Something for Avalon. Seeing as A: compared to the OTL Madagascar didn't get the technological setbacks and would have gained / kept independence much earlier and B: the fact that I have a lot of airspace to cover over a lot of ocean I decided that I would need some sort of carrier force.
A quick history of the envisaged force...
1929 - 2x Converted battle cruiser of WW1 vintage that was still unfinished at the end of hostilities
One sunk in the Indian Ocean by Japanese aircraft. The other decommissioned in 1949 after spending 3 years in reserve
1945sh - CV-46 "Iwo Jima" is completed for service in Avalonian navy as a replacement for the sunken vessel. Would serve until replacement by Midway class carriers in the sixties. Refit to SCB-125 standard between 1957 and 1959.
1945ish CVB-44, CVB-56 and 57 all remain ordered, are laid down and constructed between 1943 and 1959 in much the same haphazard way the British carriers of the period ended up being built. Upon completion they were delivered straight to reserve for lack of work for them. With the gathering Storm in Vietnam the US were seeking allies who could possibly commit to stemming the tide of communism there. In 1961 Talks were under way with the Avalonian government for the purchase of CVB-56 and 57 to replace or supplant Iwo Jima, negotiations were still under way when JFK was assassinated. With Johnson's more hard line approach to Vietnam he offered a somewhat lucrative sounding proposal to Avalon. The transferral of CVB-44, 56 and 57 to Avalon for a nominal charge in return for a pledge from the Avalonian government to assist in Vietnam. The carriers were prepared for transfer to Avalon including loading the three of them with the various other supplies and equipment negotiated in the deal.
The three sailed into Glastonbury Sound on the third of March 1964. CVB-44 was immediately prepared for an evaluational cruise with the air group from Iwo Jima embarked and by October was declared ready for deployment. CVB-56 and 57 were worked up between 1966 and 67 as manpower and aircraft became available. Iwo Jima remained in service until 1977 as an amphibious warfare carrier seeing extensive service in Vietnam before her withdrawal. She remained in reserve until 1985 before being scrapped in Singapore.
The Midway class carriers in Avalonian service would all be outfitted to SCB-110 standard with some local modifications. They have served from 1964 until now with CVB-44 being retired in 1999 and scrapped in 2003. The two remaining vessels are expected to remain until the first two replacements are in service.
Their replacement in the eyes of the Admiralty can't come soon enough as although they have given many years sterling service they are incredibly labour intensive and expensive to operate.
Their replacements will come into service between 2014 and 2019.
---Class Details---
Class Members:
R62 Defender
14/06/1943 |
06/08/1943 |
12/10/1955 |
21/06/1963 |
01/12/2003
R63 Defiance
07/07/1943 |
13/08/1945 |
15/10/1959 |
23/06/1964 |
Q1 2018
R64 Discovery
07/07/1943 |
12/08/1945 |
09/09/1959 |
23/06/1966 |
Q1 2018
Class Differences:
R62 received during her life less in the way of attention being somewhat older than the other two vessels, other than her service in Vietnam she was routinely used as a training carrier and a commando carrier to supplement the Iwo Jima. As such she lost her waist catapult and part of her steam plant limiting her top speed to some 27 knots.
R63 retained her gun armament long after her sister, until 1983 in fact though the original 5 inch guns were long gone by this date, replaced by Italian 76mm mounts. These too would succumb in 1983 with the fitting of Phalanx in their former positions as well as atop the island. In lieu of IPDMS R63 was fitted with the Italian development, Aspide on her forward, starboard and aft, port sponsons.
R64 unlike her sister ship lost her original gun armament early on after a serious fire during the course of one of her Vietnam deployments. As a stop-gap measure she was fitted with OtoBreda twin-forty mounts throughout, replacing the remaining 5 inch guns as well as the damaged ones. Eventually she would land two of these mounts and receive two Aspide launchers, she retains the same layout of armament to the present day.
First point of discussion for the replacement design. Propulsion...
For a design measuring 300m x 43m (75FD) x 11m displacing some 75,000 tonnes. My logic is a 3 shaft arrangement with a central cruising shaft for 20kts and two boost shafts for maintaining 29kts for air ops. The WR-21s can go either to the cruise or boost shafts depending on power requirements. The MT30s should produce enough power to the cruise shaft and ship systems during air ops as far as I can tell. Can anyone more well versed in the dark arts provide some insight as to whether the setup is feasible?
ETA:
Basic design scheme thus far.
Specifications:
'Goddess' class aircraft carrier
[list][*]Produced:2013 Onwards
[*]In Commission: 2017 Onwards
[*]Displacement: ~75,000 Tonnes
[*]Length: 300m
[*]Beam: 43m (75m flight deck)
[*]Draught: 11m nominal
[*]
Propulsion: [IFEP / COGLAG]
[list][*]2x Rolls Royce Marine MT30 gas turbines rated at 36MW ea.
[*]2x Rolls Royce Marine WR-21 recuperating gas turbines rated at 25MW ea.
[*]MagPower MAFC fuel cell auxiliary power system for a total of 800kW
[*]2x retractable auxiliary propulsors rated at 3.2MW each[/list]
[*]Speed:
Cruise:20 knots
Sustainable Max.: 29 knots
[*]Complement and Accommodation: Crew: 1550 (900 crew, 650 air wing) Permanent Accommodation: 250 Surge Accommodation: 100 (hangar space)
[*]Endurance: 72 days before resupply
[*]Range: 20,000km @ 15 knots
[*]Armament:
[list][*]4x 25mm Phalanx derivatives
[*]SYLVER A50 (48 cells) for ASTER 15 and 30 as well as Sea Ceptor
[*]4x BAE Bofors Mk4 40mm/70
[*]4x Mk38 mounts (25mm)
[*]4x 12.7mm remote mounts (Kongsberg Protector)[/list]
[*] Aviation: Dependent on a variety of factors, standard air group is slated to be:
[list][*]24x F/A-19 Sea Wolf (Vought 1600/01/02)
[*]6x S-3 Vikings (sea control mainly with secondary ASW role)
[*]6x AW101 Merlins (ASW warfare)
[*]4x AW70 Pave Hawks (HH-60H, licence built by AW a la WS70, for CSAR, plane guard and ASuW duties)
[*]2x E-2D Advanced Hawkeye (AE2100 over T56)[/list]
[*] Boats and landing craft: 4 motor life boats (80 and 136 person) in addition to 3 RHIBs (1x 7m and 2x 11m)
[*]Noteworthy Sensors:[list][*]BAE Sampson
[*]BAE S1850M
[*]Chemring Centurion countermeasures dispenser (4x)
[*]Rheinmetall MASS countermeasure dispenser (2x)[/list][/list]