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FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
I have a question on the so called "shortfall" that the U.S will supposedly hit in mid 2040's. This could be a serious problem.

Interesting, wait me :) shortfall maybe for about 2030 no mid 2040 according the chart 41 in 2029 but with some LA RCOH in more and definitely they are capable have a more long service life yet in general retired after 33/35.

With Anti-Area/Access-Denial (A2/AD) the Silent Service is now very important and sure or almost Navy do the necessary for get a minimum fro about at less 45 and can also for some yaer increase deployment from 6 to 7 month for get the same number of SSN in area/patrol.
Actually 10 on station and in surge 35 available and for have it USN need minimum 48 which is the number fixed by the law.

Does the U.S sub yards have the capacity to pump out more than two nuke subs a year in quick time? If need be.
Coz Virginia " affordable " for a SSN as it but ofc remains expensive impossible with shipbuilding budget and in more new SSN build more as 2/year.

In theory with no money problem ofc possible during 1980/90s the 2 shipyards build each year 1 Ohio and 3/4 LA needs some year for get a workforce but 2/3 max.

And 2 Virginia are sufficient for replace LA but with new SSBN expensive later about 1.5/year then necessary find solutions and the more simple is extended life of the last LA, capable 688i.

Can depends also if SSBN-X is funded in a special budget* in this case always 2 Virginia by year no problem.* Possible coz nuclear dererrence.
 
inside is kinda summary:
Navy Funds Two More DDG 51 Destroyers
The Navy on Wednesday funded two more DDG 51 Arleigh-Burke Class destroyers, bringing the number to eight out of ten awarded through a pair of multi-year contracts.

One of the two ships was funded under a five-year procurement contract through fiscal 2017 with Huntington Ingalls Industries, and the other under a similar agreement covering the same period with General Dynamics Corp.’s Bath Iron Works, officials with Naval Sea Systems Command said in a news release.

“These funding actions demonstrate the Navy’s continued success in executing the DDG 51 class shipbuilding program,” Capt. Mark Vandroff, DDG 51 program manager, said in the release. “By successfully leveraging competition throughout the DDG 51 shipbuilding program, the Navy continues to generate cost savings while delivering vital warfighting capability.”

A total of 69 DDG 51 destroyers are now in service or under contract, according to reports. One of the newest destroyers, the USS Ralph Johnson, is set to be christened this spring.

The Navy plans to spend a total of $107 billion buying 86 of the destroyers, according to recently released Pentagon budget documents. The service will have spent $83.3 billion on the program by the end of the current fiscal year, which ends Sept. 30. It has budgeted $3.5 billion for the acquisition effort in fiscal 2017, leaving a balance of $20 billion.
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related:
Hypersonics could help Air Force thwart enemy anti-air defenses

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related article I read a moment ago:
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The race is on to build
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, missiles that blow through a target’s defenses at more than five times the speed of sound. Or should that be “the race to grow hypersonic weapons”? It turns out an unrelated cutting-edge technology,
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, may be the key to making hypersonics work.

The whole aerospace world is intrigued by so-called additive manufacturing — especially for government and/or unmanned applications not subject to laborious FAA safety testing on new technology. NASA has a 3D printer on the International Space Station;
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. Several rocket engine companies have built key components for these exemplars of high tech using 3D printing; at
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, for example, “they have a big 3D printer [and] they are making parts that are in production rocket engines right now,” said aerospace consultant
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, a vice-president at ICF International.

The ability to build up components dot by dot, layer by layer, can be helpful in making conventional aircraft, spacecraft, and missiles. But when it comes to making hypersonic systems, which require exotic materials and strangely shaped components that conventional methods can’t handle, 3D printing may be essential.

“There have been some fundamental gamechangers in that world (of hypersonics), so, not only can you build them, but you can build them affordably,” said Raytheon’s head of
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, Tom Bussing, in a briefing for reporters yesterday afternoon. “You can build things you couldn’t otherwise build.”

“In the high-speed weapon area, (3D printing) becomes a fundamental enabler because that’s the only way you can make large structures out of exotic materials,” Bussing went on. “You literally grow those parts.”

“Growing” parts in a 3D printer allows you to make much more complex shapes than the traditional process — used since before the Bronze Age — of casting the basic shape in a mold and then cutting it to the final desired form.

For example, cooling is crucial in engines of all kinds. Even an ordinary jet airliner’s turbofans operate routinely at 400 degrees above the melting point of their component materials, kept intact only by an elaborate network of cooling channels, said Kevin Michaels. Now think about a hypersonic jet moving through the air more than ten times as fast, at Mach 5-plus, how much friction is heating up that hypersonic air vehicle, and how much more cooling it needs.

But if you want cooling vents in a traditionally manufactured component, you have to drill a bunch of holes in it (and hope you didn’t weaken it too much). If you want cooling vents in a 3D-printed component, you just program the printer to make a shape that has openings in it from the start. What’s more, if you drill out your cooling channels, they’re going to be pretty much straight; but if you grow the channels in a 3D printer, they can be helixes or other elaborate shapes that vent heat much more efficiently.

“If it’s more efficient, it means you can make it smaller, [with] less cooling,” said Bussing. “[It] lasts longer, flies farther.”

Raytheon already uses 3D printing for components of some weapons already in production, such as the
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used in Afghanistan by the Army. For the future, “we’re actually looking at using additive manufacturing to grow entire weapons,” said Bussing. “We just made a big investment on a unique machine to do some very, very big structures.”

At least some of those big structures will probably be for hypersonic vehicles. Raytheon is currently competing with Lockheed Martin on two DARPA projects, with proposals on both just coming due:
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(TBG) and the
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(HAWC).

Tactical Boost-Glide is the approach already tested by both Russia and
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: a rocket motor boosts the missile up to hypersonic speed, after which it glides to the target. The goal is to “skip” off the atmosphere like a skipping stone over water, allowing it to go vast distances at extreme speeds. Getting this to work requires progress in aerodynamics, stability, and controls, as well as materials, Bussing said. 3D printing can help in all these areas.

An “air-breathing” hypersonic vehicle, by contrast, flies under its own jet power the whole way. This approach allows less range than boost-glide but greater maneuverability. Air-breathers can also be significantly smaller. A rocket has to carry large amounts of oxidizer to burn its fuel. A jet just sucks in oxygen from the atmosphere. But normal jets don’t have to suck in air moving at Mach 5-plus. A jet that works at hypersonic speeds will require some breakthroughs — and, again, 3D printing can help grow the exotic components.

Ultimately, the goal of both approaches is to hit enemies before they can react. Imagine a satellite spotting a
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rolling out of its cave and a hypersonic warhead destroying it before it can fire. Imagine a hypersonic weapon tearing through the complex layered defenses known as “
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” systems (A2/AD) before
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or
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can get a good enough radar lock to shoot it down.

But all those intriguing operational possibilities remain just that, possibilities, until someone can actually build the thing.
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might just be America’s decisive edge to make hypersonics work.
source:
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FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
For the bad guys cheap good for them :mad:

BAE's APKWS rockets go to war on AV-8B Harrier

BAE Systems’ laser-guided rocket has been rushed into combat on the AV-8B Harrier, seven months after it was requested by the top brass of the US Marine Corps.

The semi-active-laser-seeking 70mm (2.75in) rocket, enabled by BAE’s mid-body guidance and control section, is already deployed on US Navy and Marine Corps attack helicopters and was recently acquired by the Army for the AH-64 Apache gunship, but it will soon become a standard tool on the fixed-wing AV-8B jump jet.

US Naval Air Systems Command is delivering 80 units initially to Marine Attack Squadron-223 (VMA-223), which is currently deployed to an undisclosed location, likely somewhere in the Middle East.

NAVAIR could not say if the VMA-223 Harriers were currently engaged in combat against the Islamic State terrorist organisation in Iraq and Syria, but the quick delivery supports “combat operations”. The first fixed-wing variants were delivered to theater this month.

US Navy
“The intent of this requirement was to quickly provide the AV-8B with a low-cost, low-collateral damage, high-precision weapon in support of combat operations,” Navy Capt Al Mousseau, who heads NAVAIR’s munitions acquisition office PMA-242, says in a 30 March statement.

“This capability will provide commanders with a warfighting alternative to better enable weapon-to-target pairing,” adds AV-8B life cycle programme manager Col Fred Schenk.

NAVAIR confirmed that a series of qualification flights took place to guarantee the rocket’s compatibility with the AV-8B platform. It was first trailed on the Harrier during a demonstration programme in 2013, BAE says, along with the US Air Force A-10 and F-16.

The second phase, after meeting the immediate warfighting need, is to make APKWS a standard weapon choice on all AV-8Bs, NAVAIR says.

Developed under the APKWS-II programme to convert the unguided Hydra 70 rocket into a precision-guided, close-air-support weapon, the navy has carried it forward as a lower cost alternative to the AGM-114 Hellfire missile for attacking unarmoured vehicles and enemy combatants on the ground.

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related to the preceding post:
Navy deploys new APKWS design for fixed-wing aircraft
The U.S. Navy delivered the first fixed-wing aircraft variant of the
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in March 2016 to Marine Attack Squadron (VMA) 223 operating the
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in theater.

Seven months after receiving a requirement from Marine Corps headquarters, two program offices based at Patuxent River fielded the 2.75-inch rockets equipped with Semi-Active Laser (SAL) guidance capability.

“This capability will provide commanders with a warfighting alternative to better enable weapon-to-target pairing,” said
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, AV-8B Harrier Weapon System (PMA-257) program manager.

PMA-257 and the Direct and Time Sensitive Strike program office (PMA-242) worked together to define a two-phase program to quickly field the weapon variant. The first phase expedited fielding of a limited AV-8B fixed-wing APKWS employment flight envelope capability. This included the delivery of 80 guidance kits. The second phase will expand the fixed-wing APKWS employment envelope limits to the maximum extent possible for AV-8B.

“The intent of this requirement was to quickly provide the AV-8B with a low-cost, low-collateral damage, high-precision weapon in support of combat operations,” said Navy
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, PMA-242 program manager. “This entire effort showcases what unity of effort among all government and industry stakeholders can accomplish to expediently deliver capability."


APKWS, a product of BAE Systems, is the only DoD fully qualified 2.75-inch rocket that uses Semi-Active Laser (SAL) guidance technology to strike targets in built-up and confined areas. The SAL is a laser seeker which allows the system to beam-ride reflected laser energy. The reflected laser energy is sourced by either airborne or ground-based laser designators providing positive target acquisition.

PMA-242 is responsible for the acquisition, development and sustainment of weapon systems, including anti-radiation missile systems; airborne rocket systems; precision guided munitions; airborne gun systems; and joint air-to-ground munitions. PMA-257 is responsible for life cycle sustainment of the AV-8B Harrier Weapon System for the U.S. Marine Corps and its allied partners.
source is the official:
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inside is kinda summary:
Navy Funds Two More DDG 51 Destroyers

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am getting lost in these numbers after
Navy Awards General Dynamics Bath Iron Works $644 Million for Construction of DDG 51 Class Destroyer
The U.S. Navy has awarded funding for the planning and construction of DDG 124, the Fiscal Year 2016 Arleigh Burke-class destroyer under contract at General Dynamics Bath Iron Works. The $644.3 million contract modification fully funds this ship, which was awarded as part of a multi-year competition for DDG 51 class destroyers awarded in 2013. The total value of the five-ship contract is approximately $3.4 billion. General Dynamics Bath Iron Works is a business unit of General Dynamics.
Fred Harris, president of Bath Iron Works, said, "This funding will allow us to continue our efforts associated with planning and construction of DDG 124. The men and women of Bath Iron Works are working hard to continuously improve our processes as we contribute to the U.S. Navy's important shipbuilding programs."
There are currently four DDG 51 destroyers in production at Bath Iron Works: Rafael Peralta (DDG 115), Thomas Hudner (DDG 116), Daniel Inouye (DDG 118) and Carl M. Levin (DDG 120).
The Navy has named DDG 124 the Harvey C. Barnum, Jr., after a retired U.S. Marine Corps officer who received the Medal of Honor for valor during the Vietnam War. Colonel Barnum served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Reserve Affairs and as Acting Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Manpower and Reserve Affairs).
The Arleigh Burke-class destroyer is a multi-mission combatant that offers defense against a wide range of threats, including ballistic missiles. It operates in support of carrier battle groups, surface action groups, amphibious groups and replenishment groups, providing a complete array of anti-submarine (ASW), anti-air (AAW) and anti-surface (SuW) capabilities.
Designed for survivability, the ships incorporate all-steel construction and have gas turbine propulsion. The combination of the ships' AEGIS combat system, the Vertical Launching System, an advanced ASW system, two embarked SH-60 helicopters, advanced anti-aircraft missiles and Tomahawk anti-ship and land-attack missiles make the Arleigh Burke class destroyers the most powerful surface combatants ever put to sea.
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Translation. Buy Stock in Space X as pretty soon they are the only game in USAF launches.
related is the photo-gallery inside of
Launch Vehicle Engines For The Future
The competing commercial main- and upper-stage candidates to replace the Russian-built RD-180 rely on rival technologies and fuels to lift modern payloads.
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