Posted on 06/10/2018 8:12:49 PM PDT by sukhoi-30mki
A FREMM vessel designed by Fincantieri in Sydneys harbor. PHOTO: FINCANTIERI
CANBERRA, AustraliaU.S. allies are embarking on a naval shopping spree as territorial standoffs intensify in the Pacific.
Contracts valued at about $70 billion are up for grabs from Australia to Canada, as governments update aging fleets to protect shipping lanes and their territorial waters.
While defense spending globally had fallen over the past decade, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute expects spending this year to be the highest since the close of the Cold War. Nations in Asia and the Middle East are leading the charge.
That is a potential windfall for companies such as Lockheed Martin Corp. and Huntington Ingalls Industries Inc. in the U.S., Britains BAE Systems PLC and Europes biggest shipbuilder, Fincantieri SpA. The new contracts could secure thousands of jobs and guarantee a pipeline of work for at least a decade.
Western navies are rebuilding their Pacific fleets as China and Russia challenge their dominance in the region. China is asserting more dominance over the South China Sea, tensions on the Korean Peninsula are high, and Russia is showing renewed interest in Asia. Late last year, a Russian navy ship docked in Papua New Guinea for training and Russian bombers visited Indonesia.
The U.S. has urged its allies to spend more on defense. President Donald Trump has called for a U.S. naval fleet of 350 ships. The current fleet of 273 ships is the smallest since 1916. Last year collisions between U.S. guided-missile destroyers and merchant ships that left 17 sailors dead prompted criticism that the fleet is stretched too thin, resulting in cutbacks on training and certifications.
Defense companies say the coordinated buildup among allies is also an opportunity for Western allies to build a common warship.
(Excerpt) Read more at wsj.com ...
Note: Figures are estimates for BAE Systems and Navantia, images are renderings.
Sources: Navantia, BAE Systems, Fincantieri, Australian Strategic Policy Institute.
Nah, we'll keep our military secrets, well, secret.
Not with our DoD contractors’ current level of competence and security measures, we won’t.
Not asking rudely, but why do you say that?
Good. Smart Australians! Anti-submarine equipment and personnel will be very important, and more will be better. An antagonist nation has been building a large submarine force and keeping it tightly under wraps.
I may be off base, but I’d sure like to see some speeds better than 28 knots in this day and age.
Double that and it will be harder to target the ships. Triple it and forget about it.
Am I asking the impossible here?
Contractors are in it for money, so performance isn't the issue.
What we need to do is replicate in shipbuilding the great success we're having in aircraft design with the F-35.
We need one ship that can, with minor adjustments, serve multiple purposes: as a destroyer, a minesweeper, a battleship, an aircraft carrier, and a littoral close support craft.
What great savings in costs and time to deployment we will reap!
I was referring to the “loss of data” by a DoD contractor that was the subject of several threads over the weekend.
Because he’s repeating a stereotype based on no first hand knowledge.
There is the speed released for public consumption, then there is the real speed, then there is sprint speed as in get out of the seeker cone of an inbound...
Yes, for something of any size.
Power requirements are a function of the velocity cubed. I say again, CUBED!
Okay, thank you for the mention. That does help.
Okay. Thanks for addressing the issue.
I should let the pros handle it, but it does cause concern.
Very cool.
Additionally, I wonder just how important speed is in the era of advanced missiles? Although I think the main issue is the heavy requirements that come with speed.
But then again, all the people who work on these designs are experts, and I will not be foolish and claim to know better than those who worked on the LCS. Im sure they had their reasons, and those reasons were valid.
The War Zone had a very good comparison article on this subject a while back.
56 to 84 knots? Yeah, I'd say so.
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