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tygyg1111

Senior Member
Registered Member
It’s not cost that matters. Sinks on battleships must be battle grade & not sink. This design criteria will save lives when the ship sinks so Cost is not an issue. Lives matter.
That's why we use LifeSink™, the Mumbai train of lifesaving fixtures - supports up to 3 standard sailors* in the event of capsize.

*equivalent to 1 US sailor
 

supersnoop

Major
Registered Member
The Toilets are porcelain it’s the Sinks that are carbon fiber. I suspect they are 3D printed.

I’d like to imagine that they are either

a) Fake carbon fiber, just carbon fiber looking. However this doesn’t seem likely since the toilet is still porcelain.

b) Testing some new manufacturing techniques and choosing something that can be replaced easily in case it proves to be not up to grade. The main argument against this is the lack of 2000 press releases touting how some company’s “next generation production processes” are being used on “America’s flagship aircraft carrier” and “making an impact on the everyday lives of the sailors serving on board”.

The materials used for the two items seem counter-intuitive. You want a carbon fiber toilet to take the blow of the taco bomb. Maybe in this LGBTIQ era, it is the sink that has to stand up to abuse. :cool:

You were making a joke, but there is actually some truth in it

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TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
I’d like to imagine that they are either

a) Fake carbon fiber, just carbon fiber looking. However this doesn’t seem likely since the toilet is still porcelain.

b) Testing some new manufacturing techniques and choosing something that can be replaced easily in case it proves to be not up to grade. The main argument against this is the lack of 2000 press releases touting how some company’s “next generation production processes” are being used on “America’s flagship aircraft carrier” and “making an impact on the everyday lives of the sailors serving on board”.
I have been putting thought into them and best I can figure is since the basins are free standing mounted only to the bulkhead and to the plumbing. The lighter weight might be advantageous in that it means less risk of the basin coming free in the event of a violent shock to the ship. It’s also likely that the material was chosen to reduce rust issues that are common on metal surfaces.
the Toilet being mounted to the deck would not require such.
 

sheogorath

Major
Registered Member
I have been putting thought into them and best I can figure is since the basins are free standing mounted only to the bulkhead and to the plumbing. The lighter weight might be advantageous in that it means less risk of the basin coming free in the event of a violent shock to the ship. It’s also likely that the material was chosen to reduce rust issues that are common on metal surfaces.
the Toilet being mounted to the deck would not require such.

Do they use saltwater for the toilets and sinks in the CV's?. Rust could be it, if thats the case.
 

pevade

Junior Member
Registered Member
Do they use saltwater for the toilets and sinks in the CV's?. Rust could be it, if thats the case.
There is no way they're using saltwater. Imagine washing your face with saltwater. Yikes. , Even if they were using saltwater, basically all the plumbing would have to be plastic which I doubt.
They're almost certainly using RO or some kind of water purification system.
 

Heliox

Junior Member
Registered Member
The Toilets are porcelain it’s the Sinks that are carbon fiber. I suspect they are 3D printed.

Ford Toilet.jpg

One would think that a plastic vacuum-formed sink would be cheaper and just as light or if the shape is too complex, then GFRP rather than CF would make more sense.

Anyway, other issue with the toilet (not the sink) ...
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  • The toilets on America’s two newest
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    , causing problems throughout the ship.
  • Outages in one toilet affected a wider grouping of toilets
  • The ships use a scaled-up version of airliner toilets, using vacuum power to evacuate human waste.
  • As a result, the system must regularly be cleaned with an expensive acid solution that costs $400,000 per use.

There is no way they're using saltwater. Imagine washing your face with saltwater. Yikes. , Even if they were using saltwater, basically all the plumbing would have to be plastic which I doubt.
They're almost certainly using RO or some kind of water purification system.

Not that. But it's a marine environment. There's no telling how many sailors come below deck salt water soaked or rinse out salt water in the basins. All fittings have to have a certain amount of salt-water corrosion resistance.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Oh I am sure there are many materials that could be Cheaper. However a number of questions come into play like fire resistance. Being a combat vessel Ford has to be designed to deal with fires.
Overall though this conversation lacks has been based on an assumption. We assume this is more expensive than it needs to be.

Back in 2018 Senator Chuck Grassly pulled the same stunt on a previous Air Force secretary asking why the USAF was looking on spending $10,000 on toilet seat covers. Those seat covers were for the C5M Super Galaxy. They cost that much because they were not a common component. The OEM Lockheed had originally designed them back in the late 1960s and manufacturing for new C5 was long cold. The USAF had ordered replacements about three times by then each very expensive as building the replacements meant they were custom made.
So $10,000.
Of course after that the USAF started making replacements for only $300 because they realized they could 3D print them now.
Basically if Mike Waltz found those sinks cost more than market value he would have the Navy Secretary on the grill after the Air Force’s $90,000 Bag of Bushings.
 

HighGround

Junior Member
Registered Member
Of course after that the USAF started making replacements for only $300 because they realized they could 3D print them now.
Basically if Mike Waltz found those sinks cost more than market value he would have the Navy Secretary on the grill after the Air Force’s $90,000 Bag of Bushings.

Hearings like this devolve into partisan "gotchas" and nit-picks in an attempt to embarrass political opposition. Meanwhile, both parties will happily ignore cost and time overruns on... basically every major US defense project in the last twenty years with various degrees of egregiousness.

Overruns are probably inevitable, but there's a lot of areas where we could improve in terms of cost control.
 

CasualObserver

Junior Member
Registered Member
Breaking: Anduril and General Atomics are selected to continue building the Air Force's first increment of Collaborative Combat Aircraft
The two companies beat Boeing, Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman for the program. A production decision is expected in FY2026
The award is a huge win for up-start Anduril. GA-ASI has a long track record of providing uncrewed systems for the Air Force. Boeing/LH/NG are able to compete for the upcoming second increment
GA-ASI says its CCA design is based on its XQ-67A Off-Board Sensing Station it developed for AFRL

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