the lone implementation of lasers without the supplementation of other gun-based systems such as the CIWS.
That's why I suspect that from the Navy side, the main goal is to loosen the tonnage limitation for future surface combatants. After the concept of bombastic superbattleship would shock the senators enough, the more "moderate and sensible" proposal of missile cruiser with same functionality but smaller displacement would not meet much objections.There are reasonable criticisms of this thing, mostly on the basis that it carries a DDG's VLS numbers, combat system and radars on a hull twice the size for no or marginal benefit. I don't know how much armour this thing has, but it might be a useful exercise in demonstrating how much tonnage is necessary to give even very marginal protection to a modern volume-critical surface combatant.
Why try to field railguns on this design if they've been shown to be costly and ineffective?
It carries a Burke Flight III/DDG(X)'s combat system, 128 VLS, plus a pair of RAM launchers, a quartet of Mk 38 Mod 4s.
There are reasonable criticisms of this thing, mostly on the basis that it carries a DDG's VLS numbers, combat system and radars on a hull twice the size for no or marginal benefit. I don't know how much armour this thing has, but it might be a useful exercise in demonstrating how much tonnage is necessary to give even very marginal protection to a modern volume-critical surface combatant.
That's why I suspect that from the Navy side, the main goal is to loosen the tonnage limitation for future surface combatants. After the concept of bombastic superbattleship would shock the senators enough, the more "moderate and sensible" proposal of missile cruiser with same functionality but smaller displacement would not meet much objections.
Scott Adams had an interesting take on the Epstein fiasco. He basically said it wouldn't matter who said they wanted the entire thing released, without a single word redacted. The Deep State / Bureaucracy (CIA and such) want to keep their leverage/blackmail, so we'll never get it. They'll just keep slow rolling it until the end of time.It‘s none of this it is just a HUGE distraction from releasing the Epstein-files.
Is there a possibility it's purpose is to serve as a flagships in a SAGs to replace the Ticonderoga-class cruisers that are being phased out or would the DDG(X) fulfil that role, and if it does essentially does have the same VLS capacity as current DDG's why is it being built when the DDG(X) program could do this at a smaller size. I thought that the idea of a modern ship had shifted from having to be exceptionally large in size (early 20th century) to having the advanced technology needed to combat asymmetric threats and bombard targets from a distance with guided missiles?
With all of this, I don't see the objective of loosening tonnage restrictions as destroyers such as the Arleigh Burke can work effectively with only a handful of other surface combatants without exceeding a tonnage of 40,000 tons. Unless this new class of combatants plan to work independently or to complement CSGs with another large combatant besides a carrier I can't fathom why this new class would even be required?
Is there a possibility it's purpose is to serve as a flagships in a SAGs to replace the Ticonderoga-class cruisers that are being phased out or would the DDG(X) fulfil that role, and if it does essentially does have the same VLS capacity as current DDG's why is it being built when the DDG(X) program could do this at a smaller size.
I thought that the idea of a modern ship had shifted from having to be exceptionally large in size (early 20th century) to having the advanced technology needed to combat asymmetric threats and bombard targets from a distance with guided missiles?
What We Know About The Trump Class “Battleship”
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What We Know About The Trump Class "Battleship"
The USS Defiant would be the first Trump class battleship, but major questions remain about affordability and logic of such a massive design.www.twz.com
So based on that specs.. I'm trying to calculate how much it costs.. based on empirical equations given here :
View attachment 796126
The equations are as follows :
View attachment 796127
Using that website, and setting some limits e.g 40K tons and 40 knots. and buy of 25 ships with assuming 95% learning curve (complex build). Basically initial cost of the USS Defiant is about 18.6 B USD FY-2025, with subsequent batch hopefully down to 14.2 B USD FY-2025 per copy.
View attachment 796128
To compare that with Burke.. well, for every Defiant. 6-7 Burkes can be build. But for the capability and much expanded weapons, guess that's worth it ?
But can they? Physically? 6-7 keels require much more available infrastructure than one, even a large one.To compare that with Burke.. well, for every Defiant. 6-7 Burkes can be build.
Avondale has been parted out. If we needed to build these and needed 2 yards to do it, Bath would only need a larger drydock. Their yard has one lane that can accommodate something this long and the assembly halls can build LPD-size blocks.Yeah, but Ingalls seems to have big enough facilities. They could also reopen the former Avondale shipyard, which have facilities for at least 290 meters long ships.
Well we got a USS Bush.Comment I just saw elsewhere.
It’s not a good look for a battleship to be named after a fart, is it?
Maybe it's because I'm foreigner, but I don't think it sounds half bad. Could be understood in the relation of the verb for people who are not into the person, as in to trump/surpass something.
I also don't really understand mixing nuclear and non-nuclear weapons (it basically forces your opponent to go after nuclear assets, which then increases the likelihood of escalation).
For this to work, the thing shouldn't make foes and allies laugh.It could (unwittingly?) serve as a conceptual Trojan horse, forcing building equivalents on foes and allies alike.
Why would it? The core of the project is based on existing USN studies and is sufficiently feasible, give or take a couple of systems. There is nothing funny about it, and neither Chinese nor Japanese naval planning staff have the leisure to take it as a joke even if there was.For this to work, the thing shouldn't make foes and allies laugh.
Perhaps rename the 'class' ship to "Donald"?
I don't know, the project actively contradicts long-standing US posture on naval operations, there's no need for a 260-270m ship to perform what a destroyer could do?Why would it? The core of the project is based on existing USN studies and is sufficiently feasible, give or take a couple of systems. There is nothing funny about it, and neither Chinese nor Japanese naval planning have the leisure to take it as a joke.
I don't know, the project actively contradicts long-standing US posture on naval operations, there's no need for a 260-270m ship to perform what a destroyer could do?
Are you German by any chance ?Why would it? The core of the project is based on existing USN studies and is sufficiently feasible, give or take a couple of systems. There is nothing funny about it, and neither Chinese nor Japanese naval planning staff have the leisure to take it as a joke even if there was.
Nah, just a large missile cruiser, nothing special.Speaking as a naval know nowt, is this a pocket battleship?
Why would it? The core of the project is based on existing USN studies and is sufficiently feasible, give or take a couple of systems. There is nothing funny about it, and neither Chinese nor Japanese naval planning staff have the leisure to take it as a joke even if there was.
Tiny hands feel at home in small pockets - so, yes.Speaking as a naval know nowt, is this a pocket battleship?
That's all chaff, smoke and mirrors.This is silly on so many levels.