Thanks, I thoght that was the situation but just needed confirmationNo, there was no French involvement in CVA-01. There was Anglo-French AEW collaboration but that's as far as it went.
I have to admit i completely forgot how new the two French carriers were compared to the Uk examples in the 1960sFrance just had put Clemenceau and Foch in service, 1960 and 1963 respectively. Plus, the bulk of the military budget was swallowed by the Force de Frappe, notably the incoming missiles and submarines.
That deck park image looks wrong. The whole point of the design is to have three lanes, with a landing lane to the port, a launch lane to starboard, and a deck park lane centerline.Some renders and plans from a Chinese post,
for archive purposes mainly.
We have no idea, unfortunately, when those plans (not renders, obviously) were made and what from. It very well may be something that the Chinese obtained at the time or somewhat later (60s-80s) or their speculation showing how they would've done it. Those plans are a kind of historical artifact in their own right.That deck park image looks wrong. The whole point of the design is to have three lanes, with a landing lane to the port, a launch lane to starboard, and a deck park lane centerline.
Aircraft should be parked on the centerline (and in the hangar), with the Alaska highway clear to run aircraft from the hangar and centerline deck park to the starboard catapult, which also needs to be clear for launches. The flow of aircraft is port (land) to center (park and move to hangar) to starboard (launch).
The plans are real, they are pirated from Ian Sturton's Warship 2014 article, which were drawn up in reference to archival material.We have no idea, unfortunately, when those plans (not renders, obviously) were made and what from. It very well may be something that the Chinese obtained at the time or somewhat later (60s-80s) or their speculation showing how they would've done it. Those plans are a kind of historical artifact in their own right.
Including the deck parking plan?Ian Sturton's Warship 2014 article
I just looked, yes, that image is from the article. It says it shows two-thirds of the air group with the other third presumably in the hangar. Two Buccaneers and ten phantoms are missing, so they must be inside. It's a confusing image though, since it looks like the only way to use the Alaska highway operationally is if a third of the aircraft are airborne. Which makes me reconsider my previous statement.Including the deck parking plan?
So it's at least one of the original arrangements.I just looked, yes, that image is from the article.
The whole point of the design is to have three lanes, with a landing lane to the port, a launch lane to starboard, and a deck park lane centerline.
Aircraft should be parked on the centerline (and in the hangar), with the Alaska highway clear to run aircraft from the hangar and centerline deck park to the starboard catapult, which also needs to be clear for launches. The flow of aircraft is port (land) to center (park and move to hangar) to starboard (launch).
I think CVA-01 should have been larger, but given the constraints the genius of the design is how efficient aircraft movement is, and how that feeds into operational tempo.
it looks like the only way to use the Alaska highway operationally is if a third of the aircraft are airborne. Which makes me reconsider my previous statement.
Which does work for day-to-day ASW and BARCAP missions, plus CAS in colonial interventions.Just about the only rationale for CVA-01’s layout is if you are doing away with cyclic operations and launching & receiving small packets of aircraft on a continuous basis.
Also, remember that you can hang a wing over the edge for a bit of clearance. Your safe limit is the landing gear!I estimate the 'Alaskan Highway' to be about 34ft wide, with around 18ft from the centreline to the edge of the island.
So you could - in theory - just about squeeze an F-111B onto it (~33ft).
Most of the OR.346/OR.356 designs came in around 27-31ft, while BAC Type 583V was smallest at 25ft. Ironically the VG Lightning at 36ft 7in would be pushing the limit.
Likewise I estimate the four weapons lifts serving the 'Highway' could accommodate four 65-70ft long aircraft - again tallying with the Bucc and the OR.346/OR.356 designs. The Highway's effective length is around 300ft.
There were only two pressure refuelling stations though located mid-Highway (between weapon lifts 2 & 3), so it was optimised for rapid reloading over rapid refuelling. But with a rolling 'line' of aircraft (given they can only take-off from one bow cat) it would still have been a pretty smooth rolling assembly line-like process.
I'd hope there is a curb/kerb on the edge then. I've bumped a fair few, I'd hate to do a "whoops-a-daisy" into the drink.Also, remember that you can hang a wing over the edge for a bit of clearance. Your safe limit is the landing gear!
The only aircraft of the Sea Vixen-Bucc-Phantom trio with hardpoints on the outer wings is the Bucc with (pair inboard, pair outboard).Hood. Interesting details. With the rearming station partway up the highway, and the aircraft still folded, this would be a constraint, i. e. you could only rearm centre line weapons, not those on outer wing pylons.