I just noticed, on your axe-bow patrol craft (which, as I explained before, makes no sense on a what is this I don't even scale), you have an open machine gun position right where the poor sod is gonna get a face full of Sea State 5.
Posts:5376 Joined: July 27th, 2010, 3:02 am
Location: Aalborg, Denmark
The Wave lives! It was actually my very first shipbucket drawing. (And the only one so far that won't fit on the small template)
I like what you've done with the Gemstone, though I'd straighten out the deck to keep as much of the sea outside the boat as possible.
On the topic of keeping the sea outside, I find the exhaust system suspect. When at anchor in heavy weather you risk swamping your exhaust system. Also, as engines go, gas turbines are rather finicky, and if there's one thing they don't like it's backpressure in the exhaust system. This'll cause slow down if you're lucky, stalling if you're not and engine reversal if you're plain unfortunate. As you might have guessed, reversing the rotation is a bad[/] thing.At the very least you're looking at new main bearings and airfilters. And speaking of air, your tubines will need it, lots of it. As it is right now you have no air intakes and unless you want engineers stuck to the airfilter, drawing air dirctly from the engine room is not an option.
Another thing, the prop shroud need some hull supports. You don't support it on the axle since this'll cause flow interference.
_________________ “Close” only counts with horseshoes, hand grenades, and tactical nuclear weapons.
That which does not kill me has made a grave tactical error
Posts:5376 Joined: July 27th, 2010, 3:02 am
Location: Aalborg, Denmark
I think you have to move the forward 76mm back a bit. As it is right now, its in the way of the bow frames.
You might also want to shorten the stalk on the pod to protect the prop from damage.
_________________ “Close” only counts with horseshoes, hand grenades, and tactical nuclear weapons.
That which does not kill me has made a grave tactical error