That Option 5A ticks ALL the boxes (well, save for the 76 mm main gun): Sea Wolf, Sea Dart, Exocet, Ikara, SKR… it’s like a massively improved Bristol.Some more Type 43 designs have come to light.
Sir Humphrey's X thread is well worth a read.
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Thread by @pinstripedline on Thread Reader App
@pinstripedline: This is one of the final design options for the Type 43 Destroyer. This little known cancelled project to succeed the Type 42, was far more important than generally realised, and far more capable to...…threadreaderapp.com
Some more Type 43 designs have come to light.
Sir Humphrey's X thread is well worth a read.
![]()
Thread by @pinstripedline on Thread Reader App
@pinstripedline: This is one of the final design options for the Type 43 Destroyer. This little known cancelled project to succeed the Type 42, was far more important than generally realised, and far more capable to...…threadreaderapp.com
Haven’t the 910’s always been without domes?Why are the 909's in domes and the 910's not?
It's a jack of all trades, master of none. Notably, even the double-ended T43 had limited magazine capacity for air defense, with only 60 Sea Dart. (IIRC 2 x 32 magazine, each magazine 2 practice rounds)That Option 5A ticks ALL the boxes (well, save for the 76 mm main gun): Sea Wolf, Sea Dart, Exocet, Ikara, SKR… it’s like a massively improved Bristol.
It's a jack of all trades, master of none. Notably, even the double-ended T43 had limited magazine capacity for air defense, with only 60 Sea Dart. (IIRC 2 x 32 magazine, each magazine 2 practice rounds)
And this ship is going to do AA AND ASW... Which require different positioning in a formation. Especially since it's also got a towed array.
No wonder T43 got axed, it was gold plated to hell and back, and had contradictory jobs at the end.
That was very unlikely to happen with how much more the T43 would have cost.Good point - although it it gets ordered in enough numbers to replace all T42s - formation positioning may not be as vital, as more T43s will be available in the formation. Additionally, the Ikara’s longer reach should be able to limit ASW maneuvering to some extend.
That was very unlikely to happen with how much more the T43 would have cost.
isn't the idea of having more multi-mission combatants to have more flexibility? I.e. be able to do either AAW or ASW as tasks require, not both at the same time (unless in a very stressful situation)?It's a jack of all trades, master of none. Notably, even the double-ended T43 had limited magazine capacity for air defense, with only 60 Sea Dart. (IIRC 2 x 32 magazine, each magazine 2 practice rounds)
And this ship is going to do AA AND ASW... Which require different positioning in a formation. Especially since it's also got a towed array.
No wonder T43 got axed, it was gold plated to hell and back, and had contradictory jobs at the end.
Again, jack of all trades, master of none. You can get seperate ships that do seperate things well, or you can get something that's mediocre in all things, but not amazing at anything. Unless you pay an ungodly amount of money, of course, but then you could just as well have gotten the specialized ships anyway.isn't the idea of having more multi-mission combatants to have more flexibility? I.e. be able to do either AAW or ASW as tasks require, not both at the same time (unless in a very stressful situation)?
They are there in the thread. I suspect that the full files he's referring to have more detail, but he's more interested in the policy angle than in the rivet-counting elements.Having read through all of the "Sir Humphreys" thread, I was disappointed by only one thing; the lack of dimensions other than tonnage (length, beam, draught, that sort of thing), unless I missed that, somehow. Does anyone have those bits of info or will one have to estimate off the drawings? The inquiring minds of "What If" model builders need to know!
Of course, but it depends if the bottleneck is cost, hull count, crew numbers, or something like machinery production or computing power, doesn't it?Again, jack of all trades, master of none. You can get seperate ships that do seperate things well, or you can get something that's mediocre in all things, but not amazing at anything. Unless you pay an ungodly amount of money, of course, but then you could just as well have gotten the specialized ships anyway.
Found them. Hiding right in front of my face in plain sight. Now I feel silly but it could have been much worse!They are there in the thread. I suspect that the full files he's referring to have more detail, but he's more interested in the policy angle than in the rivet-counting elements.
And hull count comes in in two ways - how many of these can we get within other constraints, and how many hulls does the fleet have vs how many does it need to split required roles/functions over. The whole fleet rather than whole class view can drive things like Ikara onto platforms that might ostensibly be better without it.Of course, but it depends if the bottleneck is cost, hull count, crew numbers, or something like machinery production or computing power, doesn't it?
FWIW, simulation experience tells that the Soviet counterpart of Ikara, the SS-N-14b, having substantially longer range, is very useful in conjunction with a dipping-sonar-equipped helicopter. If the helicopter sonar spots a submarine, the ship can deliver a torpedo relatively fast and to sufficient distance without the need to raise the sonar and drop the torpedo by the helicopter itself, and losing the track of the target for this maneuver. Presence of a second helicopter in the area usually resolves this as well, but it's not always possible.One of the documents implied that Ikara was added as it was the only A/S weapon that could fully utilise the Type 2016 sonar's range. You could argue the opposite, that in fact no previous RN sonar allowed Ikara to be used to its full potential range.
To me it feels like they were cramming everything onto Type 43, perhaps reasoning that ASW ship numbers would suffer if they were built so sacrificing a double-ended Sea Dart ship to add ASW capability would salvage something. Against Regiments of Backfires and Oscars lobbing Granits about, it feels like the RN was caught between trying to defend against two formidable threats using late 1960s tech (albeit upgraded if GWS.31 went ahead). The result was bound to be big, expensive and ultimately sub optimal. Given the analysis of that time indicated a NATO task force could be wiped out within 2 days from aerial attack alone, it's not surprising the politicians thought "why bother?".
Ironically it was the Falklands that freed up the money to develop Sea Harrier FRS.2 with its BVR AAM capability that had more chance of tackling Backfires (I don't think that a FRS.2 Vs. Type 43 scenario could ever have arisen given that AMRAAM was simply not available at that time and Active Skyflash was also a little later than 79-80 IIRC).This wasn’t entirely untrue, the CVSG/Sea Harrier combo had been conceived to kill Tu-95RTs and Ka-25Ts so breaking the kill chain. It couldn’t do anything kinetic about Legenda or Backfires,