Posted on 11/29/2015 11:24:59 PM PST by sukhoi-30mki
Looks a bit like one of the old ironclads.
Interesting the fellow used the word “slapping.” Well... It sure is ugly.
Why is it I think of the Midway hull?
My old man went through almost all the major battles in the Pacific on a destroyer that was 341 ft long and after all the war time upgrades didn't make 2000 tons.
What's that now, a Coast Guard cutter ?
Every current US Destroyer, the Arleigh Burke classes, all 62 in their several variants, are 8300-9800 tons. So all would be more like a WWII light cruiser. Before them the Spruance class were 8000 tons. This new one is pretty big indeed, but the trend is consistent.
I guess they could just call it a cruiser, or a ship of the line, or a battleship, and be done with it. It’s not like the WWII functional classes really apply anymore.
Smaller than some current USCG cutters. The National Security Cutter/Legend-class is 418 feet long and displaces 4500 long tons. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Security_Cutter
The Ticonderoga class cruisers (22 in service, though many are getting old) are 9800 tons. Not much different from the Arleigh Burkes really, in size and capability. They are interchangeable, the decommissioned Ticonderogas are being replaced by the latest variant of the Arleigh Burke destroyers.
The distinction between Destroyer/Cruiser in the USN seems to have disappeared, and this happened quite a long time ago.
I knew the Burkes were that big but I didn't know there was a need to go much beyond them. I had no idea cutters had gotten that large, though. For some reason I thought large cutters stopped at just about the size of WWII destroyers.
But geez,15000 tons and it's a destroyer ? I guess the roles merged or something like that which then dictates the naming convention.
Certainly is stealthy. When I first looked at the pic I thought I was looking at a seawall.
Hope it’s prettier all decked out.
This is going to be interesting. The DesMoines class of cruiser ran about 18,000 tons so we are moving to a bigger plat form. My question is how much punch it has and how independent of fleet support can it operate.
By the way, the Type 45 is far better at air defense than anything the US currently has in service.
The railgun works. The problem is that the the power generation system to fire the railgun is not well tested.
The first power to get railgun working reliably will *own* surface combat and quite probably air combat in the vicinity of the railgun armed surface combatant. Unfortunately we’re only building one of these.
I guess it is expected to steer around foul weather.
The deck is going to be awash 50% of the time in any weather.
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