Andy_Ross
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 2, 2010
- Messages
- 67,912
My great uncle served on that.
Half served on it you mean?
My great uncle served on that.
Served on half of it, maybe. Or maybe his uncle was only half as great.Half served on it you mean?
Interesting article in NY Times in the Atlantic as to current crewing concepts for USA warships in general and for Littoral Combat Ships in particular. Operative goal: "minimal manning." Chilling IMO:
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2019/07/future-of-work-expertise-navy/590647/
My great uncle served on that.
We have 9 half a billion dollar ships (each), the Independence class, that aren't even expected to survive against RPG attacks. The R&D and procurement process for the USN (and USAF) has been incredibly arrogant, wasteful, and I'm sure corrupt over the past 20 years or so that some people should be in jail. They've been so enamored with whizbang new tech that they've overlooked the importance of equipment that actually works. Meanwhile, China, Iran, and Russia have developed actual, good, working anti ship tech.
https://nationalinterest.org/blog/t...navys-littoral-combat-ships-punch-below-23042
Was he... named Albert. Had a great nephew named Rodney perhaps? (obscure reference that perhaps 1 in a million Americans will get, probably not too obscure UKside)
The LCS was never intended to operate in waters threatened by a near-peer adversary. It doesn't make sense to complain that the ship doesn't have a capability it was never supposed to have.
It does make sense to complain that the US apparently didn't stop to think about wether they actually needed a ridiculously expensive, ridiculously fragile corvette at all, rather than a modern replacement for the OHP class frigates.
I think it would have made more sense to replace the OHP with a similar type - a kind of Burke-lite general purpose ASW/AD picket. And develop a single corvette type with multiple configuration options. A more realistic modular approach. Not the quick-swap dream, but simply realizing cost savings from parts commonality and a single design base. Some get built out as minesweepers, some as special forces tenders, some as supplemental ASW pickets, etc. Each of those roles could be filled by a ship that size, and each of those would fill a capability gap in the USN.
I think the current LCS designs are inferior versions of this concept. Too expensive, not as capable as they could (should) be. But they can work in that role. They'll probably get supplanted by something more sensical in about 10-15 years. Which is probably okay.
They were useful as floating artillery batteries, but so were cruisers.It was appreciated that Battleships weren't the force they once were, the RN for example halted building on the Lions and Vanguard switching large ship construction to Cruisers and Aircraft Carriers.
Essentially the only real target for a Battleship is another Battleship.
They were useful as floating artillery batteries, but so were cruisers.
The thing is, with modern near-peer adversaries, much of the fighting during an amphibious operation is going to be happening from over the horizon. If you need to bring a battleship into range for shore bombardment, you're probably doing something very wrong. Most likely, you shouldn't have embarked on this particular operation in the first place.
And with non near-peers, that much artillery is overkill. A battleship is wasted against Somali pirate camps, and useless in contesting the South China Sea.
Battleships were very useful on D-Day and after as they could give artillery support for many miles inland and throw a huge weight of explosives on to a target in a short time.
For example 15" Mk1 guns on RN battleships could throw a 2000lb shell 30 miles.
Agreed. For contemporary near-peer adversaries, battleships were a huge asset to amphibious and over-the-beach operations.
But for modern near-peer adversaries, the value just isn't there, I think.
An evolution that culminated in the guided missile cruiser, which replaces its superfluous big guns with surface to air missiles.Battleships were also useful in providing anti-aircraft fire to protect carriers in the Pacific. 16 or 20 5/38's, depending on the ship, and loads of 40's and 20's. They also provided a big attractive target to Kamikaze pilots; one both less valuable and less vulnerable than carriers.
Then again, an Atlanta-Class cruiser had nearly as many 5/38's and could fire more of them in the same direction.
Modern aircraft and an aircraft carrier can deliver similar weights of ordnance to longer ranges.