The NHHC Photo Section was thick with these things.
Nick Sumner said:Back in the 70's when dinosaurs roamed the earth and I was a mere stripling lad there was a wonderful magazine called 'Speed and Power' which did an article on hovercraft warships, which IIRC was titled 'The 100 Knot Navy'. It had a great painting of an F14 taking off from a hovercraft aircrat carrier and noted that catapults and arresting gear would not be needed on such a ship.
Nick Sumner said:Thank you Starviking! Blimey that brings back some memories!
nuclear powered SES carrier
though I suppose one of those 40 knot catamaran ferries would be realistic enough at that point.
Abraham Gubler said:Very high speed carriers have been under study by USN/DARPA for a few years now. Using novel hydrodynamics and increasing power to weight efficiency in contemporary power plants and hull structures. The primary objective being to enable aircraft launch and recovery without the need for catapults and arrestor gear. This enables your naval aircraft to be pretty much bog standard air force aircraft. 100-120 knots wind over deck is a marvellous thing for naval aviation.
Demon Lord Razgriz said:...and murder on the deck crew that'll be forced to deal with it.
Abraham Gubler said:Demon Lord Razgriz said:...and murder on the deck crew that'll be forced to deal with it.
What deck crew? What flight deck?
If you have 120 knots WOD you don’t need a flight deck or the crew to run it. You simply lift the aircraft up on an elevator, and when exposed to the wind and with engines running the pilot pulls back on the stick and you are flying.
TomS said:Did the F-14 have an on-board APU to start the engines or did it use a starter cart? (I can't remember when the switch was made.) If the later, the design would require running engines in the hangar, which is an interesting design challenge.
TomS said:You'd also be arming and fueling aircraft in the hangar, which is not how they like to do things today.
TomS said:You'd. But the sortie generation rate sounds pretty slow.
ouroboros said:Gas turbine inlets? Considering the needs of carriers, that would be a serious drain against range/performance wouldn't it? You would probably be restricted to hover "boosts" for aircraft launch/recovery ops, but displacement mode for regular ops and transit.
Unless someone was serious about a nuclear powered SES carrier...
Which would be a very strange confluence of circumstances. The indirect cycle airborne reactor work would actually be potentially more applicable here, using a high temperature molten coolant nuclear reactor for high performance, as it essentially is a nuclear heated gas turbine that sucks in outside air, and outputs hot exhaust and shaft power for additional air compressors and generators (feeding power to conventional electric propellers?). This bypasses the need for a brutally large steam powerplant setup and provides air for the SES air bubble. You would lose some performance using a closed cycle nitrogen gas turbine with exhaust cooled by seawater (or an intermediary pure water circuit) heat exchanger exclusively, but then would be focusing on shaft power for a separate air compressor and generator exclusively and keep people with nuclear adversion from having a stroke.
Abraham Gubler said:TomS said:Did the F-14 have an on-board APU to start the engines or did it use a starter cart? (I can't remember when the switch was made.) If the later, the design would require running engines in the hangar, which is an interesting design challenge.
It is a lot easier design challenge than designing a flight deck onto an aircraft with enough space to recover and launch 25 tonne aircraft.
TomS said:You'd also be arming and fueling aircraft in the hangar, which is not how they like to do things today.
You wouldn’t be doing that in the hangar you would be doing it in a flight prep space which is different to a hangar.
TomS said:You'd. But the sortie generation rate sounds pretty slow.
It would be far faster than any conventional carrier because there would be no need to use a catapult or deck run to get aircraft airborne. No one is going to build a high speed carrier that looks like a conventional carrier. If you want to think about this stop assuming it’s a Nimitz class sailing along at 100 knots.
Kadija_Man said:ouroboros said:Gas turbine inlets? Considering the needs of carriers, that would be a serious drain against range/performance wouldn't it? You would probably be restricted to hover "boosts" for aircraft launch/recovery ops, but displacement mode for regular ops and transit.
Unless someone was serious about a nuclear powered SES carrier...
Which would be a very strange confluence of circumstances. The indirect cycle airborne reactor work would actually be potentially more applicable here, using a high temperature molten coolant nuclear reactor for high performance, as it essentially is a nuclear heated gas turbine that sucks in outside air, and outputs hot exhaust and shaft power for additional air compressors and generators (feeding power to conventional electric propellers?). This bypasses the need for a brutally large steam powerplant setup and provides air for the SES air bubble. You would lose some performance using a closed cycle nitrogen gas turbine with exhaust cooled by seawater (or an intermediary pure water circuit) heat exchanger exclusively, but then would be focusing on shaft power for a separate air compressor and generator exclusively and keep people with nuclear adversion from having a stroke.
An aversion or a healthy desire not to glow in the dark and father children with two heads? Nuclear propulsion systems unfortunately tend to produce massive quantities of radioactivity unless intermediate heat exchangers are used and which of course add their own complications but to cavalierly dismiss concern about radioactivity as merely an "aversion" seems rather foolish.
Kadija_Man said:ouroboros said:Gas turbine inlets? Considering the needs of carriers, that would be a serious drain against range/performance wouldn't it? You would probably be restricted to hover "boosts" for aircraft launch/recovery ops, but displacement mode for regular ops and transit.
Unless someone was serious about a nuclear powered SES carrier...
Which would be a very strange confluence of circumstances. The indirect cycle airborne reactor work would actually be potentially more applicable here, using a high temperature molten coolant nuclear reactor for high performance, as it essentially is a nuclear heated gas turbine that sucks in outside air, and outputs hot exhaust and shaft power for additional air compressors and generators (feeding power to conventional electric propellers?). This bypasses the need for a brutally large steam powerplant setup and provides air for the SES air bubble. You would lose some performance using a closed cycle nitrogen gas turbine with exhaust cooled by seawater (or an intermediary pure water circuit) heat exchanger exclusively, but then would be focusing on shaft power for a separate air compressor and generator exclusively and keep people with nuclear adversion from having a stroke.
An aversion or a healthy desire not to glow in the dark and father children with two heads? Nuclear propulsion systems unfortunately tend to produce massive quantities of radioactivity unless intermediate heat exchangers are used and which of course add their own complications but to cavalierly dismiss concern about radioactivity as merely an "aversion" seems rather foolish.