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Naval "drones" and motherships appear to experience a political breakthrough in the UK, carrying the hope for an affordable navy.
There are a couple problems with this, including an important one that I didn't mention back in 2009 and probably wasn't clear-enough about in 2018:
The fuel economy improves with size. It's almost impossible to build a boat-sized (shorter than about 60 m waterline) naval drone that could cruise across the Atlantic at 18 kts even without the drag of a towed sonar array.
So either the mothership is in large part a fuel replenishment ship (and then accordingly hardly looking like a destroyer any more) or a drone-enriched naval force would be rather short-legged, for European waters. The latter case raises the question why one wouldn't follow a land-based approach rather than a mothership-based one.
Another problem is the issue of fixed costs, and it doesn't go away by magically deleting the crew. Some surface boat drones would still need expensive equipment (expensive munitions, towed sonar or radar) to be of much use. This means it would be sensible to provide a modicum of survivability, regardless of crew size zero. This modicum of survivability includes soft kill defences, at least some autocannon, a tactical radar even for a sonar-centric USV and so on. In the end, this would be rather expensive. An analogy: Some mere flying drones such as Global Hawk ended up being obscenely expensive, close to manned combat aircraft or a FAC.
Truly cheap "drones" Could be little more than decoys, preferably drones that are being towed (by escorted transport ships) most of the time. They could launch infrared and radio frequency obscuration, feature cheap radio frequency jammers, trigger torpedoes and mines with their signatures. They could become freely-moving decoys during combat and be towed 99% of the time, solving the fuel issue. They would be an enrichment for a convoy, but not a replacement for a frigate or destroyer. Most importantly, they could be towed by a cargo ship rather than be tethered to some mother(war)ship.
I do insist on my two paths:
- A ship that deploys "USV" drones mostly as decoys and would rather resemble an LPD or helicopter cruiser than a FFG or DDG*
- A self-defending convoy of armed merchantmen making use of modular naval equipment
The alternative is to stay very traditional and have a GP frigate, BUT there's no way how NATO could compete with China in a naval arms race with such an approach. The Japanese might be able to pull that off, while the South Koreans better pay more attention to land power and air defence than a naval arms race.
(All this being said, a USV for picket duty (x-band radar and optronics) with the endurance (fuel) issue solved would be a valuable substitute for AEW in the quest to get early warning against sea-skimming threats.)
S O
defence_and_freedom@gmx.de
P.S.: I just found where I mentioned the fuel issue of boats before:
"convoys at sea would want to cruise at 15...25 kts, and I doubt that many small drones could achieve the necessary endurance to accompany a convoy at such cruise speeds. They would need to be recovered and refuelled all the time"/2018/01/modern-warships-ii-asw.html
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Catamarans, trimarans and SWATH could almost do that Transatlantic feat you describe. Look up KRI Klewang.
ReplyDeleteKRI Klewang would have had the endurance to go HALF way Brest-New York WITHOUT dragging a towed array through the water while being a bit slower than desirable.
DeleteCatamarans, trimarans and SWATH are not famed for great endurance under motor power.
Saildrone Spectre Silent Endurance is a candidate, but I'm sure a navy would want more mission payload than just one 25 ton 40 ft container: RWS, gimballed optronics, Sea Giraffe 1X, radar&IR decoy/concealment launchers, torpedo decoys.
The ability to maintain speed and formation in really rough seas is another question mark.
But why? Those designs minimize water drag, it's the logical choice for long endurance. And how about LCS(L)(3) if you want a monohull? I excluded sails because that's utterly ridiculous for a military vessel. Imagine waiting for a wind or presenting a giant target.
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