Lex Parsimoniae said:
Semantics. The radar budget is different from the RHIB budget but it all comes from the vote 5 allocation for AOPS.
I’m talking about NSPS staff, project office, selection of yards, legal fees, etc. Check the budget estimates and try and find a line item that covers the cost of running the NSPS.
I admit I'm no expert on government budgeting, but I assumed those costs would come from the budgets of the departments doing the work. At any rate, my point was that regardless of the port or NSPS or any other factors, the budget for the construction of the vessels has remained constant throughout the project thus far.
Lex Parsimoniae said:
LOL – so you read the watermarked date too? A fair amount has been changed in that drawing from the previous version.
There have been two rendered versions of AOPS publically released. One at 110m, azipods drives, 20 knots, with a huge landing craft on a dedicated davit; the other, a 100m, 17 knot ship as seen in the image you posted. The first was released in late 2008. Requirement changes were made in early 2009 with "design changes" (in quotes because in early 2009 the design was very preliminary anyway) made in mid 2009 after which the second image was released.
The image you posted and the changes in it from the previous version have already been discussed at length earlier in this thread. My point was that nothing substantial has changed since all of that was already discussed.
Lex Parsimoniae said:
Every passing day means that the 2007 budget buys less and thus the project staff have to cut more. To put it in layman’s terms, imagine ordering a 2011 VW Passat for your entire family with the budget for a 2007 VW Passat. You’re going to have to drop the heated seats, spare tire, etc until eventually you’re down to a single VW Golf and three or four bus passes.
I am currently on a ship file that was orginally priced in 2007. We've been pricing the ship each year since then to renew the offer. Each year the price has gone down. To put it in professional terms, imagine that a 6000 tonne ship is not a VW Passat. Although to be honest, I'd be surprised if there has been that much inflation in the price of a Passat either. The economic realities of the shipbuilding industry in the past few years can't be that much different from the car industry.
Besides, what makes you think that the budget released in 2007 would have any effect on the price of a ship designed in 2009? The inflation clock affecting the design started when the pricing for the design was finished, not when the budget was released. Provided there is inflation.
Having said that, I am in no way trying to argue that they shouldn't get on this and start construction ASAP.
Lex Parsimoniae said:
This is no more the completed design than any previous version.
Actually, it is. As I said, there have been two versions released. The first version was based on a list of desires from the GOC that had not been checked against the budget. The image was based on a GA, weight estimate, stability calculation, and a parametric price estimate. It was, in every sense, a development image of an early design created to prove viability. This should not be considered as a design that was changed for price reasons. It was a set of requirements that were changed to align with the budget. It happened to have an associated image that was unfortunately released to the public.
That exercise complete, the second version that was released is a completed and approved class package design. It has everything from paint schedule to structural drawings to mechanical schematics. It is not the impression of an artist, it is the technical conclusions of naval architects and marine engineers.
If you want to hold the governments feet to the fire over the differences between an image from a viability study and an image from a class approved design, I can't stop you, but please don't argue that it's a semantic difference.