ORIGINAL: Primarchx
ORIGINAL: mikmyk
Thanks Jim
Do you think the problem is though is that the module designs are also fluid? Not that this is wrong but it does lead people to the conclusion that they're not ready/completed.
Ex. Surface module was first built to deal with swarms in the littoral (guns and small missiles with high rates of fire). Now there is an added requirement of being able to duke it out with a contemporary or Chinese/Russian vessel with defensive systems?
I'm really a fan of these ships!
Mike
Both good points above about cost savings and expectations. But from what I've seen only the LCS ASuW module has actually been effectively deployed to date. The others seem to be chasing a moving target and failing in basic performance benchmarks followed by lengthy 'back to the drawing board' periods. I'm all for finding good TCO economies but what we see more and more of (not just with LCS) are promises of fiscal improvement turning into programs of spiraling cost that struggle to meet even fundamental performance goals.
I have no expectation of LCS competing 1:1 with a well-defended warship. However it should be an offensive/defensive match for a FAC-M, a frequent resident of the littoral region the LCS was designed to operate in. While helos/UAVs help even the scales, organic, all-weather offensive OTH weapons are IMHO necessary to make that happen.
You sound like a war fighter

If the threat imposed by a FAC-M being deployed in littoral waters were defined in the original mission module(s) requirements, a mission module's engineering solution would address it. My guess is that the original requirements didn't account for that threat capability, and if added now, drive up costs, delay deployment, and cause outside observers to question the wisdom of the program or dictate the need for a follow on program to develop an unanticipated mission module.