052C/052D Class Destroyers

Blitzo

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These things are very new to PLAN, and just having a first generation product is not enough, the effectiveness of these TAS and VDS is questionable, things have to be improved over time and over actual operations. Same goes for the experiences that NATO members have gained in WWI, WWII (all that experiences with U boats are not for nothing) and over the past few decades - during which time PLAN had never been serious on ASW (well they practically did not have a Navy after the Sino-Japanese War and before the end of WWII).

The PLAN was very new to AAW and high end air defense as well before the introduction of 052C. Since then they've commissioned additional 052Cs and even more 052Ds and looking to build more 055s. This is all despite having iterated from much less capable systems such as those present on 052Bs or 052s and 051Cs.

I think this shows the PLAN do not tend to procure new ships with certain subsystems in large numbers unless they are satisfied to it to a certain degree.

The 346 APAR on 052C technically was a first generation product as well, yet they were satisfied enough to produce an additional 4 hulls of it, as well as to further develop variants of it such that it has become the mainstay shipborne APAR family in the PLAN's surface combatants.

Considering how widely the PLAN have profilerated the same type of VDS (and likely TAS) across the 056As, later 054As, all 052Ds and all 055s, I would suggest that their "first generation" system may not be as immature or incapable as you fear. This of course is on top of the fact that the PLAN did have chances to evaluate certain European systems when they were imported as well.

ASW is indeed a challenging art for everyone, but in the last decade or so the PLAN have significantly stepped up both the qualitative ASW suite many of its ships have, as well as advanced the quantity of those ships in service. Few navies have widespread fielding of ships with both VDS and TAS (aka "two tails") as the PLAN have done, in particular in the last year.

To quote myself from last year:

"A review of the numbers show the PLAN surface combatant fleet fielded zero two tail surface combatants prior to March 2014. Slightly more than four years later, as of September 2018, there are about 42 two tail warships in service, of which about 20 are 056A corvettes intended for near-seas missions, and 22 are blue water capable 052D DDGs and 054A+ FFGs."

In four years, they commissioned forty two ships with VDS+TAS suites.That number has of course grown since September 2018, as additional 056As, 054A+, 052D and 055s enter service.
This is on top of other, previous ships many of whom have had single tail TAS as well.


The things you have pointed out certainly helps (especially the introduction of 056A with towed sonars), but they are far from enough to be serious on ASW. Japan have been having helicopter destroyers for decades, with each accommodating 3 or more ASW helicopters. Few PLAN destroyers or frigates carry more than 1 helicopter even at much higher tonnage. For the 056, other similarly sizes corvettes like the 1300t Sa'ar 5 have a hangar, the 1800t Braunschweig class has hangar for 2 helicopters. This indicates just how much PLAN doesn't care about helicopters, or ASW in general comparing to other priorities, or other Navies. This lack of capability or awareness is quite astonishing for the 2nd largest economy/Navy in the world.

For naval ships, ASW capabilities can be divided into two categories:

1: Organic shipborne capabilities, such as onboard sonar the top end of which today is VDS and TAS, as well as hull sonar; and also things like VL ASROC type weapons, and less direct flank capable torpedo launchers. In this domain the PLAN have made massive advancements, with the widespread proliferation of VDS and TAS, as well as with the introduction of VL ASROC weapons on 054A, long range flying torpedo/ASROC weapons on the 056A (and presumably other ships that can carry YJ-83s as well).

2: Aviation capabilities, namely ASW helicopters. In this domain the PLAN obviously have yet to advance as far as the previous, but that is because PRC helicopter manufacturing capablities have yet to reach a level whereby they can meet the entirety of the PLA's needs (Army, Air Force, and Navy). Specifically, the lack of a true 10 ton medium weight helicopter that can be mass produced has hindered surface combatant aviation. This is not a reflection of the PLAN "not being serious" about ASW but a reflection of industrial limitations.

For the PLAN, it seems obvious in the last decade or so they've significantly advanced their ASW capabilities in the domains when it was technologically and industrially feasible.
The fact that they've given a ship as small as 056A a full suite of VDS+TAS is absolutely mind boggling and if anything that is indicative of just how serious they are about ASW. I can't think of any other surface combatant as small as 056A with a VDS+TAS, let alone one produced in such large numbers.
It would be preferable if they were able to mass produce a large number of ASW helicopters as well, however if industry is a limit there is nothing one can do to bypass it.

Yet even despite the limits of not being able to mass produce ASW helicopters, they have still made a frightening amount of progress in such a short time in terms of organic shipborne ASW capabilities.


You mention the JMSDF having helicopter destroyers, which is certainly true and fairly unique to their navy. However their primary surface combatant destroyers -- even their largest and most capable Atago and Maya class destroyers -- only have one helicopter hangar as well.
Furthermore the 1800 ton Braunschweig class certainly does not have a hangar that can accommodate 2 helicopters -- it is only capable of accommodating 2 small helicopter UAVs, not full size helicopters. In fact I'm not even sure if that ship class has a hangar capable of accommodating even one actual full sized helicopter:

EhahVzz.jpg



Furthermore, corvettes like the K130 and even the Sa'ar 5 are somewhat different to the 056/A; those ships are designed with different armament, sensor fits and in the case of Sa'ar 5 are designed with different missions in mind than what the 056/A looks configured for.
Looking at the 056/A it seems obvious that they deliberately made the stern higher so as to give it the ability to carry VDS+TAS rather than to make the stern lower so as to accommodate a helicopter hangar instead.



Submarines are effective submarine hunters, it is no secret how noisy PLAN subs are. And while we see PLAN advances in many areas, quiet subs is not one of them. We can safely assume how noisy the surface combatants are if we know their subs are noisy. So many decades have past since the Soviets and the US competed on advanced submarine technology, yet I wonder does PLAN even care about it?

PLAN nuclear submarines are obviously likely much less capable than their US, European and Russian counterparts and that is largely accepted, considering the original 09IIIs were built in the 1990s and the 091s even older. The fact that they were much less competitive than their foreign peers is to be expected.
We know that a new generation of nuclear submarines are currently being constructed and likely to be mass produced, but it will be a number of years until we get any hint of how competitive they may be.

PLAN diesel submarines are generally regarded and acknowledged as fairly competitive abroad.

Chinese nuclear and diesel submarine capabilities are generally not conflated together because of the above reason, so I'm not sure why you are doing so here.



It looks to me their priorities are more politically motivated - building large and visible surface combatants like the CV, 055, 071, 075 that would impress the man in charge as well as be the pride of the nation, while the value of a large fleet of blue water amphibious ships like the LPD and LHD to PLAN is questionable. It appears the Navy does not really know what they want or need for larger ships, and is just following what the USN does - the USN built the Burke, they come up with their own 052C/D "Aegis", they don't even bother to design it a little differently like the Type 45 or other European AAW destroyers with AESA. The USN built a 25,000t LPD, they came up with a 25,000t LPD that is the equivalent of San Antonino class. And the 075 would probably be 40,000t, just like the WASP/America classes, unlike other Navies in the world that would build according to their needs.

I think you have gravely misunderstood the extent to which the PLAN have advanced their ASW capabilities.
I wrote this article quite a while ago, but it is still certainly relevant. Considering how little you seem to know about PLAN ASW advancement, I think you most certainly should be aware of its contents:
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!



I also question why you believe the PLAN's procurement can be described as not really knowing what they want or need for larger ships and that they are merely following the USN -- have you considered that perhaps their ships and their procurement is intended to match their own requirements, and that such solutions happen to better resemble certain existing ship types than others?

To be honest, you are throwing out a lot of big claims in your post and I wonder how familiar you are with the actual content. Mistaking the K130/Braunschweig class as having a hangar that can accommodate two helicopters, and conflating PLAN SSNs and SSKs together, and assuming that because the 052C/D look similar to Burkes that they had not considered what their actual own requirements are meant to be?
 

Tam

Brigadier
Registered Member
These things are very new to PLAN, and just having a first generation product is not enough, the effectiveness of these TAS and VDS is questionable, things have to be improved over time and over actual operations. Same goes for the experiences that NATO members have gained in WWI, WWII (all that experiences with U boats are not for nothing) and over the past few decades - during which time PLAN had never been serious on ASW (well they practically did not have a Navy after the Sino-Japanese War and before the end of WWII).

First generation product? These were inspired originally from the French and the Russians but improved with something else the originals didn't have --- much more advanced electronics.

The things you have pointed out certainly helps (especially the introduction of 056A with towed sonars), but they are far from enough to be serious on ASW. Japan have been having helicopter destroyers for decades, with each accommodating 3 or more ASW helicopters. Few PLAN destroyers or frigates carry more than 1 helicopter even at much higher tonnage. For the 056, other similarly sizes corvettes like the 1300t Sa'ar 5 have a hangar, the 1800t Braunschweig class has hangar for 2 helicopters. This indicates just how much PLAN doesn't care about helicopters, or ASW in general comparing to other priorities, or other Navies. This lack of capability or awareness is quite astonishing for the 2nd largest economy/Navy in the world.

Not just towed sonars but also active towed sonars, which the Europeans refer to as VDS or Variable Depth Sonar. Most towed sonars are passive and don't ping. These do. Most warships only have none, one or the other, and only the USN just recently is incorporating both. Yet the logic of having two towed sonars are clear --- each covers a different spectrum.

Ships still do a better job with sonars because helicopter sonars are still limited in duration and depth, and helicopters lack the computing power to process these signals. Also those other ships don't have ASROCs or flying torpedoes the Type 054A and 056A have.

Submarines are effective submarine hunters, it is no secret how noisy PLAN subs are. And while we see PLAN advances in many areas, quiet subs is not one of them. We can safely assume how noisy the surface combatants are if we know their subs are noisy. So many decades have past since the Soviets and the US competed on advanced submarine technology, yet I wonder does PLAN even care about it?

The SSKs and AIP submarines happen to be pretty quiet even as the nuclear subs need improving. The JSMDF won't put that much emphasis on ASW if the PLAN submarines weren't such a threat.

It looks to me their priorities are more politically motivated - building large and visible surface combatants like the CV, 055, 071, 075 that would impress the man in charge as well as be the pride of the nation, while the value of a large fleet of blue water amphibious ships like the LPD and LHD to PLAN is questionable. It appears the Navy does not really know what they want or need for larger ships, and is just following what the USN does - the USN built the Burke, they come up with their own 052C/D "Aegis", they don't even bother to design it a little differently like the Type 45 or other European AAW destroyers with AESA. The USN built a 25,000t LPD, they came up with a 25,000t LPD that is the equivalent of San Antonino class. And the 075 would probably be 40,000t, just like the WASP/America classes, unlike other Navies in the world that would build according to their needs.

Why? If it works it works. That's the only thing that matters. The Type 071 LPD also looks different enough from the San Antonio, and flat tops are always flat tops.

For the Type 45, instead of electing to use four very expensive big panel AESA radars, they choose to use two smaller AESA radars which would have cost cheaper but it isn't any likely to perform any much better than any top masted AESA S-band radar for frigates (see the Admiral Gorshkov). If you have four huge panel AESA radars, the sheer weight of the radar, plus the power, heat and cooling --- said to be at least 16 tons for the set --- is far too heavy to be put on top of the mast, then mechanically rotated inside a dome. So you have to put the radars on the deck house where they are better supported using the superstructure.

The Type 45's AESA radars, being much smaller and lighter, allow it to be put on top of the mast and rotated. The height of the mast gives these radars maximum radar horizon compared to putting radars low on the deckhouse. However, these radars are simply not as powerful as those you can put on the deckhouse. That is why the Type 45 is a design that feels more like a heavy frigate than a destroyer with large fixed faced radars.

Another thing is that putting AESAs on the deckhouse like on the Type 52C/D, enables modules to be replaced at sea. This is why those radars have calibration probes, although eliminated on later radars once another field calibration method is used. On the Type 45, you cannot replace broken modules on that are on top of the mast and rotating, until the ship is returned to port. Hence why future warship designs are migrating to the integrated mast instead.

However, the Type 052C/D take into consideration about the low height of the main radars by putting a smaller, secondary radar on top of the mast to do surface search. This radar is mechanical and not an AESA but it has a shorter frequency than the Type 45's main radars so it can have better target differentiation, which is something that works better differentiating a sea skimmer near the water surface. The result is a dual band set up --- the Type 364 works on the tighter C-band, while the main radar Type 346 works at the S-band which is the typical band used for search radars, like the SPY-1 or the Type 45's SAMPSON. The Type 054A frigate also shares this dual band radar set up, using S-band for better range, and C-band for better resolution. In addition. the Type 052C/D has a metric wave radar to spot VLO. The 052C/D also differs from the Burke for not having external missile illumination antennas, and maybe either hiding them under the main panels or none at all, the later points to the SAMs being active homing.

Every ship is configured differently when it comes to their radars because there truly is no standard, every naval designer has their own opinion and reasons, and no one maybe completely right or wrong until the crucible of actual combat. The radar choices made affect the way the ships are designed in terms of their radar layouts, the mast and superstructures.

Burke --- Main fixed face S-band for search and targeting, X-band in parabolics for missile illumination.
Type 45 --- Rotating S-band for air and surface search, rotating L-band for ranged search. Uses active homing missiles so no need for missile illumination.
Sachsen --- Fixed faced X-band for surface search, fire control and missile illumination, rotating L-band for ranged search. No S-band, ma!
Akizuki --- Fixed faced C-band for search, fixed faced X-band for fire control and missile illumination. Another ship that relies on no S-band.
France FREMM --- Rotating S-band for air and sea search. SAMs active homing.
Italy FREMM --- Rotating C-band for air and sea search. SAMs active homing.
Admiral Gorshkov --- Rotating S-band for air and surface search, fixed faced X-band for high resolution tracking. Missiles are active homing so X-band is not used for missile illumination.
Type 052C/D --- Fixed faced S-band for air search, rotating C-band for surface search, rotating UHF for ranged search. C-band if missile illumination or none at all.
Type 055 --- Fixed faced S-band for air search, fixed faced X-band for surface search, high resolution tracking.
Zumwalt original --- Fixed faced S-band for air search. Fixed faced X-band for surface search, high resolution tracking.
Zumwalt final --- Fixed faced X-band for air and surface search, high resolution tracking.
 
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P5678

New Member
Registered Member
It appears the Navy does not really know what they want or need for larger ships, and is just following what the USN does
I think they know what they need, and decided to follow the USN. Actually, it is not important to follow whom, the most important is to achieve your strategy goal.
 

Lethe

Captain
The notion that PLAN is "just following USN" is ridiculous. 022, 056, 054, 039, 072A anyone? Indeed, given recent developments with FFG(X) and the stated desire to evolve USN's inventory to be less top-heavy, the optics would rather suggest that USN is following PLAN.
 
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Tam

Brigadier
Registered Member
First picture posted by LKJ86 at the PDF. Note the positions of the two destroyers in the dock.


164240hblwdk0a0tucub0d.png


But of course in the recent picture, the two hulls have been moved outward. My theory is that the two hulls are water tight, the dock was flooded, and the two hulls floated from inside to the outer side of the dock.

48063263996_07c1fbb941_o.jpg

At the last image, the crane has moved to the back. My hypothesis is that it will be getting ready to move the pieces of the destroyer at the right dockside into the dock itself, and maybe later, modules for another destroyer will appear on the same dockside.
 

AndrewS

Brigadier
Registered Member
The notion that PLAN is "just following USN" is ridiculous. 022, 056, 054, 039, 072A anyone? Indeed, given recent developments with FFG(X) and the stated desire to evolve USN's inventory to be less top-heavy, the optics would rather suggest that USN is following PLAN.

There's also the large Unmanned Surface Vessel programme, which is supposed to produce 10 Corvette sized (2000tonne) vessels for the US Navy.

For contrast, China has launched over 60 Type-56 corvettes in the past 6 years.
And if it's technically feasible, there's nothing stopping the Chinese Navy from automating their corvettes as well.
 

asif iqbal

Lieutenant General
Finally the long endless discussion is over

Let’s keep updates on and discussions to minimum

What’s this unmanned warship programme i. China about, any more details
 

Blitzo

Lieutenant General
Staff member
Super Moderator
Registered Member
First picture posted by LKJ86 at the PDF. Note the positions of the two destroyers in the dock.


View attachment 52791


But of course in the recent picture, the two hulls have been moved outward. My theory is that the two hulls are water tight, the dock was flooded, and the two hulls floated from inside to the outer side of the dock.

View attachment 52792

I'm not sure if the hulls themselves are watertight, they might be.

However when ships are launched from this drydock what has happened both times in the past is a separation wall had been lowered between the two ships to be launched and the ones half way through assembly..
 

steve_rolfe

Junior Member
I'm not sure if the hulls themselves are watertight, they might be.

However when ships are launched from this drydock what has happened both times in the past is a separation wall had been lowered between the two ships to be launched and the ones half way through assembly..

I had wondered that myself, as the ship certainly doesn't look watertight without its stern and bow fitted?
 

Blitzo

Lieutenant General
Staff member
Super Moderator
Registered Member
I had wondered that myself, as the ship certainly doesn't look watertight without its stern and bow fitted?

Incomplete ships can certainly be watertight if their stern and bow are not fitted, if they are designed that way. For example the launch of the 8th 071 recently was done in a drydock where the incomplete 075 lacking its complete stern and bow was also exposed to the same water.


For the case of 052D and 055 launches at DL, my point is that we have no way to confirm whether the ships at their stage of construction was meant to be watertight or not -- because for the launches of the two 052Ds earlier this year and the two 055s last year, they placed a separating wall between the ships intended to be launched and the ships still under construction.

There were literally pictures taken of those launches, showing a separating wall in place.
 
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