that deck view is of the wrong deck, IIRC. it is at least one deck higher then the deck you think it is.
Nope that is the no. 4 deck which is the lowest except the bottom of the hull. I’ve got the original deck plans right in front of me of the DDL and I haven’t made such a simple mistake.
and with changed weapons I didn't mean the seadart (well, a little bit
) but also the weird oto guns housing and the 'changed' 909 directors. why would they make such modifications?
The Oto Guns are the same as all the others except they have a South African peculiar housing scabbed on the right side of the top of the turret. This feature is found on all the South African guns and I think the Israeli’s. I don’t know exactly what it is but I suspect it’s a camera housing. Since it looks pretty cool I added one to the Mk 66 twin 5”.
The directors are the same as a British one except they have a slightly different radome. This is just a glass fibre cover and I guess in South Africa they built them slightly different to in Great Britain. This is just a cosmetic thing with no real impact on performance of the system.
also, for the height of the directors. the SPS-01 on the tromp is on the lowest position possible there. but you used an different setup, with 2 very heavy directors and an huge funnel. you should at least lower the directors or this ship is gonna have serious topweight issues.
The SPS-01 on the Tromp class can be quite lower if they wanted. The radar room is located on the third deck! My deck plan is slightly different but the radar is once again on the third deck above the main deck. Which is why if you line up a picture of the Tromp with the Zambezi you will see the ‘Kojak’ radome is at exactly the same height above the waterline on each ship. The Type 909 illuminators are not significantly heavier than the AN/SPG-51s on the Tromp. They just look bigger because they have radomes covering the antennas. While I have located one of them higher (and one the same height) this increase in weight above the metacentre compared to the Tromp (which has the same COGOG machinery and a very similar hull) is compensated by the lowered Mk 13, lowered bridge and no Sea Sparrow system.
for the funnel size: the tromp has, due to the fact it has to limit topweight, very small structures apart from the one with the radar on it. so did the type 82, and that ship was a lot bigger already
The funnel is not huge. I have no idea where you get this from. It is the same size – exactly – as the funnels on the Types 22 and 42 and the DDL (in fact the funnel is kit bashed from the Shipbucket DDL). The Tromp has the same engines but a different funnel arrangement because it has split exhausts to a Y shape so the smoke does not foul the main mast. But far from being lighter or better for top weight it is actually heavier (two stack shrouds and exhaust support beams in place of one) and while moving weight lower moves it out to the beams from the centreline which is worse for stability.
The Type 82 is such a fundamentally different warship it is no basis of comparison to this ship. I appreciate the feedback but none of these criticisms are valid from a shipbuilding perspective.