penberth3
Well-Known Member
Oh dear! Wrong side of the bed?
Me too. I was hoping the big white elephant would finish up like this:
http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/80052000/jpg/_80052554_80052548.jpg
Oh dear! Wrong side of the bed?
Me too. I was hoping the big white elephant would finish up like this:
http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/80052000/jpg/_80052554_80052548.jpg
I saw it in Invergordon the other week, and found it quite unimpressive when compared to many of the oil sector vessels which have been there; all very clever ships at a fraction of the cost, and available within 5 years (or so) of first being thought of. I'm aware that I don't know any of the details of the carrier, but the timeline from conception to active service isn't swift is it. Prepared of course to be corrected by someone informing me of the efficiency, and cost effectiveness of this ship, and also of how HS2 will be good value as well!
I saw it in Invergordon the other week, and found it quite unimpressive when compared to many of the oil sector vessels which have been there; all very clever ships at a fraction of the cost, and available within 5 years (or so) of first being thought of. I'm aware that I don't know any of the details of the carrier, but the timeline from conception to active service isn't swift is it. Prepared of course to be corrected by someone informing me of the efficiency, and cost effectiveness of this ship, and also of how HS2 will be good value as well!
Comparing Warships and Merchant vessels is rather a false analogy a bit like trying to extrapolate from a JCB to AS 90. One source gives the following cost comparisons, though such things are always going to be broad brush estimates.
Charles de Gaulle (France)-$3.7 billion
CVN-78 Gerald R Ford-$13.5 billion
Queen Elizabeth (UK)-$3.7 billion
George HW Bush-$6.26 billion
As to efficiency it's worth noting the ship complement size for a US CVN is about 5,000 and QE about 1,500
Blame the Ministry of Rip-Offs, more commonly know to you as the MoD.
Some years ago, I was working as THE ROV pilot/navigator on a Danish vessel assisting with the building of StoreBelt bridge, with 4 of us usually onboard; Captain, 2 divers and myself. The vessel had a 3 point anchoring system, where the 3 of 'us' would deploy and recover the anchors, I did the nav stuff, so that the captain had a screen with our desired location visible to him. One of the diver's was a marine engineer, and looked after the engine, I was tasked with the vessel's electric stuff. The 2nd diver 'mucked-in', and assisted as required. The vessel ostensibly worked from 07:00-19:00hrs, 5 days a week helping around the pier bases on this enormous bridge, and worked well enough as we were all able to achieve what we needed to onboard.
My Father, 28 years an RN (FAA) officer came out with us on one occasion, and was surprised by the minimal crewing, telling me that if it had been a RN vessel, there'd have been 22 onboard. He was very definite about this, which I found surprising.
Your point about a USN carrier is astonishing! I was once told by an RAF engineer that they took a Shackleton on a tour one time, with 5 of them running the aircraft, including the pilots. He told me that an F-14 (or similar) had a ground crew of 22!! 1 guy to fill the left tyre, another for the right and so on, 'possibly' a bit too tall of a story, but indicative.
You only seem to be taking into account the crew needed to 'drive' the ship. Actually those are in some ways peripheral to the ship's function as a weapons system or delivery platform (before one even starts on the need for DC and redundancy if one is to survive a fight). I rather suspect the numbers involved on passage in managing the propulsion machinery and navigating are not wildly dissimilar between the MN and RN.
Some years ago, I was working as THE ROV pilot/navigator on a Danish vessel assisting with the building of StoreBelt bridge, with 4 of us usually onboard; Captain, 2 divers and myself. The vessel had a 3 point anchoring system, where the 3 of 'us' would deploy and recover the anchors, I did the nav stuff, so that the captain had a screen with our desired location visible to him. One of the diver's was a marine engineer, and looked after the engine, I was tasked with the vessel's electric stuff. The 2nd diver 'mucked-in', and assisted as required. The vessel ostensibly worked from 07:00-19:00hrs, 5 days a week helping around the pier bases on this enormous bridge, and worked well enough as we were all able to achieve what we needed to onboard.
My Father, 28 years an RN (FAA) officer came out with us on one occasion, and was surprised by the minimal crewing, telling me that if it had been a RN vessel, there'd have been 22 onboard. He was very definite about this, which I found surprising.
Your point about a USN carrier is astonishing! I was once told by an RAF engineer that they took a Shackleton on a tour one time, with 5 of them running the aircraft, including the pilots. He told me that an F-14 (or similar) had a ground crew of 22!! 1 guy to fill the left tyre, another for the right and so on, 'possibly' a bit too tall of a story, but indicative.
Some years ago, I was working as THE ROV pilot/navigator on a Danish vessel assisting with the building of StoreBelt bridge, with 4 of us usually onboard; Captain, 2 divers and myself. The vessel had a 3 point anchoring system, where the 3 of 'us' would deploy and recover the anchors, I did the nav stuff, so that the captain had a screen with our desired location visible to him. One of the diver's was a marine engineer, and looked after the engine, I was tasked with the vessel's electric stuff. The 2nd diver 'mucked-in', and assisted as required. The vessel ostensibly worked from 07:00-19:00hrs, 5 days a week helping around the pier bases on this enormous bridge, and worked well enough as we were all able to achieve what we needed to onboard.
.
I read that these carriers will be named after members of the royal family as they are all a colossal waste of public money?
I accept what you say, however:
1. How many weapons systems did you have to maintain, re-arm, re-load and fight?
2. If you took on water how many spare bodies did you have for damage control and/or fire-fighting?
3. How many other assets did you have to communicate with 24/7, and in how many languages?
4. Whilst you operated the ROV, who did air defence and anti-submarine sweeps?
I won't go on, a warship is a far more complex piece of machinery, and its centre of gravity entirely different to the merchant marine. Rightly or wrongly the RN will sacrifice sailors to keep the ship afloat, long after any sane MN skipper would have abandoned ship.
Good point, however an 'average' DSV in the North Sea, working in a variety of modes will have between 60-80 crew onboard, rarely above 100. These vessels will be conducting multiple complex tasks, using many disciplines onboard, and working 24/7 without replenishment for many weeks, perhaps not docking for several months. It's my understanding that this would be extremely rare for an RN vessel. In no way am I being critical of the manner in which RN vessel's are operated, but in a commercial world, it wouldn't be viable, as a Frigate's complement is 180 crew.