Good morning, guys. May I ask a question about the towed sonar and the numerous (12) torpedo tubes? Is the very high speed of a hydrofoil vessel compatible with the ASW missions? I mean, is the high speed silent enough for having a good search and hunt capability of a sumerged submrine? Cheers and thanks in advance for your answers.
The concept of operations behind the ASW hydrofoil was that the vessel could use its high speed (+60 knots when foil-borne) to dash to the location of a submarine contact. Once it arrived to the area of the submarine contact, it would revert to normal hull-borne propulsion at low speed and deploy its variable-depth sonar to continue pursuing the contact. The submarine hunting would have been done at low speed in the same manner as any other vessel.
One of the reasons that the ASW hydrofoil concept was ultimately abandoned was the relatively short range of the vessel in combination with its comparatively low speed - despite being extremely fast for a surface warship, it was far slower than ASW aircraft such as the P-3 Orion/CP-140 Aurora that were entering service during the same time period. It was determined that ASW aircraft were the superior platform for these types of missions. Additionally, advances in submarine-launched ballistic missiles meant that they no longer had to get as close to the shoreline to deploy their weapons, further reinforcing the requirement for a long-range platform to combat them.
paul_541 wrote: * | September 17th, 2024, 4:01 am |
It is from Warship International review Number 2 , 1982. I have the full pdf file.
Description:
This model displays what a future production ship derived from the Bras d'Or experience might look like. DREA photograph.
This ship type represents one of three possible alternatives to fill multi-role naval needs after the new class patrol frigates are undertaken during the 1980s. A VDS sonar is carried at the stern, missile launcher canisters are sited alongside the superstructure, and a 3-inch gun is mounted forward. The athwartships containers aft of the inclined missile canisters probably are ASW torpedo tubes, and it is possible that the slightly bulbous bow forefoot incorporates a small sonar array for hullborne use.
This is interesting. So not necessarily an armed Bras d’Or, but an evolution of the design. The RCN conducted an initial study beginning in 1974 on the replacement of its current destroyer escorts with a new type of vessel (DGMEM,
Report on Surface Warship Study, [3120-280/C3-3 (DMEM-5)], dated 25 January 1974). One of the designs that was studied was a 400-ton hydrofoil. I wonder if Paul’s image is the same vessel, or a further derivative of that design? Ultimately these studies abandoned the idea of replacing destroyer escorts with less capable but more numerous vessels, and instead resulted in the Canadian Patrol Frigate programme which gave us the
Halifax - class frigates beginning in the early 90s.