Hi Tobius,
Can you help with some bits of your post that I'm not understanding?
Also be prepared to lose that carrier when she's torpedoed. You can't counterflood a catamaran to remove a list, nor can you correct for wave roll in yaw and you sure don't want to launch crosswind on that broad deck.
I'd thought you'd flood voids on the other hull. Is this impossible or unworkable on a catamaran?
I've seen a couple of naval disasters involving catamaran ferries (the closest thing to what is illustrated above.)
It's possible to counter-flood, but you have to be quick. The problem is that you have two much smaller float bubbles and too much top weight. The cant action comes quicker and you have to calculate the imaginary incline line between the two float bubbles. It could be a quadratic rather than a linear progression as a problem.
How do you cross feed from port trap to starboard cat shot? On the flight deck or underneath it? Underneath means you don't foul traps or takeoff runs. Do you know what an aircraft carrier deck crew means by aircraft roller skating or a bolter?
A bolter is a trap that fails to catch the wire and that means the lander plows into planes parked forward. KABOOM.
Roller skating is when an aircraft being moved by men or a tractor breaks loose from grip and rolls away from the plane handlers. Since catamaran hulls pitch sideways as well as back and forth, that roller skating plane will not only roll but SKID into parked planes. Again with the KABOOM.
I'd thought K showed the under-flight-deck hangar? Presumably this would be used for transfer of aircraft? With regards the bolter, surely this is why the crash barrier is present? Or am I misunderstanding and we're referring to a returning plane coming down onto the wrong hull and ploughing into the deck park aircraft there? Regards aircraft sliding to the side, perhaps a similar sort of crash barrier running longitudinally (not stressed to the same sort of strength, of course, as it's hopefully stopping aircraft at a substantially slower speed than those failing to land correctly) would do the trick there - you wouldn't want it to be the sort of thing that would impede transferring aircraft across the flight deck if necessary in an emergency, so I suspect a permanent barrier would be detrimental.
His illustration did not show me clearly that he had allowed enough turn room or wide enough tunneling to cross the plane, I would have preferred continuous width open bay hangers (more garage space) instead of the illustrated British pattern box integrated into the hull frame. One explosion in that box and the carrier hull is swanged out of frame and you might as well write her off as a total loss.
1. You don't ever stop a bolter if you can avoid it... EVER. You want him to touch and go through a clear run across the clear deck path and back into the air for another go around if he's lucky or into the drink if he's not. The carrier comes first. Same for a roller skater. Steer over the side if it can't be stopped. Curbs on a flight deck are impractical for the very good reason you mentioned.
2. The Japanese (and now apparently the British will try with the Queen Elizabeths) tried to cross feed aircraft under the flight deck. A bomb into the hanger full of explosives and fuel and loaded planes=loss of carrier. You want explosions and fires outside the hanger, not inside it. Cross-feed on the flight deck, fuel on the flight deck, arm on the flight deck, move on the flight deck so that the explosions are outside the armor and the hull, not inside.
3. The flight deck should be as clear of wind breaks and physical obstructions as possible. The carrier operating tempo and its defense depend on the speediness of how fast it can launch and recover aircraft. There are three ways to do this currently, one called CATOBAR (catapult assisted take off back arrested recovery) and RTOBAR (rolling [ski jump] take off barrier arrested recovery) and vertical take off arrested or vertical landing. All of them require unimpeded and open recovery runs with vertical landing being the most dangerous on a cluttered deck because of the downdraft and downwash. Vertical landings are uniquely dangerous in that there is a sideways slip component as the helicopter or the jump-jet tries to slip into its assigned landing spot
on a moving ship. That is why many vertical landers (helicopters) use a cable winch recovery assist to haul down onto their deck spots. Jump-jets can't do that, which is why you don't see jump jets operate off the back of frigates.
Anything that clutters a take off/trap run, even if it is a man standing in the wrong place at the wrong time is a giant error in judgment that leads to at best a delay in the operating tempo or to assorted disasters like plane on plane collisions or roller-skating or a crashed bolter or just a warmed up plane sucking that man into its engine (or setting him or something else) on fire. All of this has happened. The result is that there are rather firm and hard rules for how you design (CATOBAR) aircraft carriers. If you look at the French Charles de Gaulle or an American Nimitz, those rules are very plain to see.
The heck of it, is that most of the rules were invented by the British, who seemed to have ignored every one of them in their current aircraft carrier designs.
Regards,
Tobius