proelite
Junior Member
You'd have better luck selling that to the Brazilians than to the PLAN.
Exactly. 50,000-60,000 medium carrier ~270'm long. Export friendly.
You'd have better luck selling that to the Brazilians than to the PLAN.
If indeed there is a follow on CV then I expect an improved Fujian class - quick and cheap to design, and the entire point of ongoing CV production would be to build up numbers quickly and cheaply. I don't see any advantages for PLAN in developing (at considerable cost) a completely new GT-powered conventional design when it has a CVN on the way and a viable CV design already in Fujian. Also steam propulsion is not obsolete - it's what powers both CVNs and SS(B)Ns, all that differs is the heat source to make the steam. So there's considerable benefits in training and logistics with COSAS.
In general terms, with carrier aviation you should go big or go home, and PLAN is clearly intending to go big, with its huge investments in EMCATS, J-15, J-15T, KJ-600, JL-15, etc. It doesn't make a lot of sense to just be introducing 1 carrier every 5 years or so if you consider RoI and the need to keep production lines going.
An ideal carrier fleet should contain both CVs and CVNs for different roles, complimenting each other instead of the latter completely replacing the former.I agree that Fujian mod. would be cheaper and faster upfront but IMO in the long run a new design would be more effective and economical. Plus, if Type 005 is a bit larger than Type 003 while using a newer hull(Like the Type 004 due to more advanced propulsion systems avaliable) means more hanger space and probably more deckspace even if it has two islands. As for additional design work, SOYO noted that the tender were from atleast last year meaning the design would be done already anyways and this carrier's modules may already be under fabrication. JN had over 7 years to work on this new design(Type 003 was probably finalized in 2016) while also having experience from Type 076, its plenty time for a brand new design.
But its not impossible that Type 003A is going to be built instead, but IMO GT-IEPS is still the most optimal for hi-low.
An ideal carrier fleet should contain both CVs and CVNs for different roles, complimenting each other instead of the latter completely replacing the former.
It's 2025 and the Forrestal-class is a 50s design. The Type 003 was always meant to be a stopgap and time to leave it behind. A Kennedy/Nimitz-analogous with IPS-GTG is the way to go.
CVNs can't be built as fast due to extremely high upfront cost and nuclear safety issues/regulations. Large GT CVs could be cheap enough to be built 2 at a time while also utilizing preexisting supply/maintenace production lines as the rest of the fleet for faster construction time and lower costs. It's not unrealistic that once mass production started such a ship could be built from steel cutting to commission in 3.5-4 years' time while JN is also realistically capable of building two of these ships at once due to lower cost and part standardisation with the rest of the fleet(Powerplants, IEPS components, etc), it's also realistic that China could afford to build two of these ships(Likely less than half the cost of a CVN upfront while also having much cheaper lifetime costs even when compared to Type 003/002/001 with COSAS due to using the same propulsion/fuel as the rest of the fleet) at once while also building another CVN at DL.OTOH if future carrier production actively becomes a mix of CVNs and CVs, then that is a different matter -- but I cannot see any particular benefit for building big deck CVs in future once they have mastered CVNs.
CVNs can't be built as fast due to extremely high upfront cost and nuclear safety issues/regulations. Large GT CVs could be cheap enough to be built 2 at a time while also utilizing preexisting supply/maintenace production lines as the rest of the fleet for faster construction time and lower costs. It's not unrealistic that once mass production started such a ship could be built from steel cutting to commission in 3.5-4 years' time while JN is also realistically capable of building two of these ships at once due to lower cost and part standardisation with the rest of the fleet(Powerplants, IEPS components, etc), it's also realistic that China could afford to build two of these ships(Likely less than half the cost of a CVN upfront while also having much cheaper lifetime costs even when compared to Type 003/002/001 with COSAS due to using the same propulsion/fuel as the rest of the fleet) at once while also building another CVN at DL.
As some people mentioned before if China wants to dominate the seas and/or have extensive expeditionary warfare capability capable of rivaling/beating US forces anywhere(except for CONUS obviously) by 2049 without a large network of overseas bases then a massive number of carriers with a few strategically placed nodes or bases to resupply the fleet around the world is the way to go.
What is the operations life of a warship?The obselecence of carriers have been talked about for quite a while now, much like similar talk about tanks. I think it's entirely possible that like tanks in the Ukraine war, while not obsolete its role and importance could be dramatically reduced or otherwise changed due to advances in technology when an actual war breaks out. Tech and tactics can evolve quite fast during a hot war between large powers. As such, it may not be prudent to look at lifecycles of 50-70 years, maybe more in the 20-30 years range like other naval assets of the PLAN.
The thing is, a doubling of speed requires a fourfold increase in power.