You know what, hell, we probably can have a ramp up to the forecastle from the hangar. That's pretty awesome and I ought to have considered it. Note this crane is a bit less than 7' tall and 6' wide, so something like 9x8 (which I can totally fit) allows seriously awesome access forward and aft. We can start thinking about crazy stuff like launching Scan Eagle forward while conducting flight ops aft, stuff like that. The crane can handle 24deg changes in concave slope and we can curve the convex edge, so as to fit the entire ramp within a single compartment.
I'll draw it properly later, maybe, but this is IC-40 to scale, with the ramp and whatnot. We could probably even fit an IC-80 without too much trouble, which has a 18klb capacity.
THIS, in turn, might open up some questions about how I want to arrange the cranes within the mission bay, doesn't it? And now we can reasonably have major VERTEP forward when we want to do so.... this is a huge win. Major improvement, thank you for the suggestion.
That's cool, glad you like it
Honestly, I hadn't paid attention to the deck shift and the need for a ramp. If there is space for a gangway, I don't see a reason this can't work. You might even hard-build some enclosed parking space for three cranes to service both aft and fore decks at the same time. Missiles notwithstanding, they can probably help a lot with solids UNREP, moving palettes quickly away from the reception point. Hell, you can even imagine them carting around specialized equipment to pre-equipped plug-in stations. Say, specialized sensors (SLAR, ELINT...) or weapon stations (Griffin palettes, miniaturized RMS...) or whatever (UAV catapult) could be carried one at a time to reduce cost, and deployed in a specific corner of the deck when needed. Or is this starting to sound too LCS-y already?
Also, I mentioned before the idea of a bespoke rail-driven trolley replacing the wheeled crane. Though it certainly sounds dangerously un-American compared to the truck-based version
it opens a different avenue for expansion where you would lead the rails to a holding bay where you could swap trolleys via overhead crane with a selection of crane (utility) and palette (cargo) trolleys which can then load one another with pre-packaged modules (see above) to then position then all around the ship on plugs or stick them on the rail circuit and feed them in place through the rails. With position sensors on the rail and optionally some COTS remote-sensing between trolleys, you can remote-control all that from a central console in the hangar.
In your VLS UNREP scenario, you would move a heavy-duty palette trolley and a crane trolley to the edge of the hangar bay. The crane picks up the VLS canisters, piles up as many as possible on the palette, then both follow the rail to the designated VLS module, where the crane unpacks the individual canisters and strikes them down in place, until the palette is depleted and both trolleys switch back to their storage station. For deployable systems, you load them on palette trolleys from an overhead crane directly at the trolley station or at a designated loading bay, and then drive the loaded palette to the designated plug station, which can consist in a rail derivation (so as not to clog the main circuit) where the palette sits snugly with its system on top and handles the power feed and diagnostic.
The possibilities are endless! And I really shouldn't get that excited about a glorified warehouse sorting system!
I'll give a stab at drawing this version at some point, but it is clearly time for me to turn in now.