Tuesday, October 26, 2010

U.K. Cuts Aircraft Fleets in Strategic Review | AVIATION WEEK

U.K. Cuts Aircraft Fleets in Strategic Review | AVIATION WEEK

U.K. Cuts Aircraft Fleets in Strategic Review


Oct 19, 2010


 
As part of its 8% cut in planned defense spending, the U.K. will retire a slew of aircraft early and revamp its modernization plans.
The decisions laid out today under the long-awaited Strategic Defense and Security Review include canceling the BAE Systems MRA4 Nimrod program and retiring the Raytheon R1 Sentinel ground-surveillance platform as soon as they are freed up from Afghanistan duties. That means the government will pull the plug on more than £5 billion ($7.8 billion) in intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance programs spent during the past decade.
The Nimrod move was difficult, defense officials say, and the decision to retire the R1 Sentinel was made because future fighters, such as the Lockheed Martin F-35, will have sophisticated sensors that would allow those surveillance roles to be shifted away from dedicated assets.
The fighter force also is being restructured, although many decisions still loom. The Harrier force will be retired next year, having lost the battle against the Tornado GR4. The Tornados will be phased out as Eurofighter Typhoon capabilities ramp up.
The government also has opted to reduce its F-35 buy. Britain will shift its carrier-based version to the F-35C, away from the short-takeoff-and-vertical-landing B version. How many F-35s will be bought, as well as whether the Royal Navy and Air Force will use the same type, remains to be sorted out. A defense official says those decisions may await the next review in five years, leaving a lot of uncertainty about the program.
The Defense Ministry also will retire its C-130Js a decade early, but is sticking with plans to buy 22 Airbus Military A400Ms, as well as 14 A330-based tanker/transports.
On the aircraft carrier side, the HMS Prince of Wales will be modified to allow operations of the F-35C, designed specifically for carrier-based operations versus the land-based A version. The carrier will be fielded four years later than planned, around 2020, when the aircraft also are slated to arrive. The HMS Queen Elizabeth will be held in reserve and may be sold, leaving the U.K. with a single-carrier force in the future. In the short term, the HMS Ark Royal will be retired early, along with an amphibious assault ship still yet to be identified.
The government has stuck with plans to buy 12 more Boeing Chinooks and field three L-3 Communications Rivet Joint signals intelligence aircraft. The Puma helicopter will receive a life extension, and the Lynx Wildcat program also has survived for the Army and Navy.
The government also will work on a green paper for its defense industrial strategy, with a formal document to be prepared next year to ensure key capacities.
To save money, the Trident replacement program has been delayed, with key decisions now not to be taken until 2016 and a new submarine with fewer missiles not expected to be fielded until 2028. But the U.K. intends to maintain its at-sea deterrence in the meantime.
Prime Minister David Cameron says Britain will sustain defense spending at least at the 2% NATO planning target in the next four years. After 2015, he sees a need for real increases.

Monday, October 4, 2010

LHD Juan Carlos I, mission profile

Text by Gerardo Señoráns Barcala and pictures by Ministerio de Defensa and Navantia, Madrid, España.

The LHD Juan Carlos I has four decks:
  • Dock and garage for heavy cargo.
  • Habitability deck.
  • Hangar and light cargo garage.
  • Flight deck with a portside sky-jump.

LHD Juan Carlos I

LHD Juan Carlos I, flight deck with 6 middle size helicopters and two Boeing / BAe AV-8B Harrier II Plus on the 2 elevators

LHD Juan Carlos I, flight hangar with max. 20 Boeing / BAe AV-8B Harrier II Plus
LHD Juan Carlos I, flight hangar with max. 11 Boeing / BAe AV-8B Harrier II Plus and 12 Boeing CH-47 Chinook.

LHD Juan Carlos I, flight hangar with 10 Boeing / BAE AV-8B Harrier II Plus and 12 Boeing CH-47 Chinook.
   
LHD Juan Carlos I, light cargo hangar 10 Boeing CH-47 Chinook, trucks, jeeps etc.

LHD Juan Carlos I, light cargo hangar with trucks, jeeps etc.
 
LHD Juan Carlos I, heavy load hangar. The heavy vehicles hangar has 1,400 m2.


LHD Juan Carlos I, heavy load hangar with 39 Leopard II tanks. The heavy vehicles hangar has 1,400 m2.


LHD Juan Carlos I, 4 decks

NAVANTIA COMMISSIONS LHD "JUAN CARLOS I" TO THE SPANISH NAVY

9/30/2010 - Navantia, Ferrol, España

The LHD "Juan Carlos I" is the biggest ship ever built by Navantia

Navantia commissioned, on 30th. September, the LHD "Juan Carlos I" to the Spanish Navy at the Ferrol Arsenal. H.M. the King of Spain Juan Carlos has presided the official reception ceremony of this amphibious ship, the biggest ever built by Navantia, and the biggest ship of the Spanish Navy. Other authorities have attended the ceremony, as the Minister of Defence and the President of Navantia, Aurelio Martínez.

This ship, whose construction started in 2005, was launched on 10th. March 2008, being HM. Queen Sofía the Godmother of the ship.

The LHD Juan Carlos I has been designed to carry out amphibious missions, force deployment, humanitarian assistance and to act as an auxiliary aircraft carrier.

She also has a large hospital capacity, which in addition to her cargo capacity make her ideal for deployment in disaster areas.
The ship has four decks:
  • Dock and garage for heavy cargo.
  • Habitability deck.
  • Hangar and light cargo garage.
  • Flight deck with a portside sky-jump.
With a length overall of 230.82 meters (flight deck 202.3 m.), 32 m. beam and full load displacement of more than 27,500 tonnes, this will be the biggest ship ever made available to the Spanish Navy. She will also be the first of such a size with podded electrical propulsion. Highly automated, her crew will consist of just 247 persons.

Fotos by Navantia.




















Ship characteristics:

Length Overall - 231.40 m
Length Between Perpendiculars - 205.70 m
Maximum Beam --32.00 m
Beam Waterline - 29.50 m
Design Drought - 6.80 m
Depth to Fly deck - 27.50 m
Light Weight - 19,300 t
Full load Dead Weight - 6,500 t
Future Growth margin - 1,000 t
Full load Displacement - 26,800 t
Displacement in Air operation - 23,900 t
Maximum speed (Full Load) ->20.0 knots
Maximum Speed in:
Air Operations - >21.0 knots
Continuous Speed - >19.5 knots
Range @ 15knots - 9,000 miles
Hangar Area and Light Cargo deck - >3000 m2
Dock Area and Heavy Cargo deck - >2600 m2
Area on Flight Deck - >4500 m2
Dock Capacity [LCM 1E; LCAC] -  [4 ;1 ]
Spots for Helicopters [NH-90; CH-47] - [6 ;4 ]
Aircraft Operations with VSTOL - AV-8B; JSF
Crew - 243 p.
General Staff - 103 p.
Flight Embarked Unit - 172 p.
Naval Landing Group - 23 p.
Embarked Forces - 902 p.
Accommodation Capacity - 1443 p.
Provisions for the Crew, EM, UNAEMB, GNP -20 days
Provisions for Embarked Forces - 30 days 
Armament:
Four 20 mm. guns.
Four 12.7 mm. machine-guns.
There are future plans for an anti-missile close-in weapon system (ESSM or RAM type).

Many international Navies, have shown their interest on this ship. Navantia is building two units for the Royal Australian Navy (RAN), contract signed in 2007.

CIF: A-84076397 C/ Velázquez 132. 28006 Madrid, Spain   +34 91 335 84 00  +34 91 335 86 52  navantia@navantia.es

By
Gerardo Señoráns Barcala
Defense Expert - International