Sure, back-to-back aerials work, no trouble there. I haven't spent 3 months drawing 80s Soviet DDGs without learning that.
This mostly helps in refresh rate and frequency redundancy.
The concept described above by Erik was light, planar composite-backed aerials, arranged on the same vertical axis, each one being
transparent to the one below, with a potential for independent rotation. My concern re. radar application is twofold: 1) can you even feed enough power (let alone signal) through the triple rotating base while ensuring transparency, and 2) is there a risk of harmonic interference between arrays, or pure noise jamming from the proximity between the feeds. If this can be solved, I can't see the asynchronous rotation being the blocking point. As long as the arrays are transparent and the mechanics independent but concentric, you can rotate each plate to the desired rpm without trouble.
Anyway, enough OT speculation unless the OP has more first-hand data, but I'll make sure to check out the Brit and Israeli models you mention, might make interesting references.
Definitely, although no name has ever described a static and unchanging type over the years. To me, in the 2010s (or even 1990s), it's got no flag facilities so therefore it's not a cruiser. Anyway, I find the prospect of the 14,500 ton destroyer somewhat less offensive than the 6000 ton frigate
(pay no attention to the thread title)
1) What are your 6 TEU in addition to a whole half-squadron of Seahawks, if not for temporary pre-fab flag facilities (not like you're short on comms anyway)?
2)Aren't 6000t frigates kind of this decade's fashion already? OTOH 15kt destroyer (or even cruisers) are kind of rare these days.
But let's just not re-(re-re-...)start a debate on the names of the various capital classes. No flag facilities => no cruiser. Point taken, but you see how easily you can slip from one to the other.
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