Dilandu
I'm dissatisfied, which means, I exist.
Introductory: a small navy in late 1960s - early 1970s have a pair of ex-British "Dido"-class cruisers. Those ships are obsolete, and the navy wanted to have a missile-armed warships. But since they are pretty much ostracized by all major powers and sanctioned by UN (essentially the South African situation - they are not good guys, but bad guys fearing others to come for their heads), they could neither buy new warships, nor proper shipborne missiles.
So they are forced to work with whatever they have, and they decided to try & reconstruct their old cruisers - obsolete, but still in reasonably good material condition due to mid-1960s repairs - into missile cruisers, by installing the available land-based SAM's. Specific condition: they wanted area-defense missiles, not merely self-defense.
Two possible scenarios:
* They have land-based "English Electric Thunderbird" Mk-I SAM systems - brought from Britain in 1960s - with Ferranti Type 83 fire control radar. The installation would require removal of both rear turrets (to accomodate missile storage hangar) and bow C turret (to accomodate relatively bulky Ferranti Type 83 radar). The fire control computer would needed to be integrated with ship's own search & track radar (IRRC Thunderbird did not have manual input mode for fire control system). The missiles are fired from a pair improvized stabilized launchers on the stern, reloading through rail trolleys from hangar;
* They managed to obtain a MIM-23 HAWK systems (unofficially, through Israel), and jury-rigged it on cruisers. Only rear two turrets are removed; the system used slightly modified M192 launcher (on stabilized mount), a HPIR fire control radar (installed in place of rear fire control director) and AFCC console (installed in ship CIC, manual data input from ship's search radar);
Which concept looks more viable?
So they are forced to work with whatever they have, and they decided to try & reconstruct their old cruisers - obsolete, but still in reasonably good material condition due to mid-1960s repairs - into missile cruisers, by installing the available land-based SAM's. Specific condition: they wanted area-defense missiles, not merely self-defense.
Two possible scenarios:
* They have land-based "English Electric Thunderbird" Mk-I SAM systems - brought from Britain in 1960s - with Ferranti Type 83 fire control radar. The installation would require removal of both rear turrets (to accomodate missile storage hangar) and bow C turret (to accomodate relatively bulky Ferranti Type 83 radar). The fire control computer would needed to be integrated with ship's own search & track radar (IRRC Thunderbird did not have manual input mode for fire control system). The missiles are fired from a pair improvized stabilized launchers on the stern, reloading through rail trolleys from hangar;
* They managed to obtain a MIM-23 HAWK systems (unofficially, through Israel), and jury-rigged it on cruisers. Only rear two turrets are removed; the system used slightly modified M192 launcher (on stabilized mount), a HPIR fire control radar (installed in place of rear fire control director) and AFCC console (installed in ship CIC, manual data input from ship's search radar);
Which concept looks more viable?