So this is in the very-rough draft phase of being drawn. It is not clean yet. It's all my own except for the helos and the missiles and a few of the radars and things. Which I believe are all "Thing that Help" under the rules. Correct me if I'm wrong.
The purpose of this ship is to provide an alternative to the LCS, while also fully replacing the now retired Oliver-Hazard Perry class frigates. It uses the Spy-6 radars intended for the Flight-3 Arleigh Burke ballistic missile defense ships however only carries the tactical length Mk 57 PVLS. As it cannot fire the SM-3, it's ability to interdict ballistic missiles is nil. However, as in line with existing C4i systems and future C5i, I designed it under the idea that if this ship can see the threat, another ship elsewhere (carrying ABM missiles) can shoot it down. In that sense this ship offers a fast escort ship that can also keep it's eyes peeled for ballistic missile threats. It can provide illumination for ABM missiles, which is also a plus. So if a flight 3 burke cannot see them due to range or azimuth, this guy can. In the sense that if the Burke was three hundred miles further out than this ship, it would still offer the same type of spotting and illuminating capabilities as the Burke itself, and using a co-fire capability the FFX could even fire the Burke's missiles for it, and guide them. The downside to this is that the frigate has to be nuclear powered to power all systems nominally. Could it be done otherwise as a conventional powerplant? Probably.
The ship uses a lot of IRST setups for differing purposes. It even uses the same IRST system that the F-35 uses, modified for naval/surface use. The Lockheed AN/AAQ-37 is an impressive and compact IRST system that Lockheed claims can spot a ballistic missile from over 800 miles (1300 km) away. This is an example of how I try to layer technologies together that fit a similar purpose and will work together in that capacity. The AAQ-37 can see the ballistic missile visually, while the SPY-6 can better identify it and illuminate it. The AAQ-37 systems are mounted to the tops of all the turrets on the ship in addition to SAGEM EOMS units. I also envision that the AAQ-37 in addition to the EOMS as you may have guessed operates the turrets IRST, and the turret systems use it to target and aim. Though obviously the system would also provide generalized spotting as I mentioned with the ballistic missile scenario. I would still imagine that the gun systems use the ships radar to target and fire as well. IRST+Radar is my universal approach.
The ship uses SAGEM IRST technology, which are mounted at various points on the ship. They are all-weather IRST search and tracking systems and also provide navigation and IFF capabilities; and unlike active based radars, they are able to do all of this passively.
It has a lot of guns. Mostly for layered defenses in a 360 degree protection envelope, but also just because I like them. So sue me! It's intended to use the 76mm DART round and 76mm Vulcano round. Both are guided but with differing purposes. And with a range of 40 km, the 76mm Vulcano can also target ships which gives these guns surprising AShW capabilities in addition to their SM-2, ESSM and LRASM.
As you can imagine, this ship is not as cheap as the LCS. But the LCS does absolutely nothing of value while this ship is truly multi-purpose and provides partial ABM capability. SEWEIP provides abundant ECM / EW capabilities and the sonar mounted on the ship is the same that the DDG-1000 carries.
Considerations:
I would restart and redevelop Sea-Lance for added ASW capability.
I would navalize the Aim-9X for use on the ship, either to be used in the Mk 57 PVLS or launched from the turrets to supplement RAM & ESSM capabilities.
FFN(X) / FF(X)
Tonnage:
Light: 3,900 (target)
Standard: 4,400 (target)
Full: 4,900 (not to exceed)
Length: 495 ft
Beam: 60 ft / 89 ft (trimaran parallel hulls) *Ace and I are currently discussing this for revision.
Draft: 12 ft
Type: Frigate
Mission: Multi-Mission / Multi-Role
Primary Roles: Radar Picket & Signal Interdiction
Secondary Roles: Anti-Air Warfare / Anti-Sub Warfare / Anti-Ship Warfare / Anti-Ballistic Missile Warfare
Hull Composition:
Titanium Aluminum Vanadium Alloy / Ti- Al - 30% V- 2.5%
Wield method: Us Navy Tested Friction Stir Wielding
*The USN has been showing a interest in titanium based super-structures and/or hulls as of late. This is why I chose to use a titanium hull. Yes, I am aware that the USN does not currently build titanium ships. However, they are looking into doing so in the future. And, I much prefer titanium to aluminum because aluminum has so many issues concerning it's use at sea and for warfare.
*This ship uses
my preferred titanium super alloy, which is one third aluminum. It does however have the same melting point as titanium, a great deal higher than aluminum. And it is still very light. It has the lightweight of aluminum, the strength and melting point of titanium. Vanadium is used for the purposes of alloying the two other metals together more efficiently. It is also easier to cut and wield than pure titanium. And as I mentioned, it's cheaper.
http://www.onr.navy.mil/Media-Center/Pr ... y-ONR.aspx
http://www.marinelink.com/news/business ... 43678.aspx
http://www.azom.com/article.aspx?ArticleID=12499
Hull Type:
Body: Tumblehome Trimaran
Bow: Wave-Piercing / Non-bulbous
Stern: Reverse Transom Stern
AC Plant:
4 x 300 ton HES-C AC plants
(Johnson Controls YVAA Air-Cooled Variable Speed Drive Screw Chiller)
(Smart, sustainable and silent)
Sensors & Electronics:
x2 SAGEM Vampir NG (or USN equivalent)
x4 SAGEM EOMS NG (or USN equivalent)
x4 Raytheon AN/SPY-6
x2 SATCOM arrays
x2 IFF Arrays
x2 CEC Arrays
x4 TX Arrays
x4 RX Arrays
x8 Lockheed AN/AAQ-37 (Naval/Surface MOD)
x2 Hughes AN/TPQ-37 Firefinder Weapon Locating System (Naval MOD)
x16 SAGEM Sigma 40 Laser Gyro System (or USN equivalent)
*Equipped with AEGIS ACB20 / TI-16
• Total Ship Computing Environment – a single, encrypted network that controls all shipboard computing applications, ranging from the ship’s lights and machinery control to its radars and weapon systems. The TSCE's sailor-centric interface and high degree of automation allow the ship to run more effectively and efficiently.
• Electronic Modular Enclosures – a shipbuilding innovation that packages more than 235 individual electronics cabinets into ready-to-install, “ruggedized” units for easy integration, maintenance and upgrades. Each ship carries 16 EMEs. ECM/EMP Hardened. Radiation Hardened via SEARAD.
• Integrated Undersea Warfare System – two sonar arrays (high and medium frequencies) in one automated, hull-mounted system designed to protect the ship from enemy mines, submarines and torpedoes. Using sophisticated algorithms, the sonar better enables frigates and destroyers to detect, engage and defeat an enemy threat.
Radar:
Raytheon’s AN/SPY-6
CEAFAR 3D AESA Volume Search Radar (VSR) (X,S-band, rotating scanned array)
Sonar:
Raytheon AN/SQQ-90 tactical sonar suite;
The Raytheon AN/SQQ-90 is composed of:
Raytheon AN/SQS-60 hull-mounted mid-frequency
Raytheon AN/SQS-61 hull-mounted high-frequency
Raytheon AN/SQR-20 multi-function towed array sonar and handling system
SONARBOUYS for aircraft & ship board bouy launcher
AN/SSQ-77C vertical line array directional frequency analysis and recording (VLAD) sonobuoy
The AN/SSQ-101 air deployed active receiver (ADAR)
AN/SSQ-125 pinging sonobuoy
AN/SSQ-53F sonobuoy
SUS MK-84 Mod 1 Signal Underwater Sound Device
Propulsion & Power:
Integrated full electric propulsion (IFEP)
100,000 SHP on two shafts
*Fully-Shrouded eleven blade contra-rotating propeller assemblies
Max Speed: 41 kts
Cruise Speed: 30 kts
2 x 110 MWt Lightweight Lead-cooled fast reactor (LFR)
Total: 220 MWt
Reactor Dimensions: Insulated Cowl Full Shielding
L: 2.9 m W: 2.0 m H: 3.5 m
Weight: 65 t
Reactor Compartment: Partial Shielding
L: 12 m W: 8 m H: 5.0 m
Weight: 395 t (compare to Ohio Class SSBN reactor compartment which weighs over 2,600 t!)
*Reactors housed in divided reactor compartments.
*Has bleed and dump tanks for the coolant, so that in the event of a shut down or failure the coolant can be dumped into a series of expansion tanks which allows the fuel to solidify without damaging system components.
*is equipped with an automatic reactor fill system that can flood the reactor with borated water in the event of a loss-of-coolant accident.
*This nuclear reactor utilizes natural circulation which is capable of operating at a significant fraction of full power without reactor coolant pumps. This is a considerable bonus to acoustic stealth.
*Graphite modulus and cores
*Heat-exchangers in reactor header for molten lead to water/steam process (or alternatively helium)
*Four steam circulation loops networked to steam turbines
*Cross-linked coolant systems enable one reactor to bleed start the other in the event that one reactor shuts down or fails, allowing the coolant to reheat.
* Instead of refueling, the whole core can be replaced after many years of operation. Such a reactor is suitable for countries that do not plan to build their own nuclear infrastructure.
Coolant: Lead
Fuel: Thorium-Uranium-Plutonium Alloy
(Th-4 w/0 U-Pu Alloys Annealed at 900°C, Water Quenched)
Cycle: Thorium Fuel Cycle, Semi-Closed Cycle
Reactor Coolant Inlet Temperature: 345 C
Reactor Coolant Outlet Temperature: 695 C nominal, 990 C max
Reactor Core Temperature: 800 C, 1,600 C max
Why Liquid Metal/Lead Cooled?
*As no electricity is required for the cooling after shutdown, this design has the potential to be safer than a water-cooled reactor.
*Liquid lead systems can't cause an explosion and quickly solidify in case of a leak, further improving safety.
*Lead is very dense, and therefore a good shield against gamma rays.
*Lead's nuclear properties allow it to prevent a positive void coefficient, which is difficult to prevent in large sodium fast reactor cores.
*The operating pressure is very low and lead has an extremely high boiling point of 1750 degrees Celsius, which is over 1100 degrees Celsius higher than the peak coolant operating temperature. This makes significant reactor pressurization by overheating virtually impossible.
*Lead does not react significantly with water or air, unlike sodium which burns readily in air and can explode in contact with water. This allows easier, cheaper and safer containment and heat exchanger/steam generator design.
1 x Siemens SST-300 @ 50 MW
*Condensing
SST-300 steam turbine series
Length (L): 12 m / Width (W): 4 m / Height (H): 5 m
Power output
up to 50 MW
Turbine speed
up to 12,000 rpm
Inlet steam pressure
up to 120 bar
Inlet steam temperature
up to 520°C
Uncontrolled extractions (up to 6)
up to 60 bar
Controlled extraction
Pressure
up to 45 bar
Temperature
up to 400°C
Exhaust steam
Back pressure
up to 16 bar
Condensing pressure
up to 0.25 bar
District heating
up to 3.0 bar
Exhaust area
0.28 to 1.6 m²
4 x Siemens SST-200 @ 10 MW
*Back-pressure non-condensing
In the backpressure turbine configuration, the turbine does not consume steam. Instead, it
simply reduces the pressure and energy content of steam that is subsequently exhausted
into the process header. In essence, the turbogenerator serves the same steam function as
a pressure-reducing valve (PRV)—it reduces steam pressure—but uses the pressure drop
to produce highly valued electricity in addition to the low-pressure steam. Shaft power
is produced when a nozzle directs jets of high-pressure steam against the blades of the
turbine’s rotor. The rotor is attached to a shaft that is coupled to an electrical generator
Source:
http://energy.gov/sites/prod/files/2014 ... essure.pdf
SST-200 steam turbine series
Length (L): 4 m* / Width (W): 2 m* / Height (H): 2.5 m*
Power output
up to 10 MW
Inlet steam pressure
up to 110 bar
Inlet steam temperature
up to 520°C
Bleed
up to 60 bar
Exhaust steam
Back pressure
up to 16 bar
Condensing pressure
up to 0.25 bar
Exhaust area
0.17 to 0.34 m²
Controlled extraction
Pressure
up to 16 bar
Temperature
up to 350°C
Armament:
8 x OTO Melara 76mm/62 cal Super Rapid Guns (4x2) ;
Located 2 fore, 2 aft
Mounted in 4 twin-gunned dome shaped "Blister" turrets; Reduced RCS design
Retractable guns, stowed in hull beneath turret during non-use.
*Automated Loading
*Automated Aiming and Firing
Recommended munitions & Maximum Associated Ranges:
76mm DART: 8,000 m +
HE-PFF: 16,000 m
SAPOMER: 20,000 m
76 Vulcano: 40,000 m
It would be envisioned that the ship would use existing Oto Melara guns housed in dome shaped turrets that would be designed and built by US defense contractors. The turrets would be notable for being fully automated, offering remote controlled firing options when desired. The blister turrets would be designed to have reduced radar-cross section in comparison to conventional turret designs, and would have SeaRAM built into the turret with approximately 4 cells arranged to the sides of the guns in sets of 2.
There are several reasons to mount the Rolling-Airframe launchers in the gun turrets. Firstly it limits deck clutter. Secondly it allows the cells to be reloaded using a modification to the tubes themselves so that reloading can occur from a small magazine within the turret. And thirdly since the 76mm guns are also designed to function as CIWS & CIGS in their own role, it makes sense that the Rolling-Airframe missile would be utilized to assist in operation of such role. In this case the missiles would already be aimed at the target that the guns were attempting to engage.
Because the Oto Melara Super-Rapid system is designed with a high-fire rate it makes for a reasonable close in weapon system when engaging missiles and aircraft. It's 120 rpm rate of fire is high enough for this role, but not of proper saturation for dealing with super-sonic sea skimming type weapons which typically would only give five seconds or less of advanced warning, if any at all. Therefore a CIWS with a higher-rate of fire would be required to provide a higher saturation of fire, especially in attacks involving multiple incoming targets that are moving in excess of sub-sonic speeds. The 35mm Oerlikon Millennium Gun is the chosen weapon to provide saturation in such affairs, of which the FFN(X) is intended to carry four of these guns.
The Oto Melara 76mm gun already exists, and would only need to be modified to work with the customized turret setup of this design. Traditionally the system carries 80 to 89 rounds ready to fire (Compact Mount), however using a custom turret design this could be increased by modifying the feed system and stowed magazine cache. I would envision each turret carrying 600 rounds ready to fire and additional box or tray magazines below deck.
Blister turrets are envisioned to be a complex, in that they extend below the deck and have additional maintenance and machinery compartments below deck. While this requires more compromise in the design and construction of the ship, it also offers better maintenance access and increased reliability of such. Also, you have greater capacity to offer additional features than the original compact mount.
4 x Rheinmetall Oerlikon Millennium Gun / GDM-008
Located 4 amidships
Mounted in single-gun dome shaped "Blister" turrets; Reduced RCS design
Retractable guns, stowed in hull beneath turret during non-use.
*Automated Loading
*Automated Aiming and Firing
8 × MK 57 VLS / PVLS modules, with 4 vertical launch cells in each module, 32 cells total;
Located fore (edge of deck / sides)
4 x Mk 32 triple torpedo tube sets
*Internal reload system, 6 reloads per set
*Mounting altered so that the mounts are internal/above-deck & flush with the hull
Aircraft facility:
Can carry a SH-60 in a below deck hangar which can raise topside via an aircraft elevator. Hangar is located aft.