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Or buildings for that matter, where one price covers both design & build.Kirkhill said:.... Design Build can mean Design Build a ship or it can mean Design Build a fully functional fighting system ....
Or buildings for that matter, where one price covers both design & build.Kirkhill said:.... Design Build can mean Design Build a ship or it can mean Design Build a fully functional fighting system ....
milnews.ca said:1) Parliamentary Budget Officer (69 page PDF)2) From the Info-machine
Kirkhill said:FSTO:
They do reference the US GAO with respect to budget management. Given the USN's track record in getting ships in the water the GAO has reason to be gun-shy of budget predictions.
Can the RCN, working with a neophyte industry do better? ???
FSTO said:Not sure, but the design of an AOR is pretty generic. It's not like we are building a radical new ship like the original JSS was going to be.
But then again this is Canada and if we can find away to make this tougher than needed we usually succed.
Royal Netherlands Navy orders new Hr.Ms.Karel Doorman Dec 24, '09 5:22 AM
for everyone
After more than 30 years that Hr.Ms Karel Doorman the Aircraftcarrier was sold to Argentina the Royal Netherlands Navy gets his famous name back in to the fleet.
Mid 2014 the Damen Schelde shipyards will deliver a new JLS ( Join Logistic Support) vessel.
This ship 205mtrs long and 30mtrs wide is such a big ship that it may have the name of Karel Doorman. The new Karel Doorman will have the ambition to operate worldwide, for humanitarian as well warconflicts.
Total costs € 384 million. The ship can harbour 180 personnel and 120 marines of the Royal Netherlands Marine Corps.
2 big Chinook helicopters can land at the same time on deck. A hangar offers at the same time space for another 6 helicopters. Except fot over 400 tons of ammunition there will be room for 9000 kubicmtrs of fuel.
It can operate as a self supporting village in the middle of the Ocean , load and unloading all kinds of miltairy equpment as trucks, jeeps, tanks. The new Hr.Ms Karel Doorman will get all kinds of the newest advanced weaponsystems which will be controled from the central command room..
The new warship will replace in 4 years the Hr.Ms.Zuiderkruis.
FYI, that's about CDN $517 million.... Total costs € 384 million ....
milnews.ca said:
Production of Most Powerful Danish Frigate Ever Starts -- in Lithuania
Posted by Joris Janssen Lok 6:55 AM on Feb 27, 2008
Production of the first of three new frigates for the Royal Danish Navy has started yesterday -- in Lithuania. The Baltija Shipyard at Klaipeda, Lithuania, is one of two companies in the Baltic Republics that have won a role as subcontractor to supply building block sections for the 138-meter (450-ft.)-long ships (see www.navalhistory.dk).
The other subcontractor is Loksa Shipyard in Estonia. The first building blocks are scheduled to arrive at the main shipbuilder, Odense Steel Shipyard in Lindo, Denmark, during May, and a formal keel laying ceremony is planned for early June.
Image: Defense Acquisition and Logistics Organization (FMT), Denmark
Denmark is now officially calling its new surface combatants "frigates" -- previously, they had to be called "patrol ships" for political reasons. The name change appears to be justified: the new ships are described by senior program officials as the "largest, most powerful warships ever" for Denmark's navy, which marks its 500th anniversay in August 2010.
The first-of-class of these new ships is hoped to be officially presented during the celebrations for this event.
The three ships, reportedly to be called the Ivar Huitfeldt-class as this would be the name for the lead ship, have a more or less common hull to the two Absalon-class combat support ships built in recent years, which are now entering operational service.
Image: Defense Acquisition and Logistics Organization (FMT), Denmark
The frigate program has an overall projected cost of 4.7 billion Danish kronor ($936 million, so $312 million per ship -- compare this to the staggering cost of U.S. Navy surface warships, even relatively small ones such as the Littoral Combat Ship...)
This provides three area air defense-capable ships to enter service between 2012-14. They are to replace three Olfert Fischer-class missile corvettes and ten Willemoes-class fast attack craft (the latter have already been decommissioned).
So far, the following contracts have been awarded associated with this program:
- the shipbuilding contract with Odense Steel Shipyard (which is part of the Maersk shipping group and routinely builds large merchant ships for Maersk while it has also built the two Absalon-class ships for the navy);
- the anti-air warfare system contract with Thales Nederland. This includes the Smart-L long-range 3D volume search radar and the APAR medium-range multifunction radar, plus the associated command & fire control systems. Thanks to the 400-km-range Smart-L radar, when positioned in the center of the Danish archipelago, a single frigate of this class can monitor the airspace over the whole of Denmark proper;
- the Mk 41 vertical launching system contract with Lockheed Martin;
- the contract for Ceros 200 radar/electro-optic fire control directors from Saab Systems of Sweden (these are to provide fire control for the various guns on the ship);
- the bow-mounted sonar contract with Atlas Elektronik;
- the contract for ballistic protection panels with Ten Cate/Roshield of Denmark
- the contract with Saab Danmark for the internal/external communications suite.
Yet to be awarded are contracts for the missiles (planned are Raytheon Standard Missile SM-2 Block IIIA, Raytheon Tomahawk, Raytheon ESSM); the main gun (planned to be of 127-mm. caliber), and the 35-mm. close-in weapon systems (planned to be Millennium guns from Rheinmetall/Oerlikon Contraves).
Tags: ar99 Denmark Lithuania Estonia frigate
dapaterson said:PBO has a not-to-scale illustration of how costs increase:
CF Operational Requirements -> Design/modify designs -> Build in Canada.
Use an off the shelf design & tell the Navy to adapt, or buy somewhere other than Canada, and prices will go down. As we're unwilling to use someone else's design, and unwilling to shop around for a better price offshore, we're stuck.
(And the PBO report was reviewed by overseas experts - bullet-resistant, if not bullet-proof).
1. Weight
2. Manufacturing complexity for structure
3. Percent of new structure
4. Percent of design repeat for structure
5. Engineering complexity
As indicated, the inputs for the point estimate were:
1. Weight of 18,469,520 lbs
(i.e. Protecteur’s weight)
2. MCPLXS of 3.78
(i.e. Protecteur’s MCPLXS)
3. Percent of new design of 85%
(reflecting the significant redesign work that would be necessary to adapt any design to Canadian operating requirements and make it possible to be built in a Canadian shipyard)
4. Design repeat for structure of 40% (reflecting the fact that there will be some, but not complete, symmetry in the design of the ship)
5. Engineering complexity of 1.1
(i.e. a new design based on existing technology, designed and executed by a team with mixed experience and some product familiarity,
thus reflecting Seaspan’s current state)
For these values, the model returned a point estimate of approximately $3.28 billion.
Kirkhill said:PBO's assumptions: (Page 7)
Apparently all the assumptions are the PBO's own, assisted by external advisers, and the estimate is generated by a "crystal ball" programme.
I don't see any reference to an actual dollar associated estimate of activities.
But that could just be me.
So, $312 million per ship. Would be real interesting to see how much it would cost us to build the same ship. I don't like only 32 vls cells per ship, would like at least 48. If we could build for 4x the cost, 1.248 billion per ship, times 15 hulls, is less than 20 billion total, fits right within budget.Kirkhill said:And here's the Aviation Week pricing for the Danish Ivar Huitfeldts with APAR, SMART-L and Standard SM-2s
The Dollars referenced are USD.
As an aside - and probably more relevant to the DND-PWGSC debate - it is informative that the purchase of these ships is the responsibility of a military Defense Acquisition and Logistics Organisation.
Policies Here
That being said, there's a lot I agree with what he's saying. We won't get as much as we were promised, we never do. And what we get will be watered down and less capable than originally proposed too. He's spot on that were we to go offshore it would cost much less and be faster too boot. Of course that's not politically viable, which is a shame. My :2c:GAP said:Let's see....the CBC has managed to completely dismiss any ships being built, unless they fit a bath tub, bring up the F35 cost overruns at least 4-5 times, denounce the Conservatives.......yup, it's a CBC story alright..... :
AlexanderM said:If this goes the way it looks to be going, I'd much rather buy the ships for a good price elsewhere. We're just going to end up paying through the nose for ships, and won't be at all competitive at shipbuilding when it's all over. Why not dangle the order in front of the EU and get back a full scale free trade deal, plus a pile of business for Canadian companies? The idea that a Berlin Class costs 2 billion means we've reached ludicrous speed.