but just when the bow trosters are running. Normaly you are operating those trusters when you are moneuvering int harbor, and in that Situations a passive Sonar is not necessary.
false. the noise problem of bow and stern thrusters is related to the noise you hear in port, but not the same. the noise you hear is from the water pushed trough an relatively small and long tube. and when the ship is sailing, that tube is still there, and creates noise due to the fact that the water does not follow the lines of the hull but instead it tries to go into the pipe.
stopping this can be done partially by fitting doors on the pipes, but these do not close perfectly and are considered to vulnerable for military ships. instead I would recommend an retractable thruster in the bottom, like the perry or the nansen class has.
I also dont know if it would be working but as I understand how a passive latheral SONAR array works it is possibel.
keep an eye on the huge space it would take, and the fact that it runs through multiple watertight compartiments, by that requiring an compartiment for itself along the hull, this complicates construction and maintenance a lot, while it works less then an towed array sonar that takes a lot less space. also, I have doubts about the exact dimensions of your array, I think it should be higher and shorter, and more near or even under the keel.
May I ask you when exactly you have seen an ARPA-housing from the inside?
I just asked the 2nd DWE from the FGS Hessen an he things it will fit if the elektronik racks of SEAPAR the same or less size of APAR.
I have to admit it has been a long time since I had the chance to look at the technical drawings of the APAR. but, I know for certain that SEAPAR does not fit in the space available. true, there was to be fitted an radar in that space, but it would be an wider, less deep and less heigh system for ABM defence. this was never fitted, so there is some space, but I highly doubt SEAPAR would fit in it, and I doubt even more why you would want to do so.
But I like the 8 inch big guns and without those Guns it would be just a CG but I want a ship with high land atack capacity and I am thinking of removing the SSMs because the gung could do AsuW as well. you say the enlaged design of the oto 76 locks bad so please tell me what desingof an 203mm gun would you have drawn.
all the guns I named, apart maybe from the 125/54LW, are developed for shore bombardement. there is currently no 8 in gun in production, and that is for a reason.
if you would fit an gun like the Mk 71, and you would want to reduce the radar cross section, I think you would most likely end up with something between the latest Mk 45 mods and the oto 127 stealth mounts. both of these are relatively high mounts more like the Mk 71 instead of the square (round, from origin actually) oto 76 cupola.
I put the goalkeeper aft because they dont need this much under Deck space like a Bofors and I put it on the hangar roof so I need the space beneath for the hangar. Putting aditional guns aft will interfere with the flightdeck or the existing weapons.
surprisingly, false! the goalkeeper has substantial deck penetration, as can be found in the belowdeck thread I manage for exactly to stop this kind of mistakes from happening
the bofors gun has no deck penetration apart from it's ammunition lift, which could quite likely be fitted at the side of an hangar (like is done on the USS zumwalt)
the only thing making an goalkeeper in that position better, is that it is an slightly better CIWS (but it cannot be used against surface targets) and the bofors might have an slightly heavier inpact on the construction due to recoil. of course, if you take an AU goalkeeper with 2 gatling guns and an RAM launcher, yeah, the deck penetration issue would be even worse and the recoil issue at the very least the same.
This a Cruiser by clasical definition which means its should be able to operate independently in operations of various intensity, showing force and if necessary projecting power. Of course this ship is oversized for embargo or survalience operations but however it should be able to operate so when its size is political necessary.
But to answer your question. It is an AAW cruiser with good ABM, surface- and land attack capacity. moderate ability to operate as an ofshore commandpost for lithoral operations , and very rudimental ASW capabilitys
well, here is my problem with this. the CB-90's seem to suggest its role is littoral, with area air defence as secondary capability. the large guns and large number of secondary guns support that claim.
with what you said in mind, I would suggest 2 RHIB bays, (on the ship, not per side) of which one can take an CB-90 or other littoral support boat if needed, and one bay in the stern that can take another littoral support boat or an light modular load, like an towed array, a few containers or some UAV's, for example.