home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: sci.military
- Path: sparky!uunet!psinntp!ncrlnk!ciss!law7!military
- From: Dan Sorenson <viking@iastate.edu>
- Subject: Re: Marine Aircover <was New Carrier Plan>
- Message-ID: <By4LMv.Cy4@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM>
- Sender: military@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM (Sci.Military Login)
- Organization: Iowa State University, Ames IA
- References: <Bx3oKt.2t8@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM> <Bx7CE6.EC3@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM> <BxB8D9.KL3@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM> <BxvFFE.8M0@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM>
- Date: Sun, 22 Nov 1992 16:25:43 GMT
- Approved: military@law7.daytonoh.ncr.com
- Lines: 70
-
-
- From Dan Sorenson <viking@iastate.edu>
-
- "david.r.wells" <drw@cbnewsg.cb.att.com> writes:
-
- >You should be thinking of carriers for this comparison. You can't always count
- >on a nearby airbase, especially in these days of base closings! Even if
- >you could, aircraft are even worse fuel hogs than BBs.
-
- This is, in my opinion, most likely untrue. BB's take metric loads
- of fuel. Not the pounds taken by aircraft, but on the order of tons. I'd
- like to get figures on consumption at various speeds, but let's just think
- in terms of horsepower; you've got at least four boilers going for just
- putting about, so call it 440,000shp being made. The other four boilers
- are running too, but probably providing hotel services and the like (air,
- water, hydraulics, steam, etc...). Call that another 100,000hp necessary.
- At any level of efficiency this is going to out-consume what a plane can
- likely carry, let alone what a plane would consume. As for the base
- closings, that's what the superior range of the aircraft is for. The
- aircraft carriers didn't have to get near Korea or Vietnam to launch
- deep strikes into her, while a battleship needs to sit on the coast.
- Given that strike we did on Libya and how Desert Storm strikes were
- possible from Germany, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and probably a few more
- it seems that air bombardment would be the cheaper solution, and more
- than likely the quickest. The battleship moves at 35mph; the planes
- at a 600. The fire support mission out of gun range will take a while
- as the ship moves into place. The fire support mission at the other
- end of the country just takes another half hour of flight time.
-
-
- > Keeping them in
- >the air 24 hours a day would be a maintainence nightmare. I doubt you
- >could keep 24 hour a day flights going for very long, especially with only
- >12 aircraft. You'll run out of pilots real fast. That doesn't even begin
- >to figure in any combat losses.
-
- The Berlin Airlift shows that if the will to do it is there, it
- can be done. However, a couple SAM's can make life interesting for the
- bombers; what will some Exocets do to the battleship in terms of money?
- A country that has the capability to shoot down high-level bombers or
- fast strike aircraft can be presumed to be capable of harming a BB. More
- planes would be nice, of course, but as even a single aircraft carrier
- can keep a 24-hour CAP around her, I think it can be done without undue
- numbers of planes.
-
- > Anybody have any good data on how much it costs to run one sortie
- >of, say, an F-16, including fuel, munitions, etc? I'll bet it doesn't
- >run cheap. By the way, I was just talking to an Air Force friend the
- >other day, and he was saying that he works at a "small" airbase, only
- >5000 people. The 1500 man crew of the BB is looking better all the time!
-
- Don't forget the tenders, tanker ships, munition ships, the
- destroyers and cruisers to keep her escorted, etc... Just as a battleship
- can't fly, an aircraft cannot deliver shells like the ship. The mission
- of the battleship, however, is much more limited and one in which it
- is the ultimate response. Aircraft are more versatile, and it seems
- they would be cheaper. At Normandy, battleships were in their element.
- At Vietnam, airlifted 105 Howitzers and Huey's or F4's were probably the
- more all-around useful fire support.
-
- Of course, the battleship looks *MUCH* more impressive, which
- is an important force projection criterion and makes for a better
- reception when showing the flag. ;-)
-
- < Dan Sorenson, DoD #1066 z1dan@exnet.iastate.edu viking@iastate.edu >
- < ISU only censors what I read, not what I say. Don't blame them. >
- < "This isn't an answer, it's a pagan dance around a midnight fire >
- < written in intellectual runes." -- Rich Young >
-
-
-