• Thanks for stopping by. Logging in to a registered account will remove all generic ads. Please reach out with any questions or concerns.

Replacing the Subs


the korean report of the above
 
RFI is used to further define what the RCN will ask for. A lot of it is to answer questions
  • is what we asked for possible?
  • is it feasible?
-challenges/opportunities identification
- do we need to change what we need
-timelines

And so on. Then they'll define the specific contract requirements from that information. It will take some time for the project to digest the submissions and adjust the draft requirements. I don't expect a lot of communication in the meantime.
 
RFI is used to further define what the RCN will ask for. A lot of it is to answer questions
  • is what we asked for possible?
  • is it feasible?
-challenges/opportunities identification
- do we need to change what we need
-timelines

And so on. Then they'll define the specific contract requirements from that information. It will take some time for the project to digest the submissions and adjust the draft requirements. I don't expect a lot of communication in the meantime.
I was thinking more along the lines of 'who' actually bothered to submit a proposal - did the Japanese, yes or no - if 'no', then it really comes down to SK or the Nor/Ger subs. If 'yes', then its a 3 horse race most likely.
 
I was thinking more along the lines of 'who' actually bothered to submit a proposal - did the Japanese, yes or no - if 'no', then it really comes down to SK or the Nor/Ger subs. If 'yes', then its a 3 horse race most likely.
RFI’s are just government fishing expeditions to see the state of industry. Sometime companies won’t bother to respond to RFI’s, but it doesn’t mean they aren’t interested, just that at times they may not want to publicly express that.

Ideally there would be a draft RFP released for industry commentary, and then that used to further refine the RFP.
 
I was thinking more along the lines of 'who' actually bothered to submit a proposal - did the Japanese, yes or no - if 'no', then it really comes down to SK or the Nor/Ger subs. If 'yes', then its a 3 horse race most likely.
If there is a Euro sub likely it would contract along with an ally for the submarines. It would be along the lines of Germany gets a sub, Norway gets a sub then Canada gets a sub. Then start again. If it was Korea it is more likely to firehose submarines at us rapidly. Lmao.

The question/concern is something along the lines of "we have 1.5 - 2 trained crews" how the hell are we going to adapt to a lot of submarines fast.

Of other note, the first Korean joined the NATO DE Perisher course. Leveraging that expertise and reducing costs across the board and some good military exchange.
 
Back
Top