Without reading all the comments that your design appears to be already generating (way to go!), my initial comments are these.I just uploaded the latest version of my atlantis class SSCVN. This is one I just drew today, it has some improvements over the one I described earlier. The sub now, as a whole is 600 feet long and just shy of 480 feet wide at its widest point. Note the two oversized ballast tanks on either side of the foreward bow. These would be underwater sloping up towards the elevators and the bow of the sub itself. I will draw a 3D version when time allows me.
Some quality has been lost to the uploading process but it is still discernable. I labeled all the major components of the sub, but it only shows the exterior, birds-eye view. The interior cross sections will be next.
Please note that the aft CIWS battery has not been drawn but it would appear very much like the foreward CIWS batteries, with a watertight door that closes over it.
I can draw a very rough cross section in MS paint, and then I can make a more detailed drawing on paper but I can't load it until tomorrow. From the front, you would see the main body of the sub which is a cylynder of 120 feet in diameter. Roughly 2/3rds of the way to the very top of the cylinder are two thin protrusions on either side (this is the runway). From the bottom of the runway is another cylinder. This is the ballast tank. At the top of the main body of the sub, there is the sail, of course, and then the top is flattneed to allow for the helo storage. Again, I will make a very rough cross section on paint and I can have it uploaded tonight.In doing so, it looks proportionally too wide (and I understand why you are making it that wide) for efficient and quiet underwater transit and operation at depth. I would have to see a cross section to be sure, but its ability to transit long distances at relative high speed with very little acoustic signature (either engine noise or flow wise-cavitation) while submersed are sacrosanct for subs.
Like I said in a previous post, I wanted my design to be compatible with both the F-18 and the JSF. Compromises are necessary, but I tried to get as much of both worlds as I could.That's why my desing looks the way it does. Basically a very wide conventional hull flattened on top and utilizing a hybrid, double hull interior structure. That limits the deck width and shape, but does allows it to be sufficiently wide for STO, EMAL ATO and VL operations. Such compromises, IMHO, are necessary to maximize the mosty essential faacets of both the aircraft carrier and submarine characteristics.
I think I did a fine job at planning out the elevator system. As for the CIWS, I had the phalanx in mind, but the RAM is another fine CIWS. The reason that the helo storage areas are so mechanically complicated is because I wanted the helos to be separate from the rest of the air wing. I have two reasons for this:Also, there are a lot of openings for the various elevators, equipment access and weapons that seem fairly mechanically complicated. You would have to be sure that their water tight integrity at depth was adequate. I think useing RAM or ESSM from VLS would provide a way to address the CIWS in that regard...you would be using already proven underwater VLS technologyu. As to the elevators, IMHO, simple up and down elevator desing allows for a straight forwad watertight sealing solution.
I decided for my latest design to have the CATCC located inside the ship near the CIC and bridge with a photonics/radio package rising out of the sail to watch each side of the ship. If you look on my design's blueprint you will see two rectangular things near each side of the sail. The package comes out of there, and the information is fed to large monitors in the CATCC.As to the air ops control, yes, I believe you could locate them in the sail. I have mine designed into the sail, able to look both forwad and aft. I believe tat is where you would have top put it...and in my case, that sail is significantly larger than most sub sails, while maintaining a proportional ratio to allow for efficent existing design as far as underwater transit is concerned.
1) too much reserve buoyancy
2) decks susceptible to current drift
3) decks reflect too much energy from the verticle direction. Any SAG would put holes in your sub before you can surface.
Hmmm, I fear that the big wide deck, particularly being relatively so thin, is going to act like a big wing in the water. Whenever there is any significant speed coupled with an up or down plane condition for the sub, it seems like aft of the vessel that there would be a large amount of cavitation, and therefore noise.[qimg]http://i41.photobucket.com/albums/e266/Killa_Dilla/Subcarriercrossesction1.jpg[/qimg]
Cross section
Hmmm, I fear that the big wide deck, particularly being relatively so thin, is going to act like a big wing in the water. Whenever there is any significant speed coupled with an up or down plane condition for the sub, it seems like aft of the vessel that there would be a large amount of cavitation, and therefore noise.
Perhaps there are structural fairings or other considerations that could be designed into the vessel, particularly on the aft end, that could help control this. Get some engineers who are specialists in submarine design regarding the water flow around he vessel to take a look...but, basically, that is why the general shape of subs has developed into the smooth cylindrical vessels of today has developed, to lessen the noise as it passes through the water.
IMHO, either some sort of structural dampening will have be added to the design, or the vessel will have to drastically slow down as it goes into any up or down plane condition.
Any experienced submariner engineers out there? Sea Dog, Obi Wan, Popeye, what is your take?