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Ex-Dragoon said::you can't compare a fishing schooner to that of a minor warship.
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
How about the Mercury program then. I am telling you we are moving backwards.
Ex-Dragoon said::you can't compare a fishing schooner to that of a minor warship.
RC said:You have to include the time from where someone first thought "Hey, we should build a speedy fishing schooner." to the point where it hit the water.
RC said:Mercury doesn't compare very well, as you are talking about a program with an immense design budget and hundreds of engineers for Mercury, versus a dozen engineers developing the AOPS design. I suppose any ship program could be accelerated by spending more money but numbers vs. productivity doesn't scale very well in the engineering world in my opinion. Mercury had big pressure to deliver quickly. That is expensive. I don't think that's a route we would want to take for our Navy. Better that the money is spent on the ships.
RC said:....but numbers vs. productivity doesn't scale very well in the engineering world in my opinion. .....
Larkvall said:Well they said "Hey, we should build a speedy fishy schnoor." right after they lost the race to the Americans in October 1920 and she hit the water March 26, 1921.
Sure Mercury had an immense budget. But the AOPS program has an immense budget compared to the Bluenose.
Why don't we just use some of these Kingston class ships tied up doing nothing. Reinforce the hulls with some 4 x 4s and patrol the arctic with them until these AOPS ships are ready in 10-15 years.
RC said:I was trying to illustrate that there is more to the program than just the design and build, and as far as the timeline goes, a healthy part of it is dedicated to developing the requirements and securing financing.
You can't be honest about a comparison of the timelines if you include everything for one and only design and build for the other. You have to include the time from where someone first thought "Hey, we should build a speedy fishing schooner." to the point where it hit the water.
It's probably also worth noting that the Bluenose was less than 1/20th the size of the proposed AOPS and (scaling for inflation) about 1/1000th of the cost. One might imagine that would have an effect on the level of planning required.
Mercury doesn't compare very well, as you are talking about a program with an immense design budget and hundreds of engineers for Mercury, versus a dozen engineers developing the AOPS design. I suppose any ship program could be accelerated by spending more money but numbers vs. productivity doesn't scale very well in the engineering world in my opinion. Mercury had big pressure to deliver quickly. That is expensive. I don't think that's a route we would want to take for our Navy. Better that the money is spent on the ships.
Ex-Dragoon said:Why do
Why don't you quit talking out of your @ss and read the naval forum. You might learn something.
4x4 indeed....grow a brain for Hilliers sake. :![]()
I am kind of surprised by the thought that a steel ship in 2010 should be operated in the arctic with wood to reinforce the hull and that it would actually make a difference in the ship coming in contact with significant pack ice. Although I agree ships operated there 300 years ago and they were made of wood, doesn't mean that it should be done that way today. Also I would hazard a guess that any naval architect would tell you that the complexity of planning, desigining and constructing a fleet of ships to operate in the arctic is exponentially more challenging than building a simple wooden hulled schooner in the 20's.Larkvall said:I have been reading the naval forum. How do you think I came across this thread? What I am reading here is the same old, same old from government. Instead of making a call and dealing with a problem governments just kick the can down the road and waste the taxpayers money. Whether it be on defense, garbage disposal, highways, etc. governments just pretend to deal with the problem with commissioning study and study after study wasting the taxpayers money.
Look at the problems with the Sea King replacement, AOR replacement and now the AOPs. Why are you guys not willing to see that this is not a good thing.
Sure use 4x4s or 4x8s or 8x8s. This is how they reinforced hulls in the old days. If there is something better and you can get it by the beancounters sure use it. Else, raid the petty cash and go to Home Depot. The Hudsons Bay Company was doing business in the Arctic over 300 hundred years ago in wooden ships. Where is that same spirit? Maybe I shouldn't ask such questions or else the government might commision a report to find out where it went. (Who knows maybe it already has.)
I am done reading Navy threads for a while. They are very depressing.
Washington Marine Group (WMG) announced the signing of a Teaming Agreement with Thales Canada forming a strategic alliance to provide the Government of Canada a single solution for the future build and in service support of the Arctic Offshore Patrol Ships (AOPS). The AOPS program is worth over $2b dollars, delivering six ice breaking patrol vessels to the Canadian Navy, as part of the Federal Government’s National Shipbuilding Procurement Strategy (NSPS). It will provide 700 to 800 skilled jobs to BC shipbuilders and 40 to 60 high technology jobs, in Ontario.