Maybe its for lightweight torpedoesTorpedo bulges in 2025? Interesting concept.
But I thought modern torpedos are keel-breakers, so the detonation would be coming from below instead of from the side.
Maybe its for lightweight torpedoesTorpedo bulges in 2025? Interesting concept.
But I thought modern torpedos are keel-breakers, so the detonation would be coming from below instead of from the side.
A recent photo of the Jiangnan shipyard.
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I think the research team made some minor modification, but yes, the inner diameter of the main crush tube are both 3,8 m.Figure 9 is taken straight from LittorioView attachment 152188
Interestingly this test ship re-uses a hull number previously assigned to a Type 815A SIGINT hull.I'm not up-to-date on PLAN's weapon test ships, but what ship is this? It looks different from the weapon test ships I remember.
There looks to be another 052-mod cutter at the center of the photo? The hull paint looks to be too white to be a naval warship, alongside a racing stripe-looking feature fore of the superstructure's hull, which is typical for coast guard cutters.
I hope I was wrong, though.
@tphuang is your dream coming true?Just in: China is testing next-gen giant GaO naval radar, working in L+S+X band, with incredible T/R power. Two additional electric generators are equipped for the radar in the test. Many suggest the radar has comparable capacity to land-based AN/FPS-115 PAVE PAWS.
Can see two boxes (likely electric generators or capacitors) behind the radar.
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Did you mean GaN or Gallium Oxide?Just in: China is testing next-gen giant GaO naval radar, working in L+S+X band, with incredible T/R power. Two additional electric generators are equipped for the radar in the test. Many suggest the radar has comparable capacity to land-based AN/FPS-115 PAVE PAWS.![]()
Did you mean GaN or Gallium Oxide?
How can the bands combo be known? Military is unlikely to release such info.