Fugly new destroyer

OT: anything goes!

Moderator: Edi

User avatar
Boba Fett
Jedi Master
Posts: 1239
Joined: 2002-11-22 11:54am
Location: Lost in my fantasies...

Post by Boba Fett »

Nathan F wrote:Whatever happened to the form of ship building...

Ships used to be the epiphany of power and had a unique beauty about them, but now we have this computer designed box on water. Whatever happened to the actual human design...
Yes, I miss it too.

Although I'm pretty sure the shape were designed like this to minimize radar detection.

...and those advanced guns will fire GPS guided ammo!!!
Image
Visit Darksaber's X-Wing Station

Member of BotM and HAB
User avatar
Vympel
Spetsnaz
Spetsnaz
Posts: 29312
Joined: 2002-07-19 01:08am
Location: Sydney Australia

Post by Vympel »

Boba Fett wrote:
...and those advanced guns will fire GPS guided ammo!!!
The Extended Range Guided Munition is .... uncertain at this point.

1: It costs $50,000 per round.
2: Very complicated and failure prone due to the high pressures invovled when it is fired from the 'Advanced Gun System'
3: Rounds are falling far short of the program objective of 63 miles.
4: $2 billion wasted on it so far, delivery date extended from 2001 to 2005.
5: Barrel overheats due to the powerful charges involved
"the development and testing of an extended-range guided munition for this gun has again been delayed by technical and contractor performance problems, and the achievement of an initial operational capability has slipped by 4 years to fiscal year 2005. Recent flight tests of this munition have achieved some success, but it is still too soon to know if its development will be successful. For example, it is still not certain that the munition can meet range and lethality requirements. Even if this munition is successfully developed, it will not provide the capabilities needed by the Marine Corps."
General Accounting Office Report.

- Assuming the barrel heating problem can be solved, it can only be fired at half the rate of current ballistic rounds because the ERGM missile requires double ramming.

- Since it is twice the length of ballistic rounds, fewer rounds can be carried in each ship's magazine.

- ERGMs are fired at high angles to allow accurate GPS reception, but this hurts responsiveness. The ERGM operational requirement document specifies the need to respond within 10 minutes to a call for fire (i.e., ordnance must be on the target no later than 10 minutes after the FO initiates the call for fire). At maximum range, ERGM flight can be up to 7 minutes, leaving no more than 3 minutes to prosecute a call for fire. By contrast, the Marine Corps requirement for artillery fires responsiveness is 2.5 minutes. This means that Marines 40 miles ashore must wait at least 5 minutes for an ERGM round to impact. A charging horde infantrymen can can cover half a mile in 5 minutes, and vehicles can move miles during that time.

- The ERGM will prove inaccurate in windy conditions because it is designed to explode and release it submuntions 300 meters above earth. The Navy is considering a unitary warhead to compensate for this and provide the ability of penetrate small bunkers. However, a 19lbs warhead doesn't seem worth the effort, which is why ERGM salesmen stick with the 72 submuntions angle.

- The cost of ERGMs have been estimated from $35,000 a round to $60,000, although the Navy uses low-ball estimates based on a screwy "FY9? dollars" formula to confuse people. An expert in a recent article in "National Defense" magazine noted that: "When it comes to cost, ERGM is no different than any other guided munitions program", said Don Kennedy, a warhead designer who worked on the ERGM project during the early stages of the program, when it was managed by Texas Instruments. He added: “Every program I’ve ever worked on starts out as ‘low-cost ammunition,’ and then it turns out to cost 10 times as much.”
Like Legend of Galactic Heroes? Please contribute to http://gineipaedia.com/
User avatar
Montcalm
Emperor's Hand
Posts: 7879
Joined: 2003-01-15 10:50am
Location: Montreal Canada North America

Post by Montcalm »

Spanky The Dolphin wrote:
kojikun wrote:yanno what it looks like? a sub. it does, like some U-Boat or sommat.
Come on, this is the future!! We're suposed to have stuff that looks like this. Where were you in the 1980s? :P
"What we`re in the future damn i thought this was the present :? :mrgreen:
Image
Jerry Orbach 1935 2004
Admiral Valdemar~You know you've fucked up when Wacky Races has more realistic looking vehicles than your own.
User avatar
aphexmonster
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 1668
Joined: 2003-04-12 10:42pm
Location: Sacramento
Contact:

Post by aphexmonster »

Spanky The Dolphin wrote:Gee, I guess I'm the only one who likes how it looks... :?
It looks, interesting...
-monster
my sig is totaly lonely now =(
User avatar
Col. Crackpot
That Obnoxious Guy
Posts: 10228
Joined: 2002-10-28 05:04pm
Location: Rhode Island
Contact:

Post by Col. Crackpot »

The Duchess of Zeon wrote:
Sr.mal wrote:That ship is shaped that way because it is designed to be stealthy to radar.
Unfortunately, it bears a close resemblence to French pre-dreadnought battleships in design. The ones famous for rolling over and sinking after suffering from only a small amount of damage - due to their hull form. Wundar ship here is probably going to have the same problem, especially with that huge superstructure. *shudders* Welcome to the era of the colonial patrol boat with no actual naval combat survivability, USN!

For comparison, Bouvet
a heavily weighted keel could solve that. it would resist capsizing, and when it did, it could roll much like the coast guard mortor rescue boats, although this is much larger, i'll admit. But, with the minimal crew and minimal exposed structure on the weather deck it is at least feasable....
"This business will get out of control. It will get out of control and we’ll be lucky to live through it.” -Tom Clancy
User avatar
Warspite
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 1970
Joined: 2002-11-10 11:28am
Location: Somewhere under a rock

Post by Warspite »

That is a fucked up design, even the new french stealth frigates are more elegant than that... thing. (And I've seen one up close.)

The bow is totally wrong, modern day ships have evolved from those types of bows for a reason, and that is: (TA DA!) seaworthiness.
Standard bow design allow the water to spread outwards, specially with incoming waves or in rough weather, avoiding unnecessary, and dangerous, taking of water.
Besides the long term corrosion problems, it can damage structures (there have been cases of ships in storms loosing welded capstans (winches for the laymen), and during WWII there was a case of gun barrels bending... but, that's another story), and more importantly, if the water can find its way inside the ship, it can affect the balance of said ship, since it's a unwanted added weight aboard. (Refer to several ferry accidents, for a better explanation.)

The supertructure "seems" a little too tall for my taste, but without the dimensions, it's not possible to say anything else besides, butt-ugly. (In defence, I can say that the height of the superturcture can be off-set by the beam of the vessel, a larger beam lessens capsize tendency, since the ship will be "fatter".)

Stealth in ships are stupid. A certain amount of care can be used in the design and building process, to diminish the radar-reflectivity, and it would be very welcome in prevention of anti-ship missile attacks, specially with the fielding of supersonic missiles. Nevertheless, the very nature of design and construction of marine structures makes this whole exercise silly, the money spent in stealthfying a ship would be better spent somewhere else.
[img=left]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v206/ ... iggado.jpg[/img] "You know, it's odd; practically everything that's happened on any of the inhabited planets has happened on Terra before the first spaceship." -- Space Viking
User avatar
Vympel
Spetsnaz
Spetsnaz
Posts: 29312
Joined: 2002-07-19 01:08am
Location: Sydney Australia

Post by Vympel »

Warspite wrote:That is a fucked up design, even the new french stealth frigates are more elegant than that... thing. (And I've seen one up close.)

The bow is totally wrong, modern day ships have evolved from those types of bows for a reason, and that is: (TA DA!) seaworthiness.
Standard bow design allow the water to spread outwards, specially with incoming waves or in rough weather, avoiding unnecessary, and dangerous, taking of water.
Besides the long term corrosion problems, it can damage structures (there have been cases of ships in storms loosing welded capstans (winches for the laymen), and during WWII there was a case of gun barrels bending... but, that's another story), and more importantly, if the water can find its way inside the ship, it can affect the balance of said ship, since it's a unwanted added weight aboard. (Refer to several ferry accidents, for a better explanation.)

The supertructure "seems" a little too tall for my taste, but without the dimensions, it's not possible to say anything else besides, butt-ugly. (In defence, I can say that the height of the superturcture can be off-set by the beam of the vessel, a larger beam lessens capsize tendency, since the ship will be "fatter".)

Stealth in ships are stupid. A certain amount of care can be used in the design and building process, to diminish the radar-reflectivity, and it would be very welcome in prevention of anti-ship missile attacks, specially with the fielding of supersonic missiles. Nevertheless, the very nature of design and construction of marine structures makes this whole exercise silly, the money spent in stealthfying a ship would be better spent somewhere else.
So the reason for the fucked up seaworthiness is stealth? Has the USN lost it's mind with this idea, or do they have some whizzbang way to overcome it?
Like Legend of Galactic Heroes? Please contribute to http://gineipaedia.com/
User avatar
Warspite
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 1970
Joined: 2002-11-10 11:28am
Location: Somewhere under a rock

Post by Warspite »

Vympel wrote: So the reason for the fucked up seaworthiness is stealth? Has the USN lost it's mind with this idea, or do they have some whizzbang way to overcome it?
Actually, I haven't the faintest ideia... Some of other concept art has this same type of bow (the carrier concept of the pyramidal type ship). It may be a "flash-show" to impress some congressman/woman in to giving more money to the Navy, look at the attached systems, they all suffer from the same aillments: integrated, advanced... the usual.

Curious, though, the French stealth frigate, has a normal bow... and they are the only ones so far to put the ships in operation.
[img=left]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v206/ ... iggado.jpg[/img] "You know, it's odd; practically everything that's happened on any of the inhabited planets has happened on Terra before the first spaceship." -- Space Viking
User avatar
Stormbringer
King of Democracy
Posts: 22678
Joined: 2002-07-15 11:22pm

Post by Stormbringer »

Vympel wrote:
Boba Fett wrote:
...and those advanced guns will fire GPS guided ammo!!!
The Extended Range Guided Munition is .... uncertain at this point.

1: It costs $50,000 per round.
2: Very complicated and failure prone due to the high pressures invovled when it is fired from the 'Advanced Gun System'
3: Rounds are falling far short of the program objective of 63 miles.
4: $2 billion wasted on it so far, delivery date extended from 2001 to 2005.
5: Barrel overheats due to the powerful charges involved
"the development and testing of an extended-range guided munition for this gun has again been delayed by technical and contractor performance problems, and the achievement of an initial operational capability has slipped by 4 years to fiscal year 2005. Recent flight tests of this munition have achieved some success, but it is still too soon to know if its development will be successful. For example, it is still not certain that the munition can meet range and lethality requirements. Even if this munition is successfully developed, it will not provide the capabilities needed by the Marine Corps."


General Accounting Office Report.

- Assuming the barrel heating problem can be solved, it can only be fired at half the rate of current ballistic rounds because the ERGM missile requires double ramming.

- Since it is twice the length of ballistic rounds, fewer rounds can be carried in each ship's magazine.

- ERGMs are fired at high angles to allow accurate GPS reception, but this hurts responsiveness. The ERGM operational requirement document specifies the need to respond within 10 minutes to a call for fire (i.e., ordnance must be on the target no later than 10 minutes after the FO initiates the call for fire). At maximum range, ERGM flight can be up to 7 minutes, leaving no more than 3 minutes to prosecute a call for fire. By contrast, the Marine Corps requirement for artillery fires responsiveness is 2.5 minutes. This means that Marines 40 miles ashore must wait at least 5 minutes for an ERGM round to impact. A charging horde infantrymen can can cover half a mile in 5 minutes, and vehicles can move miles during that time.

- The ERGM will prove inaccurate in windy conditions because it is designed to explode and release it submuntions 300 meters above earth. The Navy is considering a unitary warhead to compensate for this and provide the ability of penetrate small bunkers. However, a 19lbs warhead doesn't seem worth the effort, which is why ERGM salesmen stick with the 72 submuntions angle.

- The cost of ERGMs have been estimated from $35,000 a round to $60,000, although the Navy uses low-ball estimates based on a screwy "FY9? dollars" formula to confuse people. An expert in a recent article in "National Defense" magazine noted that: "When it comes to cost, ERGM is no different than any other guided munitions program", said Don Kennedy, a warhead designer who worked on the ERGM project during the early stages of the program, when it was managed by Texas Instruments. He added: “Every program I’ve ever worked on starts out as ‘low-cost ammunition,’ and then it turns out to cost 10 times as much.”


So much for the wonders of the advanced gun system. I don't advocate bringing back battleships just for the hell of it but we have no naval gunfire suport. If we do have to storm a beach where the hell is the gun fire support? It doesn't seem like it'll be there.
Image
User avatar
Vympel
Spetsnaz
Spetsnaz
Posts: 29312
Joined: 2002-07-19 01:08am
Location: Sydney Australia

Post by Vympel »

Stormbringer wrote:
So much for the wonders of the advanced gun system. I don't advocate bringing back battleships just for the hell of it but we have no naval gunfire suport. If we do have to storm a beach where the hell is the gun fire support? It doesn't seem like it'll be there.
Heck- at least *one* battleship would be nice ... the cost is prohibitive though- but hey- when you need 16'', you need 16''.
Like Legend of Galactic Heroes? Please contribute to http://gineipaedia.com/
User avatar
Stormbringer
King of Democracy
Posts: 22678
Joined: 2002-07-15 11:22pm

Post by Stormbringer »

Vympel wrote:Heck- at least *one* battleship would be nice ... the cost is prohibitive though- but hey- when you need 16'', you need 16''.
Yeah.

We need something with a real gun. And so far the Iowas or other big gun type ships seem to be the best option. If they're out of the question we need to build a ship with a real gun not these half ass pop guns.

Hell, a few modern cruiser size ships would be ideal. Give them a decent gunnery armament and load them down with missles. Make them a real cruisers and they'd fit the bill. Less price and more utility than the Iowas but still capable of naval gun fire support. It won't happen until it's too late though.

I guess talk Marina into it when she becomes Emperess.
Image
User avatar
Montcalm
Emperor's Hand
Posts: 7879
Joined: 2003-01-15 10:50am
Location: Montreal Canada North America

Post by Montcalm »

Why would they make new battleships when they`re relying on the missiles. :roll:
Image
Jerry Orbach 1935 2004
Admiral Valdemar~You know you've fucked up when Wacky Races has more realistic looking vehicles than your own.
User avatar
Stormbringer
King of Democracy
Posts: 22678
Joined: 2002-07-15 11:22pm

Post by Stormbringer »

Montcalm wrote:Why would they make new battleships when they`re relying on the missiles. :roll:
Because, for some missions a cruise missle just isn't the right tool for the job. Naval fire support in particular is one of those.
Image
User avatar
Montcalm
Emperor's Hand
Posts: 7879
Joined: 2003-01-15 10:50am
Location: Montreal Canada North America

Post by Montcalm »

Stormbringer wrote:
Montcalm wrote:Why would they make new battleships when they`re relying on the missiles. :roll:
Because, for some missions a cruise missle just isn't the right tool for the job. Naval fire support in particular is one of those.
I know but todays navies seems to favor missiles over guns,and the guns are getting smaller.
Image
Jerry Orbach 1935 2004
Admiral Valdemar~You know you've fucked up when Wacky Races has more realistic looking vehicles than your own.
User avatar
Warspite
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 1970
Joined: 2002-11-10 11:28am
Location: Somewhere under a rock

Post by Warspite »

Stormbringer wrote: Yeah.

We need something with a real gun. And so far the Iowas or other big gun type ships seem to be the best option. If they're out of the question we need to build a ship with a real gun not these half ass pop guns.

Hell, a few modern cruiser size ships would be ideal. Give them a decent gunnery armament and load them down with missles. Make them a real cruisers and they'd fit the bill. Less price and more utility than the Iowas but still capable of naval gun fire support. It won't happen until it's too late though.

I guess talk Marina into it when she becomes Emperess.
I'm for the battleships, but with air power nowadays, keeping 9x16" just for fire support (excluding cruise missile boxes) is too expensive, the same effect can be achieved by helicopters... Iraq Fredoom is the latest example, with total air dominance, the Marines could afford the Cobras doing multi-passes (in a carrocel (sp?) sort of way) over the objectives.

If the same purpose can be achieved by more economical platforms (cruisers and destroyers), more versatile systems (helicopters), then the BB's are just not worth it.

(But, man, watching a full broadside from those suckers...)
[img=left]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v206/ ... iggado.jpg[/img] "You know, it's odd; practically everything that's happened on any of the inhabited planets has happened on Terra before the first spaceship." -- Space Viking
User avatar
phongn
Rebel Leader
Posts: 18487
Joined: 2002-07-03 11:11pm

Post by phongn »

I'm not a fan of re-activating the battleships, especially in today's personell-strapped Navy.

The Navy had intended to use 8" guns aboard the Spruance-class DDs (which presumably would have carried on to the Kidd and Ticonderoga designs), but that was cancelled and replaced with a 5" due to budget limitations. This solution was not a very good one (hence the current investment into AGS with the ERGM).

The 16"/L50 doesn't have the range neccessary to meet the USMC's requirement (who aren't even planning the "storm the beach" amphibious assault tactic of which this kind of NGFS is best used for) unless you shove a saboted ERGM in it.
User avatar
Stormbringer
King of Democracy
Posts: 22678
Joined: 2002-07-15 11:22pm

Post by Stormbringer »

I'm for the battleships, but with air power nowadays, keeping 9x16" just for fire support (excluding cruise missile boxes) is too expensive, the same effect can be achieved by helicopters... Iraq Fredoom is the latest example, with total air dominance, the Marines could afford the Cobras doing multi-passes (in a carrocel (sp?) sort of way) over the objectives.


That's the problem, we're counting on missles and aircraft. Missles have there drawbacks and aren't the best for naval firesupport. And counting on total air dominance is a dumb idea. If we have an opposed landing against a near equal foe it's going to be messy indeed. We don't have the eqipment to make a forced assualt.
If the same purpose can be achieved by more economical platforms (cruisers and destroyers), more versatile systems (helicopters), then the BB's are just not worth it.
No, the old Iowas aren't. What I'm talking about is a cruiser. Essentially a next generation AEGIS platform. A cruiser outfitted with a heavy missle armament and a pair of fairly heavy gun turrets (not Iowa type, more in line with WW2 era cruisers). Capable of providing decent shore supporty fire but also usefull in other roles.
Image
User avatar
phongn
Rebel Leader
Posts: 18487
Joined: 2002-07-03 11:11pm

Post by phongn »

Warspite wrote:Curious, though, the French stealth frigate, has a normal bow... and they are the only ones so far to put the ships in operation.
Type 45 seems to have a conventional bow as well though none are yet in service.
Rubberanvil
Jedi Master
Posts: 1167
Joined: 2002-09-30 06:32pm

Post by Rubberanvil »

Warspite wrote:
I'm for the battleships, but with air power nowadays, keeping 9x16" just for fire support (excluding cruise missile boxes) is too expensive, the same effect can be achieved by helicopters...
Imho 2 to 4x16 is a bit practical, through I do favor 10 to 14 in. guns instead.

While the French stealth isn't the prettiest on the block, at least they look seaworthy. The Type 45 destroyers concept looks very impressive.
Malecoda
Padawan Learner
Posts: 340
Joined: 2002-11-13 03:53pm
Location: Maple Valley, WA

Post by Malecoda »

The Duchess of Zeon wrote:
Sr.mal wrote:That ship is shaped that way because it is designed to be stealthy to radar.
Unfortunately, it bears a close resemblence to French pre-dreadnought battleships in design. The ones famous for rolling over and sinking after suffering from only a small amount of damage - due to their hull form. Wundar ship here is probably going to have the same problem, especially with that huge superstructure. *shudders* Welcome to the era of the colonial patrol boat with no actual naval combat survivability, USN!
Quit being silly. That's a weird rant sprung out of an awkward leap of logic based on a picture. You have no idea what the engineers put into that thing. What do you want, to review their calcs?
I have being given A's for depleting Dragon ball Z the way it should be.
Malecoda
Padawan Learner
Posts: 340
Joined: 2002-11-13 03:53pm
Location: Maple Valley, WA

Post by Malecoda »

Col. Crackpot wrote:
The Duchess of Zeon wrote:
Sr.mal wrote:That ship is shaped that way because it is designed to be stealthy to radar.
Unfortunately, it bears a close resemblence to French pre-dreadnought battleships in design. The ones famous for rolling over and sinking after suffering from only a small amount of damage - due to their hull form. Wundar ship here is probably going to have the same problem, especially with that huge superstructure. *shudders* Welcome to the era of the colonial patrol boat with no actual naval combat survivability, USN!

For comparison, Bouvet
a heavily weighted keel could solve that. it would resist capsizing, and when it did, it could roll much like the coast guard mortor rescue boats, although this is much larger, i'll admit. But, with the minimal crew and minimal exposed structure on the weather deck it is at least feasable....
Not you too? Why do you both give so much weight to the outside appearance and say "Oh gee, we could weight the keel"? You know what would do a better job of keeping it afloat? Proper design in the first place! So why assume that bec it has some superficial resemblance to a dreadnought, it must not be designed correctly? I've never seen any employer so concerned about safety as the military. I have no reason to think that they would float an idea that itself can't float stably. I have better reason to think that they would, however, design something that does work after all. The people who design boats and build them are not like you and I: they, unlike us, are not laymen. They, unlike us, have experience in CFD. They, unlike us, have jobs doing it. And if YOU can tell us abt the French dreadnoughts, then SO CAN THEY. So why, being in your position of not knowing how to design a ship, and of not knowing what goes on in the fleet, do you assume that there must be some fault that only you can rectify?

Which brings me to the next objection: so ships "used to be the epiphany of power"? You mean, they don't work for force projection unless they have 3 turrets and a 250-foot tall mast on them? I wasn't aware that the looks of a ship dictated how well she could perform her mission. America better keep this in mind when we go off to attack the Island of the Nerds. We wouldn't want to disappoint them with a bland visual. I guess I'm old-fashioned. The word you want isn't "epiphany", anyway.
I have being given A's for depleting Dragon ball Z the way it should be.
User avatar
Warspite
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 1970
Joined: 2002-11-10 11:28am
Location: Somewhere under a rock

Post by Warspite »

Stormbringer wrote: That's the problem, we're counting on missles and aircraft. Missles have there drawbacks and aren't the best for naval firesupport. And counting on total air dominance is a dumb idea. If we have an opposed landing against a near equal foe it's going to be messy indeed. We don't have the eqipment to make a forced assualt.
I understand your point, but with the new doctrines borne out of Iraq Freedom, there will be no need for... heavy fire support.
PGM's will take care of the enemy prior to an opposed landing, while the necessary fire support can be provided by lighter weapons close to shore (read, destroyers, frigates, corvettes and fast patrol boats), and helicopters.
It's not the amount of explosive delivered that counts, it's the place and effect created. (Although, 9 tons of explosive (more or less) can create a fucking effect! :wink: )

No, the old Iowas aren't. What I'm talking about is a cruiser. Essentially a next generation AEGIS platform. A cruiser outfitted with a heavy missle armament and a pair of fairly heavy gun turrets (not Iowa type, more in line with WW2 era cruisers). Capable of providing decent shore supporty fire but also usefull in other roles.
A heavier caliber is not desirable by current day Navy doctrine (there have been voices against the 5 inch turrets already), that role being taken over by missiles. Fire support requires the ship to be close to shore, or in other words, within the striking distance of shore based anti-ship missiles, and that is the problem, missiles can afford a greater range, avoiding the firing ship to be close to land, and diminishing the danger posed by enemy missiles.
Also, the ship needs to be relatively stable when firing, limiting not only the forward speed, but also the sea conditions in which it is able to fire. Granted, you'll not be firing missiles during a gale, but you're also not firing broadsides at full speed in roling seas. These conditions limit a captains options when faced with an attack.

In the end, the USN has enough airpower to provide more than adequate fire support with a high level of precision, after all, the assault landing ships were born with that purpose in mind.
[img=left]http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v206/ ... iggado.jpg[/img] "You know, it's odd; practically everything that's happened on any of the inhabited planets has happened on Terra before the first spaceship." -- Space Viking
User avatar
Lonestar
Keeper of the Schwartz
Posts: 13321
Joined: 2003-02-13 03:21pm
Location: The Bay Area

Post by Lonestar »

Speaking as the only active duty USN sailor on this board(who isn't deployed) I'd like to comment that I'd rather be on a ship that completely fucking dominates and looks ugly than a purty ship that isn't much of an improvement over a DDG.

I've also heard enlisted personnell would get 3 person staterooms on the new DD(X), and, having leaved on currently berthing areas, I think that's just gravy.
"The rifle itself has no moral stature, since it has no will of its own. Naturally, it may be used by evil men for evil purposes, but there are more good men than evil, and while the latter cannot be persuaded to the path of righteousness by propaganda, they can certainly be corrected by good men with rifles."
User avatar
Frank Hipper
Overfiend of the Superego
Posts: 12882
Joined: 2002-10-17 08:48am
Location: Hamilton, Ohio?

Post by Frank Hipper »

ALL HAIL THE RETURN OF THE RAM BOW!!!!!!

I'm positvely horny for this ship! My nipples are bursting with excitement!

As for seaworthiness, all ships take water over the bows, a smaller deck area up front means less area to absorb water, and the freeboard on this thing will keep it reasonably dry, anyway.

As to the loss of the Bouvet, at the time of her loss, her bulkheads were corroded THROUGH. Her hull form played very little in her loss, having her hull shattered did.
Image
Life is all the eternity you get, use it wisely.
User avatar
Sea Skimmer
Yankee Capitalist Air Pirate
Posts: 37390
Joined: 2002-07-03 11:49pm
Location: Passchendaele City, HAB

Post by Sea Skimmer »

Stormbringer wrote:I miss the battleships. Especially the Iowas, now those were good looking ships.
I like French predreadnoughts and armored cruisers my self. They look so cool yet sucked so badly...
"This cult of special forces is as sensible as to form a Royal Corps of Tree Climbers and say that no soldier who does not wear its green hat with a bunch of oak leaves stuck in it should be expected to climb a tree"
— Field Marshal William Slim 1956
Post Reply