“SDs are tightly packed honeycombs of armoured compartments, built with some of the toughest materials ever built. … let me direct you to what David has to say about naval refits”
Of course, and that is not in dispute. Please note that I am not talking about naval refits at all, and that there seems to be considerable confusion between the terms "refit" and "reconstruction".
They are very different things.
An auxiliary service requirement may be a refit, but it is not necessarily a refit in naval combatant terms, which is what’s discussed there. What’s being talked about there is reconstruction (per the QE class in the 1930s). Refits are not reconstruction. They can be almost negligible affairs depending on the intended function. Let me repeat that: refit to auxiliary purposes is not reconstruction as a combatant and may not necessitate disturbing anything.
I’ll also add that even SD’s are unarmoured in their top and bottomsides, and no refit proposed involves systems deep inside the ship, or major systems such as propulsion or power generation.
For a low-end example, let us say that Nuncio requires a training platform. Let me postulate that due to their outdated educational system, they have to teach basic everything, from ‘here is how you mop the deck’ to ‘basic characteristics of systems’ to ‘boat bay operations and small craft work’. There is no denying the Nuncio needs to train in these areas as part of their basic training.
What ship (which has to be nominal cost – this is a desperately poor society) suits this basic training requirement? If does not have to best suit it, it just has to be able to do the job.
An entirely unmodified Scientist class SD in parking orbit (a ‘harbour training hulk’ equivalent) will suit the role perfectly. It also has the advantage of ‘guys, I think we are on the winning side here’ in political terms. In this scenario, the ‘refit’ required to fit the ship to purpose is de-storing the ship of things it does not need, and re-filling its boat bays with small craft. It needs no shipyard at all, this ‘refit’.
That’s the lowest end of the spectrum. The highest end of the TS spectrum has already been described. That would need a yard, one able to build DD/CL sized units would probably do, as that’s about the scale of the task.
There’s a lot of comment on how hard it might be to do X due to honey-combing and so on. The issue I have there is the inherent assumption that the designers were stupid: that they deliberately built ships which could not be properly maintained, let alone incrementally upgraded, over the life-cycle of the ship. I am forced to reject that inherent assumption as being invalid. To my knowledge, no-one has ever built an operational warship or aircraft class or type that way. I can name a number of less than full scale one-off technology demonstrators built that way, but note that they were built for once-off trials. If you build an operational class that way, you cannot repair battle damage, and we have numerous examples of battle damage being repaired in a timely manner, and of broadside weaponry being swapped out. So this point is invalid. If broadside weapons mounts can be swapped out, then they can simply be removed. And that won’t require a specialist yard (it may require some additional skills and tooling, but that would be it).
As for training - the SLN ships use different software and have slightly different manning requirements for tasks. To train properly, you should be working on the hardware and software (or as close to it as possible) you will be using when you join the fleet.
The key word here is properly. Properly to what point in the training continuum? I am speaking here of basic training requirements from a low-end educational baseline. Let us take a fusion plant tech. Only at the end of his training continuum would he require specific skills for plant fitted to the ship he is posted to. For the bulk of his intermediate training (and for all his basic training) he requires access to any generic fusion plant. Indeed, in the most basic stage, the simpler the better, remembering that he will start with mere images. He does not require training on the systems currently in use until he’s very deep into his training continuum because that’s a layer added to an already deep series of layers. And a good training system will expose him to as many different systems as possible all through his training, specifically to build experience.
The use of commercial yards for even this low level deconstruction/construction work been mentioned by many posters over the years and repeatedly shot down by the author.
Some examples would be interesting. I’d also point out the logical corollary to this is that SD’s cannot be scrapped! Yet scrapping of ships is referred to. This indicates that there exists a contradiction here.
Worse, noting that everyone's SD's have unarmoured topsides and bottomsides, that presents a contradiction in terms.
I can accept that the armour requires a special facility to be scrapped (or cannot be scrapped and is dumped into a convenient gravity well), but I cannot accept as logical that commercial facilities which build such armoured warships have any limits on their capability to conduct work on them, or that lesser facilities cannot strip them through the same access pathways as must be designed in to them to permit battle damage repair and incremental upgrade over the life of the platform.
Because assuming that means assuming that they cannot be easily refitted or repaired from battle damage – and what designer or yard is going to do that? For warships, you deliberately design in features to permit rapid battle damage repair along modular lines.
Training sailors on the specific combat systems became a major hurdle; enough so that it took significant retraining to move them between ship classes within the same navy that had different combat system architectures.
Agreed, and none of which applies to basic training, which is where this focus is, because that’s where the need is in an economically underdeveloped backwater which does not have and cannot afford expensive modern simulators. In addition, simulators are of little value in basic training as it’s, well, basic. There’s a reason basic includes things the Romans did, like marching drill. It’s to inculcate the fundamentals of self-discipline, unit discipline and unit cohesion. I keep mentioning ‘basic training’ as there seems to be a view that there is one type or style of training, and there is not. There is a training continuum which starts with a long haired undisciplined know-nothing oik off the street. I can say that because that’s a self-description of a young Mark, too many moons ago to comfortably count. I am certain there’s plenty of other military types here with the same experience of training systems.
We ALL started off square bashing and being belted for not having our kit laid out properly just like a Roman recruit to Legio VI Ferrata at Paphana in 106. And for the same reason. It works.
The lack here is the basic training system, and oddly enough that’s the hardest thing to build, as it’s surprisingly infrastructure-heavy and demands top-notch trainers. Yes, I do speak from experience and doubtless others here can too. An excellent example to look at is the Empire Air Training Scheme. Enormous infrastructure investments were demanded at the basic level and they had to be done very quickly, well before investment was demanded for intermediate and upper level training. That’s because most of it already existed and it just had to be expanded somewhat – but none of the mass initial (basic) training infrastructure existed at all. It’s a decent parallel to this situation – assuming that there’s an interest in mobilising local assistance. The bottom line, unless you can rapidly develop a mass-training infrastructure at the basic level, nothing else can be done. You will not have the trainees to take to advanced courses.
See here for some basic data:
http://www.ozatwar.com/raaf/eats.htm
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_B ... _Australia
A last call of empire : Australian aircrew, Britain and the Empire Air Training Scheme John McCarthy.
Cheers: mark