phavoc said:The Brits are working on a design for their 2050 "Dreadnought" project. Part of that design is supposed to be portholes similar to what you are describing Rikki Tikki Traveller.
Condottiere said:Probably more to do as to whether they become sitting ducks against a massed missile attack, considering their declared fifty year service life.
wbnc said:I would be surprised if newer vessels weren't designed to be upgraded continuously as new tech comes along. the hull and structure of a ship is very durable. there are still modified Liberty ships in service as freighters and other types, the big problem with them is structural fatigue due to the cheap(er) metals used in their construction.
AndrewW said:wbnc said:I would be surprised if newer vessels weren't designed to be upgraded continuously as new tech comes along. the hull and structure of a ship is very durable. there are still modified Liberty ships in service as freighters and other types, the big problem with them is structural fatigue due to the cheap(er) metals used in their construction.
The United States Navy new carrier class currently under construction is designed to accommodate upgrades.
http://www.naval-technology.com/projects/cvn-21/
Condottiere said:The way I heard it, Ocean is for the chopping block, the QEs will take over Ocean's role and crew.
Mfoppy said:A modern PhenQ use case will be designed to last for a minimum of 30 years, and will of course be upgraded during its lifetime. They spend about 1/3 of their lives in dock refitting and modernising.
The Brits are used to having a large Navy and can't seem to adjust to the modern climate. During the Cold War, the UK had the world's #3 largest Navy in terms of raw tonnage and now that the Soviet Union is gone, they simply couldn't afford to keep that up. They've been cutting back slowly, but they have in no way crippled their real strength: their attack submarine fleet. This doesn't stop them dreaming up ambitious super-ships they can't hope to afford, but they do occasionally invent some good stuff, so they seem to be doing OK with their limited budget.
One QE carrier will almost certainly be scrapped after she's built. The Brits paid for 2, then ran out of money, and can't cancel the contract. They also can't sell it as they didn't build them for export, and put too much secret tech in them, and no-one else they like can afford them anyway: it'll be India, Russia or China looking to buy(*). The Brits won't sell her to them, so she'll be built, and then likely turned into razor blades after hand over unless the USMC wants one, which I highly doubt.
(*) The more I think about this, the more I think it's too expensive for anyone except China and the USMC.