They were both mistakes, though for different reasons.This thread took a weird turn. I thought we were talking about boats. To keep it on rails: What was a bigger blunder the LCS program or the Zumwalt program?
Destroyers cost about a billion.
First, let me correct my statement above. The current cost of a destroyer is now about 2.2 billion dollars, not one billion.My grandfather was a Tin Can Sailor and saw action in both theaters in WW2- two German Subs and a lot of splashed planes. The HMS Holcomb was running port-quarter when she took a torpedo, showed her keel and disappeared, ash cans engaging at their set depths. My grandfather said they were pulling English sailors from the water “bleeding from every port.” My hats off to the sea legs of these old time Destroyer men. MSO- Thank you for your service. Your father’s as well.
Maybe but the spec is so high that our gear is still really good. I used to marvel at how indestructible all the stuff I was issued was. As a kid I would blow out the kneecaps on my blue jeans rather easily. Amazingly, BDUs just never tore despite all the abuse they received. A rucksack is more indestructible than any Northface pack I’ve ever owned.As we learn in basic training, never forget your equipment is made by the lowest bidder.
I'm also surprised the Navy haven't foisted them on the Coast Guard yet and thump their chest and say, "See! We support the Coast Guard!" Like they have done in the past. My first unit was a Wind class icebreaker that was commissioned around 1944 and given to the Russians. Russia got it stuck in the arctic, abandoned it and told the Navy they could have it back. The Navy transferred all the icebreakers to the Coast Guard. I was on it from 72-74.I'm surprised they haven't transferred them to the Coast Guard yet... That's what they seem to do with all the other junk the Navy didn't want when I was in.
Seriously though, shipbuilding has been an issue as of late in both the Navy & the Coast Guard.
Several years ago I remember the Coast Guard trying to save money by lengthening the 110' coastal patrol cutters by adding 13' feet to them. When I saw the prints, I pointed out what I believed were some design flaws. I wasn't listened to because I wasn't an engineer. The program was a disaster and a couple of the cutters broke in two... exactly as I stated, but what the hell did I know?
From your lips to God's ears.Maybe they'll decom the Independence and strike it, then they can give the name to more worthy Vessel.
This reminds me that I need to research military contractor mutual funds. As I understand it, the services can't conduct meaningful audits because they don't keep receipts. Blank checks like those have got to mean unlimited profits right?The U.S. Navy has run into trouble with some of its most recently launched small ships. Built by two different major contractors, these are classified as littoral combat ships designed for coastal shallow-water duty. The Navy wants to decommission eight of ten of the current class for serious problems with propulsion systems and the lack of suitability for current needs, facing the Chinese deep water fleet rather than the small boat conflicts in the Middle East. These U.S. ships average only four years old.
Being a former enlisted minesweeper sailor aboard an Aggressive-class minesweeper in the South China Sea, a predecessor to the littoral combat ships -- and the son of a WWII YMS-class minesweeper skipper in World War II -- I've followed this new ship design closely and with great interest. I'll spare the pipe group all of the details. But it has been an interesting misstep in design and seagoing operations. The Congress doesn't want the Navy to abandon the ships, partly because of the investment already made, an partly because of the interest groups in the various states where these ships and their equipment are designed and built.
As a historical reference, the ship designing and building competition between navies goes back to the Greeks and Trojans and before. The European sea powers in the 18th and 19th Century were always jockeying between huge flagships with mighty arrays of guns to smaller, swifter and more maneuverable ships that could take shots at sinking the big ones. So this drama is not new. But it is riveting to people who've been aboard warships as crew and can sense the at-sea challenges that are, or are not met.
I had the opportunity to be interviewed by Rickover back in 1977. An unpleasant experience but it only lasted ~ 1 minute, that was the beginning of a 28-year career in submarines. Irascible as he seemed it's said that his staff was devoted and liked working for him; standards were high and fools not tolerated. The record of success and safety speaks for itself.This harkens back to the mythology (some true) of Hymen Rickover, a renegade admiral who commandeered development of the nuclear powered submarine by building a working model in the dessert in the U.S. That way all the dangers and mistakes could be worked through before anything was launched as a commissioned sub.
He was an abusive boss, making junior officers wait for hours or days outside his office to interview for jobs in his program, including future president Jimmy Carter. But because he got the submarine design right, or whipped others into doing so, he is lionized in the nuclear Navy.
He tried to board a ship in civilian clothes without presenting an i.d. at the gangplank and a young sailor threatened him with his sidearm, and after establishing who he was, he went on to commend the sailor for taking his security duties seriously. Rickover was known for tooling about his commands in a VW bug.