PLAN Future FFG design

Status
Not open for further replies.

Solaris

Banned Idiot
Re: PLAN Type 056 Class OPV/Corvette

I imagine there would be equal numbers of FFG and DDG, and I'd lay out the additional two FFGs closer to the carrier, as dedicated MR defense for the flattop.
And this is where we'll have to disagree, as I don't feel there is really such a thing as a MR air defense layer, and therefore no need for frigates beyond what is needed for ASW. I could see adding 1-2 more frigates for backup ASW in case one of the other ones get taken out or there is expected to be heavy resistance and likely more than one threat axis, but generally if I were to add any more ships they would all be DDG's of some kind.


Also, I wonder if there is a danger in having escorts too tailored to an expected threat axis, because if an attack comes in from a direction one is not expecting then you are in trouble. Especially if your escorts are far away from each other and if you do not get early warning soon enough (for whatever reason, stealth, sea skimming, SNAFUs...), meaning not enough time to adjust positioning. Of course this depends on the nature of the threat and the maritime geography.
If a CVBG does not get early warning soon enough, then something has gone terribly wrong. That means the entire airwing of fighters available for CAP has been destroyed, all the available AEW/C have been destroyed, and communications with the rest of your military support structure (land based AEW/C, satellites, HALE UAV's, OTH radars, etc.) have been destroyed. This could be accomplished, but if you insist on continuing with your attack in the face of this level of destruction of your electronic eyes and ears, you will have nobody to blame but yourself if you get utterly annihilated later on. In practice a carrier group (especially a USN one) will have multiple means of early warning and can position its ships accordingly as an enemy attack is inbound. If there is more than one threat axis the escorts will have to do their best to spread their assets between them.
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
This thread is about the future FFG designs for the PLAN, starting with the vessel that will be the Type 054A follow on.

It is meant to be a thread to discuss what might be coming, and the various aspects of it.

Once an actual design is verified with a specific designation (ir the Type 054B is that is what they call it), then a separate thread can start on that specific class of vessel, and this thread will remain for the future design beyond that.

I will move numerous posts here from the Type 056 thread where this discussion has had a real genesis.
 

duskylim

Junior Member
VIP Professional
I think the intended role for each respective frigate, 056 and 054A is quite clear judging by the ways the PLAN has used/deployed them.

1) the 054/054A frigates have been used on long-range patrol as far as the Gulf of Aden, the Mediterranean (during the Libyan crises) and in the southern Indian Ocean during the search for MH370.

Clearly the PLAN sees them as suitable for these long-range fleet operations, and they provide the 'inner' AAW/ASuW/ASW defense screen for the fleet.

Yes, they are multi-role frigates (jack-of-all-trades) but this is because that in the role the PLAN intends for them, as fleet escorts, they HAVE to be.

Admittedly, at the present their ASW capabilities may be less than sterling, but hopefully future upgrades will improve on these.

They will thus also constitute the most numerous of the PLAN's long range escort vessels, probably out-numbering their accompanying destroyers by a factor of two in the fleet.

Clearly due to their limited size and tonnage, they are probably close the minimum size for these operations, implying limited range and endurance, more reliant than larger vessels on underway replenishment.

Nonetheless, I believe the PLAN was generally quite satisfied with them, and that they represented a tremendous advance over all previous classes of PLAN FFG's, as well as excellent value for money - hence the large production run they enjoyed.

In my opinion, a successor to these ships would need to be larger (certainly NOT smaller) and certainly have to incorporate improved weapons, sensors and capabilities.

It should incorporate improved radars and sensors, battle-management, communications and data-sharing, electronic warfare, ASW and ASuW systems along with increased endurance and the new 'universal' VLS system.

The PLAN's expansion into the more ocean-going activities demands it.

All of these imply a larger vessel, 054B (or whatever the PLAN decides to call it) will be the 054A's big-brother.

2) The 056 class continues in the more traditional (Mao-era) role of the PLAN - Coastal and Littoral waters defense.

These small frigates of 1500 (or so) tons were never intended to operate with the fleet, rather their role is patrolling of China's coastal areas within the reach of local aircraft and air defenses.

They need sufficient size and endurance to undertake these missions and have basic/adequate AAW, ASuW and ASW capabilities.

Though not obvious to the casual observer, they also represent a vast improvement in capabilities versus the vessels they are being built to replace.

I believe they will also be improved as more of the class are built.

Just my 2 cents.
 

Solaris

Banned Idiot
Yes, they are multi-role frigates (jack-of-all-trades) but this is because that in the role the PLAN intends for them, as fleet escorts, they HAVE to be.
They don't HAVE to be anything. Oliver Hazard Perry frigates are also fleet escorts, but try telling me they are multi-role frigates. 054A frigates are multirole because they were designed and built at a time (mid 2000’s) when the PLAN barely even had any modern destroyers while at the same time they were facing the impending retirement of the 051's and 053's. There was a need to get some modern ships into service, and clearly these frigates are many times more capable than even the destroyers they were helping to replace, and easier to design and build than the larger ships like the 052B and 052C, which they were still experimenting with building 2 at a time. There was no point in specializing in ASW when you didn’t even have an effective generalist. The PLAN no longer has a modern destroyer deficit. It no longer has modern shipbuilding inexperience to deal with. The types of ships the PLAN can now be tailored to what the PLAN really needs rather than putting something out for the sake of filling the ranks. In this day and age of the 052D and impending 055, I don’t see a role for a generalist the size of a frigate. Whatever low end or low intensity roles that the PLAN needs to fill along its coastal regions or as antipiracy escorts or whatever, can be filled by either the 056 or the 054A, both of which will remain in service for decades. The 054A will probably also see interim service in the PLAN’s new CVBG’s in the role of ASW. But if these carrier groups do not coalesce by the time the 054B comes out, the 054A will likely not even see any service alongside carriers. For carrier escort duty the PLAN does not need featherweight warships trying to punch above their weight class in AAW using their MRSAM’s; this is the domain of the destroyers and cruisers and the LRSAM’s. Frigates on the other hand are perfect for ASW. A comparatively cheaper platform that can even so carry all the hardware that is necessary to detect and destroy an enemy submarine and that is not hampered by the need to act as a necessary part of the fleet’s air defenses, the maneuvering for which is incompatible with the constant zig-zag pattern searching that is necessary for ASW.


Clearly the PLAN sees them as suitable for these long-range fleet operations, and they provide the 'inner' AAW/ASuW/ASW defense screen for the fleet.
This is a misunderstanding of the concept of 'inner' and 'outer' defense screens, which are defined by proximity to the carrier or other high value unit (HVU) and not by perceived capability. You will see destroyers in both the inner and outer screens, and if there is only one frigate in the CVBG, it will more likely be in the OUTER screen doing ASW.


They will thus also constitute the most numerous of the PLAN's long range escort vessels, probably out-numbering their accompanying destroyers by a factor of two in the fleet.
Just because they are smaller doesn't automatically mean they will be more numerous, to say nothing of being more numerous by a factor of two. I don’t know how you arrived at this ratio.
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
They don't HAVE to be anything. Oliver Hazard Perry frigates are also fleet escorts, but try telling me they are multi-role frigates.
When they were introduced they were precisely that.

They had good AAW with the 40 round single arm launcher and the Standard missiles of the day.

They had decent ASuW capabilities with the Harpoons and 76mm gun.

They had good ASW capabilities with the two helos and the towed array.

Just because they no longer fit that bill does not mean they were not designed back in the 70s to be multi-role.

The US would benefit greatly from ensuring that the 24 or so new FFGs that the Secretary of the Navy will be looking at are good, multi-role frigates in today's environs like the Perry frigates were when they were first introduced...but more upgradable so they can stay that way for a loner period without huge coosts.

As it is, the Turks and Aussies are upgrading their Perry's to keep them operating in a multi-role capacity.

For the Turks this means they new G-Class FFGs will have:

1 × Mk 15 Phalanx CIWS
1 × Oto Melara 76mm DP gun
8 × Harpoon SSM
32 × SM-1 MR SAM
32 × ESSM launched from Mk-41 VLS

For the Aussies, it meant:

1 × Mk 15 Phalanx Block 1B CIWS
2 x Typhoon 12.7mm Remote MGs
1 × Oto Melara 76mm DP gun
8 × RGM-84 Block II Harpoon SSM
32 × SM-2 Block IIIA SAM
32 × ESSM launched from Mk-41 VLS

In both cases, they will be nice modern multi-role frigates, with decent AAW, ASuW and ASW capabilities.

Such an upgrade was deemed too expensive for the US Navy.
 

Solaris

Banned Idiot
When they were introduced they were precisely that.

They had good AAW with the 40 round single arm launcher and the Standard missiles of the day.

They had decent ASuW capabilities with the Harpoons and 76mm gun.

They had good ASW capabilities with the two helos and the towed array.

Just because they no longer fit that bill does not mean they were not designed back in the 70s to be multi-role.
Exactly. They were multirole..... and now they are not. If they were needed to be multi-role, they would have remained multi-role.


The US would benefit greatly from ensuring that the 24 or so new FFGs that the Secretary of the Navy will be looking at are good, multi-role frigates in today's environs like the Perry frigates were when they were first introduced...but more upgradable so they can stay that way for a loner period without huge coosts.
What the USN is looking at is not necessarily what they are going to commit to or buy, so what the USN is known to be buying is a better judge of what the USN thinks it needs: 30-something 'multi-role' LC ships. Only they are not multi-role in the traditional sense of good capability in AAW, ASuW, and ASW. Their ASW is probably going to be pretty good, but that's about it. Besides the SeaRAM, their AAW is non-existent. Their ASuW consists of either NLOS or Hellfire, and a gun.


As it is, the Turks and Aussies are upgrading their Perry's to keep them operating in a multi-role capacity.

In both cases, they will be nice modern multi-role frigates, with decent AAW, ASuW and ASW capabilities.

Such an upgrade was deemed too expensive for the US Navy.
Yeah, so expensive that they decided to build more Burkes instead and let the Perrys just do the ASW, which is perfect for these smaller ships. And that's exactly what I would have done: a cheaper platform for ASW, a good platform for AAW that doesn't try to skimp on the goods. In the modern age a large proportion of the cost of a warship, or perhaps even the majority of the cost, comes from the electronics and software. Less powerful warships that try to do part of the work of a full size warship are simply going to be less cost effective than larger platforms. I'm willing to bet that the cost of an Aegis system installed into a frigate is going to be almost the same cost as one installed in a destroyer. You may get a few hundred T/R modules shaved off the price with smaller arrays, but the rest of the guts and brains are the same. But yet this frigate will load probably 32 to 48 SAM's while a destroyer will load at least twice that many. When that much of the cost of a ship cannot be effectively reduced with a smaller platform, it does not make sense to make mini-destroyers to perform some of the work of a destroyer. What you need are frigates that perform other jobs that don't require high end radars and lots of firepower, like ASW, ISR, special ops, mine warfare, etc., all of which BTW are intended for the LCS to do. All of these can be done with smaller ships. AAW is best done with larger ships sporting powerful radars, powerful combat data systems, and large masses of VLS cells.
 

Blitzo

Lieutenant General
Staff member
Super Moderator
Registered Member
Yeah, so expensive that they decided to build more Burkes instead and let the Perrys just do the ASW, which is perfect for these smaller ships. And that's exactly what I would have done: a cheaper platform for ASW, a good platform for AAW that doesn't try to skimp on the goods. In the modern age a large proportion of the cost of a warship, or perhaps even the majority of the cost, comes from the electronics and software. Less powerful warships that try to do part of the work of a full size warship are simply going to be less cost effective than larger platforms. I'm willing to bet that the cost of an Aegis system installed into a frigate is going to be almost the same cost as one installed in a destroyer. You may get a few hundred T/R modules shaved off the price with smaller arrays, but the rest of the guts and brains are the same. But yet this frigate will load probably 32 to 48 SAM's while a destroyer will load at least twice that many. When that much of the cost of a ship cannot be effectively reduced with a smaller platform, it does not make sense to make mini-destroyers to perform some of the work of a destroyer. What you need are frigates that perform other jobs that don't require high end radars and lots of firepower, like ASW, ISR, special ops, mine warfare, etc., all of which BTW are intended for the LCS to do. All of these can be done with smaller ships. AAW is best done with larger ships sporting powerful radars, powerful combat data systems, and large masses of VLS cells.


Even an ASW frigate will still require some level of air defence, and in the modern age, I think if you intend that ship to also be able to operate independently in low and medium threat environments you need to give it some level of air defence of MR at least.

Such a ship won't be optimised for AAW of course, but will be still need to be competent at it, to defend itself. And yes, it may contribute to a CSGs AAW as we discussed before.


Also, a frigate with a smaller APAR and combat system won't only be cheaper in terms of a few hundred TR modules compared to a larger ship. Fewer consoles, likely less sophisticated multi engagement capability and overall less capable combat system, smaller CIC overall, overall smaller and less powerful radars, possibly less sophisticated EW. That will all add up to something substantial.

---

And I don't understand what the disagreement is in preceding few posts, as fleet escorts more often than not are multirole. The only recent class of fleet escort in recent memory I know of that has skimped out on multirole capabilities is the type 45 and that was more budget than choice.

Of course a ship having multirole capability doesn't mean it will be used in all roles equally. As mentioned before, a multirole frigate will more likely spend more time in the ASW job than an equally multirole destroyer.

---
And the reason the USN removed the arm launchers on their Perrys was less because they thought frigates didn't need credible air defence or didn't need to be multirole, and more about wanting to retire their arm launchers and the high cost and impracticality of refitting Perrys with mk-41s (along with a fetish for a grand fleet made of large 9000-10000 ton behemoths that on paper is meant to be able to do every job out there)
 
Last edited:

Solaris

Banned Idiot
Even an ASW frigate will still require some level of air defence, and in the modern age, I think if you intend that ship to also be able to operate independently in low and medium threat environments you need to give it some level of air defence of MR at least.

Such a ship won't be optimised for AAW of course, but will be still need to be competent at it, to defend itself. And yes, it may contribute to a CSGs AAW as we discussed before.
Yes, but being capable of defending itself and having the full-on advanced AAW suite found in ships like the Burke and the 052D are not the same thing. I think the 054A is already a pretty effective frigate in terms of AAW if we are talking about defending itself or a nearby ship. But if you want to provide fleetwide air defense, you will need far more capability than what the 054A has on hand. And this is what I'm saying a frigate in a navy like the modern day PLAN does not need.


Also, a frigate with a smaller APAR and combat system won't only be cheaper in terms of a few hundred TR modules compared to a larger ship. Fewer consoles, likely less sophisticated multi engagement capability and overall less capable combat system, smaller CIC overall, overall smaller and less powerful radars, possibly less sophisticated EW. That will all add up to something substantial.
In terms of the AAW suite, I'm not sure how you can have fewer consoles or a less sophisticated combat system, or can demonstrate significant cost savings with these degradations of capability. Perhaps you can give me an example of a tiered capability combat data system.


And I don't understand what the disagreement is in preceding few posts, as fleet escorts more often than not are multirole. The only recent class of fleet escort in recent memory I know of that has skimped out on multirole capabilities is the type 45 and that was more budget than choice.
It is not necessarily easy to compare different fleets with different budgets, different technological levels and different missions. The PLAN resembles, or at least in the future will most closely resemble, the USN. There can be no doubt that this is where the PLAN is heading. We are talking about suitable escorts for carriers and surface action groups. We are not talking about misrepresenting a destroyer as a frigate or a carrier as a destroyer in the manner of other navies. By which I mean that the PLAN is not building European-type 6,000ton "frigates" that are destroyers in everything but name, and which are appropriately multirole because they act as destroyers in smaller navies should act, responsible for AAW because they are (mostly) the largest ships in those navies, and responsible for ASW and ASuW because they are one of the few ships in those navies. I'm talking about ships like the Zeven Provincien, F100, etc, those ships I mentioned earlier.

When we look at the USN, we see a frigate whose capabilities have been allowed to atrophy so that it is essentially only capable of ASW. We see its replacement whose capabilities include ASW but definitely not any real AAW (or ASuW for that matter). While we can agree that probably most people viewing the LCS from outside the USN think these ships are irresponsibly undergunned, this does not mean we would all agree that the solution is to slap some SPY-1's on there and go to town with VLS modules.


And the reason the USN removed the arm launchers on their Perrys was less because they thought frigates didn't need credible air defence or didn't need to be multirole, and more about wanting to retire their arm launchers and the high cost and impracticality of refitting Perrys with mk-41s (along with a fetish for a grand fleet made of large 9000-10000 ton behemoths that on paper is meant to be able to do every job out there)
Cost is always measured against need. If they felt that the need was there for a frigate like the Perry to retain AAW and ASuW capability, the cost would have been borne. Also, the big ship fetish has to be judged from the lens of Cold War big budget days, not from our current post-Great Recession viewpoint. They obviously felt that to fight the Soviets you needed big ships with big capabilities, and that multirole half-pints weren't really needed. And they obviously didn't think Ticos and Burkes were meant to do every job out there since they have retained the services of the Perrys to this very day. Also, both Ticos and Burkes have nowadays essentially ceded the role of ASuW to the carrier air wing, and are mainly AAW ships with some land attack and ASW capability remaining.

Even now the USN's conception of the LCS belies the belief that the USN has somehow changed its views about the need for multirole frigates. As I said before, the LCS is indeed 'multirole', but AAW and ASuW is certainly not included in any of those multiple roles. But lo and behold, ASW is.
 

Blitzo

Lieutenant General
Staff member
Super Moderator
Registered Member
Yes, but being capable of defending itself and having the full-on advanced AAW suite found in ships like the Burke and the 052D are not the same thing. I think the 054A is already a pretty effective frigate in terms of AAW if we are talking about defending itself or a nearby ship. But if you want to provide fleetwide air defense, you will need far more capability than what the 054A has on hand. And this is what I'm saying a frigate in a navy like the modern day PLAN does not need.

Yes, I agree. But I think we disagree as to what capabilities a frigate needs to be capable of "defending itself" means in this day and age.


In terms of the AAW suite, I'm not sure how you can have fewer consoles or a less sophisticated combat system, or can demonstrate significant cost savings with these degradations of capability. Perhaps you can give me an example of a tiered capability combat data system.

Well in my mind a new PLAN frigate would use a completely new combat system to 055 and 052D in the sense that it will be deliberately less capable. I.e.: not simply a scaled down "aegis+SPY-1" that various other nations have done for their ships like bazan or Nansen, which have slightly smaller arrays and less VLS compared to a burke or tico, but that is about where there combat system difference ends. A new PLAN FFG should deliberately use a less powerful radar, a different combat system (different software especially. I imagine they could use the same console designs as on 055 or 052D if they wish, but maybe with less powerful processing power and fewer total console number).

OHP is an example of a ship that gave up various capabilities seen on larger ships. For instance when it entered service lacked 3d air radar, it lacked the advanced EW suite of its contemporaries of the time (I forget the exact designation), it used a single arm missile launcher rather than dual. OHP is a great example of a lower cost ship with weaker combat systems and weaker combat capabilities compared to larger destroyers or frigates of its time, while simultaneously having credible capabilities in all domains enough for a medium threat environment or able to support in a larger task group.

For a future PLAN frigate, it might have a shorter range radar less capable against stealth targets and maybe a combat system less capable against a high volume of targets (as a modern day "loss in capability" compared to the OHPs lower capability 2D radar of the day). The lower capability single arm versus two arm launcher can be also present allegorically via a smaller number of VLS cells on a future frigate versus a destroyer.


It is not necessarily easy to compare different fleets with different budgets, different technological levels and different missions. The PLAN resembles, or at least in the future will most closely resemble, the USN. There can be no doubt that this is where the PLAN is heading. We are talking about suitable escorts for carriers and surface action groups. We are not talking about misrepresenting a destroyer as a frigate or a carrier as a destroyer in the manner of other navies. By which I mean that the PLAN is not building European-type 6,000ton "frigates" that are destroyers in everything but name, and which are appropriately multirole because they act as destroyers in smaller navies should act, responsible for AAW because they are (mostly) the largest ships in those navies, and responsible for ASW and ASuW because they are one of the few ships in those navies. I'm talking about ships like the Zeven Provincien, F100, etc, those ships I mentioned earlier.

I never said the PLAN should seek a frigate like the euro frigates, but that doesn't mean they can simply skimp on AAW and ASuW for their own future frigates.

Even other navies like Russia or India have frigates of the 4000-5000 ton range with multirole capabilities. Type 26 sits there as well, along with many others.

And just because the PLAN is seeking to emulate the USN doesn't mean it should make the same force structure decisions as the USN.


When we look at the USN, we see a frigate whose capabilities have been allowed to atrophy so that it is essentially only capable of ASW. We see its replacement whose capabilities include ASW but definitely not any real AAW (or ASuW for that matter). While we can agree that probably most people viewing the LCS from outside the USN think these ships are irresponsibly undergunned, this does not mean we would all agree that the solution is to slap some SPY-1's on there and go to town with VLS modules.

... Wait are you using the LCS as a possible example of what the PLAN should seek to emulate? (I kid)

And of course I'm not saying LCS would be better with some SPY-1s and chunks of VLS. But as it is now, lacking even ASHMs, lacking any meaningful air defence beyond point defence, and at a not-quite-corvette, not-quite-frigate displacement of 3000 tons, it definitely needs to be rethought. And that is exactly what the USN is doing by calling production at 32 boats and asking for proposals for a new replacement to LCS meant to be more like a traditional frigate capable of higher intensity operations than LCS (but considering LCS is only about as well armed as a coast guard cutter, that isn't saying much)

If anything, the LCS is an anomaly among the world's navies, for being simultaneously underarmed, trying to be modular, and small, all at the same time.



Cost is always measured against need. If they felt that the need was there for a frigate like the Perry to retain AAW and ASuW capability, the cost would have been borne. Also, the big ship fetish has to be judged from the lens of Cold War big budget days, not from our current post-Great Recession viewpoint. They obviously felt that to fight the Soviets you needed big ships with big capabilities, and that multirole half-pints weren't really needed. And they obviously didn't think Ticos and Burkes were meant to do every job out there since they have retained the services of the Perrys to this very day. Also, both Ticos and Burkes have nowadays essentially ceded the role of ASuW to the carrier air wing, and are mainly AAW ships with some land attack and ASW capability remaining.

Even now the USN's conception of the LCS belies the belief that the USN has somehow changed its views about the need for multirole frigates. As I said before, the LCS is indeed 'multirole', but AAW and ASuW is certainly not included in any of those multiple roles. But lo and behold, ASW is.

Yes, and we all see how successful of a programme LCS is turning out. The lack of credible air and anti surface capability is one of the constant criticisms of it, and that among other factors was enough to cap LCS production at 32 boats and incentivised the USN to seek a new LCS successor which has been clearly stated by Hagel to want a ship more in line with a "frigate" and able to survive in a higher intensity environment. This is all fairly recent news, but you could practically hear USN watchers breathe a collective sigh of relief as the LCS train wreck is at least being mitigated and that there are nascent plans for a ship that hopefully has some real anti air and anti surface combat capability.

The USN probably thought it could retire OHPs Mk-13 launcher because they knew they'd have more than enough missiles on their burkes and ticos. But they effectively stripped OHPs of any ability to defend themselves in a medium threat environment independently.
Actually I can't even remember the last time I saw a perry sail with a CSG either. Can anyone provide info on what roles the 11 remaining Perrys have in the USN. Anti drug smuggling? After the Perrys had their Mk-13s removed, castrating them, did they even undertake medium operations at all?
 
Last edited:

Solaris

Banned Idiot
Well in my mind a new PLAN frigate would use a completely new combat system to 055 and 052D in the sense that it will be deliberately less capable. I.e.: not simply a scaled down "aegis+SPY-1" that various other nations have done for their ships like bazan or Nansen, which have slightly smaller arrays and less VLS compared to a burke or tico, but that is about where there combat system difference ends. A new PLAN FFG should deliberately use a less powerful radar, a different combat system (different software especially. I imagine they could use the same console designs as on 055 or 052D if they wish).

OHP is an example of a ship that gave up various capabilities seen on larger ships. For instance when it entered service lacked 3d air radar, it lacked the advanced EW suite of its contemporaries of the time (I forget the exact designation), it used a single arm missile launcher rather than dual. OHP is a great example of a lower cost ship with weaker combat systems and weaker combat capabilities compared to larger destroyers or frigates of its time, while simultaneously having credible capabilities in all domains enough for a medium threat environment or able to support in a larger task group.

For a future PLAN frigate, it might have a shorter range radar less capable against stealth targets and maybe a combat system less capable against a high volume of targets (as a modern day "loss in capability" compared to the OHPs lower capability 2D radar of the day). The lower capability single arm versus two arm launcher can be also present allegorically via a smaller number of VLS cells on a future frigate versus a destroyer.
This future PLAN frigate you describe sounds like a 054A, which is BTW far more AAW-capable than the Perry ever was, even when it had its Mk 13 launchers.


I never said the PLAN should seek a frigate like the euro frigates, but that doesn't mean they can simply skimp on AAW and ASuW.

Even other navies like Russia or India have frigates with multirole capabilities.

And just because the PLAN is seeking to emulate the USN doesn't mean it should make the same force structure decisions as the USN.
I never said the 054B should skimp on AAW and ASuW, simply that I don't think it needs an advanced AAW suite. By advanced I mean anything significantly more capable than what the 054A has now. As far as ASuW goes, this is really a non-issue, since effective ASuW for PLAN ships essentially means a gun, some slant launchers and a datalink, all of which even the 056 has.


... Wait are you using the LCS as a possible example of what the PLAN should seek to emulate? (I kid)

And of course I'm not saying LCS would be better with some SPY-1s and chunks of VLS. But as it is now, lacking even ASHMs, lacking any meaningful air defence beyond point defence, and at a not-quite-corvette, not-quite-frigate displacement of 3000 tons, it definitely needs to be rethought. And that is exactly what the USN is doing by calling production at 32 boats and asking for proposals for a new replacement to LCS meant to be more like a traditional frigate capable of higher intensity operations than LCS (but considering LCS is only about as well armed as a coast guard cutter, that isn't saying much)

I anything, the LCS is an anomaly among the world's navies, for being simultaneously underarmed, modular, and small, all at the same time.
Clearly I don't mean exactly the LCS. More AAW and more ASuW are probably universally desired for this platform. But the concept is sound IMO, i.e. less focus on the traditional warfare areas of AAW and ASuW (just not THAT much less), and more focus on the things larger ships don't need to be tasked to do, like ASW, minesweeping, recon, assault, etc.


Yes, and we all see how successful of a programme LCS is turning out. The lack of credible air and anti surface capability is one of the constant criticisms of it, and that among other factors was enough to cap LCS production at 32 boats and incentivised the USN to seek a new LCS successor which has been clearly stated by Hagel to want a ship more in line with a "frigate" and able to survive in a higher intensity environment. This is all fairly recent news.
A 32-ship run is 'successful' in anybody's dictionary. On the other hand, credible capability, higher intensity, etc., these are terms with degrees of significance and different meanings to different people. Clearly you and I have different understandings of what constitutes credible air defense. That Hagel wants a beefier ship than the LCS is unambiguous. That he therefore wants a mini-Aegis is definitely questionable.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top