UK Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

Obi Wan Russell

Jedi Master
VIP Professional
Whilst we're on the subject of Submarines, I should mention My older brother was a Submariner in the 80s and 90s, serving on HMS Swiftsure and HMS Sovreign. This meme perfectly illustrates the sum total of what you're likely to get out of him about his time on the Boat (yes I know it's a yank sub, but the sentiment is universal):38753026_508791446209795_1235132220943892480_n.jpg This is him in 86 after his passing out parade at HMS Raleigh:Robert0004a.JPG And this is from that passing out parade, he's in the back row of the Honour Guard at the end (on the right as you look at it, because like me he's tall):navy0002.jpg
 

timepass

Brigadier
F-35 secrets stolen from UK air force in ‘honeytrap plot’: report . . .

Airwoman’s dating app hacked and used to sweet-talk servicemen !

043_dpa-pa_148A46009E3CEB05-630x378.jpg


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Jul 24, 2018
May 29, 2018
and
UK halts Type 31e frigate competition

24 July 2018
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while now
Type 31e Frigate programme restarted

August 16, 2018
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EDIT liked this comment:

"Attempting to build ships to an arbitrary and impossibly low cost and timeframe is an obvious admission that you have no strategy."

under Type 31e frigate competition restarted
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Last edited:
Yesterday at 8:05 PM
Jul 24, 2018
while now
Type 31e Frigate programme restarted

August 16, 2018
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EDIT liked this comment:

"Attempting to build ships to an arbitrary and impossibly low cost and timeframe is an obvious admission that you have no strategy."

under Type 31e frigate competition restarted
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and here comes DefenseNews story
UK restarts frigate competition - but will anyone take part?
Britain’s Ministry of Defence is restarting its contest to build five general purpose frigates for the Royal Navy after it
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due to insufficient interest from industry.

The Defence Equipment & Support organisation, the MoD’s procurement arm, has issued a “prior information notice” informing potential bidders it is moving forward with the Type 31e program, and plans a short period of market engagement with companies or consortia that have expressed interest starting on Aug 20.

We have relaunched discussions with industry for our new Type 31e fleet, and this week issued a Prior Information Notice to ensure we do not lose any momentum. We remain committed to a cutting-edge Royal Navy fleet of at least 19 frigates and destroyers, and the first batch of five new Type 31e ships will bolster our modern Navy,” said an MoD spokesperson.

“The purpose of the market engagement is for the Authority [DE&S] to share key elements of the new procurement, including technical and commercial elements. The Authority intends to use the feedback from the market engagement to inform the further shaping of its requirements and commercial construct,” said the DE&S in its announcement it was relaunching the competition.

DE&S said suppliers should “only respond if they are in a position to undertake the full Type 31e programme, meeting its full requirement including a £1.25billion cost and building the Type 31e in a UK shipyard.”

The Type 31e is a key part of the government’s
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which in part seeks to open up the sector to local competition, rather than contract via a non-competitive single source contract with U.K. giant
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, the world’s third largest defense company according to the
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.

The fast track schedule for the Type 31e calls for the initial vessel to be in service by 2023, replacing the first of 13 Type 23 class frigates due to be retired by the Royal Navy in the period up to the middle of the 2030’s. The final Type 31e -- the e stands for export -- is due to be delivered in 2028.

Eight of the Type 23’s will be replaced by anti-submarine warfare Type 26’s. The remainder of the Type 23’s will be replaced by the Type 31e.

DE&S and industry are up against a time crunch on getting the first Type 31e into service, one which some executives here see as daunting, if not unachieveable, thanks to the need to restart the competition.

But despite the delay in getting to the competitive design phase contract announcements, DE&S says it remains committed to the 2023 service date.

“A new streamlined procedure will present an opportunity to save time in the overall program. We will release more information about our plans when we have completed the market engagement - which we plan to start from Aug 20,” said a second MoD spokesperson.

A Cheap Frigate, A Challenging Competition

The Type 31e is planned to carry out maritime security, interdiction and other tasks, releasing more complex warships to their primary roles.

Originally the British were planning to build 13 Type 26’s and use five of the warships in the general purpose role. The scheme was junked in the 2015 defence and security strategy review on cost grounds, and a decision taken to build five of the lighter, bargain basement Type 31e’s alongside the Type 26’s.

The first of the Type 26’s is under construction by BAE at its Glasgow, Scotland, warship building yards. BAE is under contract to build three Type26’s and all eight warships are scheduled to be built by the company, with the first one handed over by the contractor in 2025.

The program received a major shot in the arm recently when
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for a huge anti-submarine warfare frigate requirement. Assuming the deal is signed, the warships will all be built in Australia.

It’s the same type of deal for the Type 31e and the Royal Navy. The stipulation is that all the warships have to be built in Britain using a design which offers export opportunities for industry here.

The Conservative Government has made vague promises about building further frigates for service in the 2030s to bolster its meager surface warship fleet, but until funding is committed that remains just talk.

In February, Britain launched the competition to find a contractor interested in building five frigates, at a total cost of no more than £1.25 billion. But the process had to be abandoned in late July when the DE&S said it had failed to attract sufficient compliant bids.

DE&S originally said it was looking for up to four bidders to award six month competitive design phase contracts, ahead of placing a design and build contract by the end of the first quarter next year.

The MoD hasn’t said how many compliant bids it received, but it is likely only offers from a consortium led by Babcock and a Cammell Laird led partnership with BAE Systems in the running.

The Babcock-led team, which also included naval designers, sensor suppliers and other shipbuilder,s were offering the Arrowhead 140, a modified version of the Danish Navy’s Iver Huitfeld-class warship designed by OMT.

The opposition Cammell Laird-led team was offering a smaller frigate design known as the Leander.

At the time of the original procurement termination, industry executives here said the requirement for so much of the work to be done in the UK had deterred some international companies who initially had shown interest.

One executive said the exceptional degree of risk the MoD wanted industry to take on the program had also been a deterrent.
it's
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Jun 30, 2018
Jun 7, 2018
and one of them even flew IMMEDIATELY!
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Today the new Lightning flew for the first time from
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- Wg Cdr Butcher said ‘It was a great forward step for 617 Sqn today launching our first flight from our home at RAF Marham as we continue work to bring the Lightning into frontline service with the RAF and RN'
now
Questions Surround UK F-35 Month-Long Flying Break

Aug 29, 2018
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The British defense ministry says there is no danger to the UK’s plan to achieve initial operating capability (IOC) from land bases with the
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, even though none of the UK-based aircraft has flown for more than a month.

F-35 sorties finally took place on Aug. 29, 34 days after the last training sortie was performed on July 26. This does not include the arrival of the second batch of five aircraft which crossed the Atlantic from Beaufort, South Carolina, on Aug. 3.

So far, the vast majority of the flights have been performed by the first batch of four aircraft which arrived on June 6, although these have been limited in number. An Aerospace DAILY analysis of the flights using social media reports suggests that the UK-based fleet had flown just 21 or 22 flights up to July 26.

The discrepancy comes from whether two or three aircraft flew on July 3.

Some nine sorties were flown in support of air show display flyovers marking the centenary of the
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over London as well as at the Royal International Air Tattoo at RAF Fairford and the Farnborough International Airshow. Many of the training flights have been local in nature, flying practice diversions to other airfields as well as performing the first vertical landings. So far, there has been no night flying performed or aerial refueling practiced.

The UK defense ministry insists the break in flying is a result of extensive maintenance checks and personnel on leave. But when the first batch of aircraft arrived in June, crews said they were expecting an intensive flying regime to achieve (IOC).

With the majority of the UK’s fleet of 15 F-35s now based in the UK, there remains questions about how the UK Lightning force has managed to maintain pilot currency. Some of this can be done in the high-fidelity simulators. But none of these are yet operational in the Integrated Training Center (ITC) being constructed at RAF Marham, the UK’s F-35 main operating base.

The UK defense ministry did not answer Aerospace DAILY’s questions on pilot currency, but said the installation of the four simulators is nearing completion.

“After bringing the jets home two months ahead of schedule, our pilots continue to rise to the challenges of a demanding program as they prepare for the workup of 617 Squadron next month,” the defense ministry said in a statement. “Flying operations have already begun this week and the Lightning Force is on track to be operational by the end of the year.”

However, the UK is known to have had some initial teething problems with the
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’s Autonomic Logistics Information System (ALIS).

When the first batch of four F-35s arrived in June, it was another three weeks before the first aircraft took to the air on June 28. Wg. Cdr. John Butcher, the commander of 617 Sqdn., the first British F-35 front-line unit, was asked about the delay by a local newspaper, the Eastern Daily Press. He responded that data for the aircraft had to be moved across from U.S. servers to the British server and then verified for airworthiness before the aircraft could be accepted onto the squadron.

“We have had some bits of missing data during that transfer, so we have been working through that,” he told the newspaper. “None of it is anything that we didn’t plan for in terms of contingency, so we have been working through those in a methodical fashion to make sure that we can get the jets into a serviceable state to take them flying in a safe manner.”

The Marham base has been undergoing extensive rebuilding work to prepare for the F-35’s arrival. But this has not impacted flight operations, with the RAF’s Panavia Tornados flying regularly from the airfield without hindrance.

Meanwhile, the UK has announced the first flights of a UK aircraft fitted with UK weapons.

Images released by the defense ministry on Aug. 28 and taken in mid-August show one of the UK’s F-35Bs based at Edwards AFB, California, carrying the MBDA Asraam air-to-air missile.

This is understood to mark the start of operational testing of the two British-made weapons destined for the aircraft as part of the Block 3F software release, which also includes the
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Paveway IV precision-guided bomb. The defense ministry says UK-based aircraft will carry out their own flights with weaponry in the “next few months” and that the work will support the plan to achieve IOC in December.
 

Obi Wan Russell

Jedi Master
VIP Professional
Not many people are aware that the now defunct Type 42 'Sheffield' Class DDGs had a secret capability which would have been a nasty surprise to the Soviet Navy in the North Atlantic had WW3 broken out; they were actually SSKs! Don't believe me? Here's one mid dive:40172432_357941248269700_2322632276891926528_n.jpg Imagine one of these surfacing within spitting distance of a Kiev or the Kuznetzov! ;-)
 
May 15, 2018
Today at 7:29 AM
plus now noticed NavalToday story UK allocates funds for seventh Astute-class submarine ‘Agincourt’
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now the news is
Astute boats 4-7 now more than £800m over budget

September 11, 2018
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and the last sentence is hilarious:

"It should be noted that whilst the Astute class is over budget, it remains cheap in comparison to other similar classes:

  • US Virginia class: £2.0B
  • French Shortfin Barracuda class: £2.4B"
in fact, it made my day
LOL!
 
D

Deleted member 13312

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lol, being cheaper makes little difference if one is still going to overshot one's budget.
 
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