Excelent question and i cant see any good answer...
This Flight I seems to be a regular Cutter with NSM and SeaRam bolted on it.
It will also have a couple of 30mm Mk38s but you are mores or less correct.
Minimal changes over the NSC.
Excelent question and i cant see any good answer...
This Flight I seems to be a regular Cutter with NSM and SeaRam bolted on it.
I rather like Legend-class FF(X} as a solution. They aren't gold-plated mini-Ticos. They are true fourth-rate, affordable, and built for endurance ships to exert a presence. Not every ship has to be a battleship. The USN can now focus on separate hulls for the first through third rate ships.
I would have been happy with derivatives more inline with MECs like the Famous-class, to get hulls on the water. Last time I saw in the newsthose chinese ships were self shredding themselves in the bully role. We needed hulls yesterday, so I have zero reservations pushing out frigates as frigates. We weren't getting more Burkes under the current conditions.They won't, though. Because we've just decided to spend money on ships the Chinese Maritime Militia could bully.
The problem was talked about (and it looks like still being talked about) in this thread before and that is "what is the minimum amount of armaments and sensors for a useful surface combatant given mission X"I rather like Legend-class FF(X} as a solution. They aren't gold-plated mini-Ticos. They are true fourth-rate, affordable, and built for endurance ships to exert a presence. Not every ship has to be a battleship. The USN can now focus on separate hulls for the first through third rate ships.
No doubt…presence matters in peace-time. Builds & strengthens alliances.I rather like Legend-class FF(X} as a solution. They aren't gold-plated mini-Ticos. They are true fourth-rate, affordable, and built for endurance ships to exert a presence. Not every ship has to be a battleship. The USN can now focus on separate hulls for the first through third rate ships.
In the reality I live in that isn't an option.
I don't think a clean sheet design will arrive quicker than initial FF(X) deliveries. Would a clean sheet be more functional and suitable for the USN than a NSC, undoubtedly, but right now the USN no longer has the street cred to manage that process by themselves.
Excelent question and i cant see any good answer...
This Flight I seems to be a regular Cutter with NSM and SeaRam bolted on it.
Except the design work still isn't finished and the absolute earliest expected delivery date is April 29 for the first vessel. It's not clear, to me at least, whether the US also expected to build the design in other yards.The other option is just more Constellations, since two are being built regardless. There’s your ASW and AAW. If another ship is preferable, build it from scratch and built Connie until it’s ready. Problem solved with no LCS like ships lying around.
I think I read somewhere that they were expecting Hanwha/ Philly to start building the NSC FFG too and possibly borrowing and building upon the NSC variant with Korean expertise.It's not clear, to me at least, whether the US also expected to build the design in other yards.
So they could and maybe that should be the backstop option but it doesn't appear to be an option any longer per this Administration and SecNav.
My reference was to the Constellation, not the NSC which will definitely be built in yards other than HII.I think I read somewhere that they were expecting Hanwha/ Philly to start building the NSC FFG too and possibly borrowing and building upon the NSC variant with Korean expertise.
Except the design work still isn't finished and the absolute earliest expected delivery date is April 29 for the first vessel. It's not clear, to me at least, whether the US also expected to build the design in other yards.
So they could and maybe that should be the backstop option but it doesn't appear to be an option any longer per this Administration and SecNav.
Agree 100% but those two vessels may never even enter active USN service but be sold off the slip.It makes no sense to build two and then pull the plug.
They could but so far have shown little backbone. Yes midterm results may change that but the evidence to date isn't in their favour.I consider it possible Congress attempts to override the decision once Johnson loses his gavel.
Agreed - all of these programs (with exception of the NSC FFG) and proposed changes need to survive the next admin change before they actually mean anything. I'd be very surprised if they can even finish the two constellation ships before the next election cycles.It makes no sense to build two and then pull the plug. I consider it possible Congress attempts to override the decision once Johnson loses his gavel.
There's no hint Constellations will be ready anytime soon. Instead, it seems likely they'll come off the shipyard later than a Legend-class Frigate. Nor is there any sign that the ship will be cheap enough to be worthwhile or anything other than another NAVSEA dead end. I've seen rumors that they're already overweight and without any growth margin, and the design still isn't complete.
This is a desperate move for a desperate situation. The Navy has completely squandered 25 years burning money and credibility. Naval shipbuilding has never been in a worse state, Naval architecture in this country is a scandal. The FF(X) is the consequence of the DDG-1000, the LCS, and the Constellation failures.
The last time NAVSEA designed a new surface ship, it was the LCS. The last time NAVSEA modified an existing ship, it was the Constellation. For everyone saying "just design something new to actually be useful" - there's no sign anyone in the US can design a warship this side of 2030. The Navy is functionally starting its surface ship design capability from scratch.
So, why are they building such a limited ship? Because time is out and the US cannot do anything better. It isn't a very complicated answer, just an awful one.
Building ships with no capability is not a solution. If it was, the U.S. could simply keep building LCS, or the KSA version there of.
As has been said many times these boats will not be significantly lower cost to run than ffgx. The will also cost 1.05 billion vs ffgx at 1.2 billion.The only way this makes sense is if these FFXs are upgraded over time.
Even in their initial forum, they will be useful in scenarios like we see now in some theaters, enforcing blockades and running down smugglers.
Low operating costs, excellent endurance and seakeeping, give them better blue potential than the LCS wanne-be speedboat.
I am certainly not making the case they are ideal warships.
Hopefully though, we can get these into series production across multiple yards fairly rapidly while also improving their capabilities.
I admit I'm an optimist.
As has been said many times these boats will not be significantly lower cost to run than ffgx. The will also cost 1.05 billion vs ffgx at 1.2 billion.
They also won’t be upgradable with the things that matter, ASW capability, AESA radar panels, more VLS cells.
If you want more coast guard cutters for sure enforcement buy them for the coast guard. The envisioned wartime roles don’t exist, especially as the Chinese are adding 60 vls tubes on merchant ships that will likely be false flagged.
The LCS MMSC version is about 60% of the FFX with much more capability and is literally being built now. The FFX is purely a political play, as if they wanted capability the would have just bought some MMSC.
There were two estimates for the ffgx cost, one by the CBO another by the navy. The both have been trending down and seemed to have converged around 1.2 billion. So that’s the current best estimate.If only FFGX existed. Lets see if it ever comes to pass and isn't 1000 tons overweight and the cost of a Burke by the time it's delivered.
I don't buy the political play. Its not like most voters know or care anything about this.
I know some believe its all politics or conspiracy.
My take is this is more a desperation move...like maybe we can actually build these things before 2032.
There were two estimates for the ffgx cost, one by the CBO another by the navy. The both have been trending down and seemed to have converged around 1.2 billion. So that’s the current best estimate.
Also 2 ffgx will still be built. So the design is going to be worked out no matter what. The also have a multi year head start on working out the design modifications over the ffx.
The NSC line has been dead for a couple years and the partly finished ship was scrapped. So there’s going to be lead time there on top of any design changes the navy made. Remember the fremm was level 2 survivability and the navy wanted level 3 which was a large contribution to the design issues. The nsc is level 1, so if survivability requirements are increased it will be just as if not worse design wise than ffgx.
I doubt these will hit the water more than 1 year before the ffgx if not later
It’s a political play not for the voters, but for corporations and donors all corruption.
NSC is not even fourth rate - too noisy for ASW, and its Mk.110, SeaRAM, & MH-60 form an incomplete package to complete all but very niche missions. It is ok if the fourth rate warship performs but a single task well, but that task must fill a gap the first three rates leave in defeating a peer enemy. ASW - a volume-of-water business that demands lots more tails & dipping than the USN currently envisions, is the biggest fillable gap due to the unaffordable cost building only multi-mission warships (CG, DDG, & FFG) to carry out all ASW missions.
FF(X) wouldn’t be a bad solution if the focus was on closing the ASW gap. The changes for ASW would probably be fairly minimal - rafting the diesels, fitting Captas 4 VDS sonar, adding a torpedo magazine for helicopters and fixed launchers.
You could even turn NSC into a pretty decent open ocean escort with a radar upgrade (rotating AESA like TRS4D or Sea Giraffe 4A), 12-32x ESSM in a VLS behind the gun and RAM on top of the hangar. The result would be pretty much like the NSC patrol frigate proposals from 10 years ago. But that would require a completely different direction from the ASuW oriented “combatant” that this administration is pursuing.
If only FFGX existed. Lets see if it ever comes to pass and isn't 1000 tons overweight and the cost of a Burke by the time it's delivered.
I don't buy the political play. Its not like most voters know or care anything about this.
I know some believe its all politics or conspiracy.
My take is this is more a desperation move...like maybe we can actually build these things before 2032.
These are big, tough decisions being made. History is rife with Defense Secretaries, Admirals, Generals, ... not getting it right in retrospective.
Most, I trust, are decent, intelligent people faced with very difficult decisions.
Ask Rex Tillerson.the people making these decisions
The only aspect in which they are superior to FFG(X) [including many of the competitors for that programme] is that if one gets sunk there's going to be less people dying.I rather like Legend-class FF(X} as a solution. They aren't gold-plated mini-Ticos. They are true fourth-rate, affordable, and built for endurance ships to exert a presence. Not every ship has to be a battleship. The USN can now focus on separate hulls for the first through third rate ships.
Two FFGX are being built regardless of cost or time. It is beyond reason that simply building more is anything more than a matter of money, and one thing FFGX provides is numbers of sufficiently capable ships at yards not already producing Burke. FFX is an LCS remake.
The purpose of the FF(X) Flight I is to be an LCS that can actually remain at sea for a reasonable period of time. There is no way the Navy is going to try CODAG and waterjets again on a ship this big, but it's not a huge deal breaker for the Saudis because their ships don't get underway. Hopefully Philly can start building 4923-style Flight IIs soon, although I would also like to see them build a few T-AHs on their training ship hull. The main purpose of the early ships is probably to get the supply chain and long-lead items moving to make it easier for new yards to jump in. As far as upgrades, the Anzac-class frigates are smaller than a Legend-class and got entire CEAFAR masts, so I wouldn't put it entirely out if the realm of possibility.
No. Alloy superstructures are terrible. They are flammable, easier to damage, less protective, and cause galvanic corrosion at the contact points between steel hull and aluminum superstructure.It only matters if the ships work and cost less than a Burke by the time they are delivered.
Right now, the are purported to be significantly overweight and slower than required to meet their mission requirements.
Now we can build them like that or attempt to redesign them to address those issues.
Ideas floated include going to an alloy superstructure or reducing weapons load.
No...they are not close to being delivered and cost estimates are as likely to be as accurate as my Grandmother's Derby predictions.
I truly hope the Connies are a raving success but that's by no means a sure thing.
No. Alloy superstructures are terrible. They are flammable, easier to damage, less protective, and cause galvanic corrosion at the contact points between steel hull and aluminum superstructure.
You can only reduce weapons load so far. Bare minimum for anything resembling competency is 16 cells Mk41 (6x ASROC and 40x ESSM), 57mm, RAM/SeaRAM, plus the anti-UxV gear. And that leaves the ship effectively unable to load SM2s for convoy defense due to lack of magazine depth. If your convoy defense scenarios require SM2s, you need at least 32x Mk41 if not 64x.
32x Mk41 would allow for 20x SM2s, 24x ESSMs, and 6x ASROC.48x Mk41 would allow for 32x SM2s, 40x ESSMs, and 6x ASROC.64x Mk41 would allow for 48x SM2s, 40x ESSMs, and 6x ASROC.
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On a different thought:
I'm honestly starting to think that the FF(X)s, the bottom end ASW-only ships, should be a large USV instead of manned. This would save a very large amount of hull volume for racks and food storage, as the USV would only have crew onboard for a week at a time at most. We're still probably looking at a 3-5kton ship, however. Towing a pair of towed arrays is not for a tiny ship.
Agreed.That fact they are considering an alloy superstructure this late in the game is an indicator the design is in trouble.
There's been allot of advances in materials science regarding corrosion. I've made my opinions on protection/survivability clear in that it's over-rated in modern ships and the Japanese and to a lesser extent the Europeans agree with me.No. Alloy superstructures are terrible. They are flammable, easier to damage, less protective, and cause galvanic corrosion at the contact points between steel hull and aluminum superstructure.
You can only reduce weapons load so far. Bare minimum for anything resembling competency is 16 cells Mk41 (6x ASROC and 40x ESSM), 57mm, RAM/SeaRAM, plus the anti-UxV gear. And that leaves the ship effectively unable to load SM2s for convoy defense due to lack of magazine depth. If your convoy defense scenarios require SM2s, you need at least 32x Mk41 if not 64x.
32x Mk41 would allow for 20x SM2s, 24x ESSMs, and 6x ASROC.48x Mk41 would allow for 32x SM2s, 40x ESSMs, and 6x ASROC.64x Mk41 would allow for 48x SM2s, 40x ESSMs, and 6x ASROC.
=========================
On a different thought:
I'm honestly starting to think that the FF(X)s, the bottom end ASW-only ships, should be a large USV instead of manned. This would save a very large amount of hull volume for racks and food storage, as the USV would only have crew onboard for a week at a time at most. We're still probably looking at a 3-5kton ship, however. Towing a pair of towed arrays is not for a tiny ship.
Disagree. And honestly it's the (lack of) fire resistance that most concerns me.There's been allot of advances in materials science regarding corrosion. I've made my opinions on protection/survivability clear in that it's over-rated in modern ships and the Japanese and to a lesser extent the Europeans agree with me.
If it's enables getting a ship out the door much quicker due to less redesign or enables a better ship on the FREMM hull they should 100% do it.
Hi,... Let's not forget USN and USCG build to the same survivability standards for this hull size. Foreign designs did not meet them. ...
All knowing Secret Projects Forum guy knows more than the US Navy lmaoit's over-rated in modern ships