The 'Arsenal Ship' Floating Missile Platform Overview | GIANT MISSILE BATTLESHIPS! 🚀⚓

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  • čas přidán 4. 06. 2024
  • An arsenal ship is a concept for a floating missile platform intended to have as many as five hundred vertical launch bays for mid-sized missiles, most likely cruise missiles. In current U.S. naval thinking, such a ship would initially be controlled remotely by an Aegis Cruiser, although plans include control by AEW&C aircraft such as the E-2 Hawkeye and E-3 Sentry.
    Originally proposed by VADM Joseph Metcalf, DCNO Surface Warfare, as a component of the "Surface Combatants of the 21st Century" initiative in the mid-1980's. Later, proposed by the U.S. Navy in 1996, the arsenal ship had funding problems, with the United States Congress canceling some funding, and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) providing some funding to individual contractors for prototypes. Some concept artwork of the Arsenal Ship was produced, with some images bearing the number "72", possibly hinting at an intent to classify the arsenal ships as a battleship, since the last battleship ordered (but never built) was USS Louisiana (BB-71).
    The arsenal ship would have a small crew and as many as 500 vertical launch tubes for missiles to provide ship-to-shore bombardment for invading troops. The Navy calculated a $450 million price for the arsenal ship, but Congress scrapped funding for the project in 1998.
    The U.S. Navy has since modified the four oldest Ohio-class Trident submarines to SSGN configuration, allowing them to carry up to 154 Tomahawk cruise missiles using vertical launching systems installed in the tubes which previously held strategic ballistic missiles, creating a vessel roughly equivalent to the arsenal ship concept.
    In 2013, Huntington Ingalls Industries revived the idea when it proposed a Flight II version of the LPD-17 hull with a variant carrying up to 288 VLS cells for the ballistic missile defense and precision strike missions.
    China has conducted studies and tested models of partially and completely submersible arsenal ship concepts. South Korea is also planning to deploy three arsenal ships by the late 2020s.
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    The 'Arsenal Ship' Floating Missile Platform Overview | GIANT MISSILE BATTLESHIPS! 🚀⚓
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Komentáře • 1,3K

  • @_Matsimus_
    @_Matsimus_  Před 4 měsíci +61

    Ok everyone! What is your *FAVOURITE* warship! I want to know why also! Let me know in the comments section and lets get some discussion going on your responses! Have a GREAT day!

    • @_Matsimus_
      @_Matsimus_  Před 4 měsíci +7

      I will start lol.............HMS VICTORY BABY!!!!! HUSSSAAHHHH!

    • @Generik97
      @Generik97 Před 4 měsíci +4

      Favorite warship of all time?
      HMS Surprise ;)

    • @archmageofmetal8883
      @archmageofmetal8883 Před 4 měsíci +4

      Favorite ship is the U.S.A.F. Odyssey for the Stargate series. Aha! You didn't say it had to be a REAL ship.
      Favorite real ship is USS Wisconsin BB-64. For my home state's namesake and for being a rock star of a ship.

    • @laughingowl7896
      @laughingowl7896 Před 4 měsíci

      Favorite warship, 'Old Ironsides,' the USS Constitution, the oldest commissioned warship on the seas. Though I've a soft spot for the the 'Big E,' the USS Enterprise, the most decorated US ship of WWII with 30 battle stars plus the PUC and NUC.

    • @reachdefender1
      @reachdefender1 Před 4 měsíci +2

      USS Iowa and Imperial Japanese Battleship Yamato coming in 2nd with the Arleigh Burke-Class Destroyers for a overall general choice.

  • @codedlogic
    @codedlogic Před 4 měsíci +752

    We already have this. It's called the Ohio Class submarine. It can carry 154 Tomahawk cruise misseles (an Arleigh Burke class Destroy can carry 90). The submarine is a better platform because its more survivable in contested areas and it can launch its missiles from any coast with almost no warning.

    • @Bonedagi
      @Bonedagi Před 4 měsíci +76

      that's more expensive than an arsenal ship

    • @seppelnachsteiger6151
      @seppelnachsteiger6151 Před 4 měsíci +51

      Is the Ohio class capable of theatre air or missile defence?

    • @t8z5h3
      @t8z5h3 Před 4 měsíci +40

      Using a sub is cool but to protect it you need to limit communication to it,
      Why not have a surface version where a soldier on the ground lock on to a point communicating though a secure link that then loads target ingo on to a weapon before lunching, no delay or command involvement

    • @jgw9990
      @jgw9990 Před 4 měsíci +35

      A submarine also costs about 20 times as much.

    • @jgw9990
      @jgw9990 Před 4 měsíci +20

      @@tricky0048 I'm talking about build cost mainly. If you want more Ohio submarines it'll cost 20x more than a surface oil powered ship. But also nuclear ships require a lot more maintenance as you'd imagine.

  • @schlirf
    @schlirf Před 4 měsíci +142

    The Arsenal ship was an interesting concept back in 1982, but even then we believed it would make an excellent hard target for enemy subs.

    • @richardsuggs8108
      @richardsuggs8108 Před 4 měsíci +7

      My thoughts exactly. It should not go it alone. However, if the ship was used as a team member of combined arms battle group then there could be a role.

    • @Badjujubee
      @Badjujubee Před 4 měsíci +6

      This is ultimately where I think we are going to see a naval equivalent to "Friendly Wingman" come in (barring Naval Brass pushback).
      Many autonomous attack platforms networked to a whatever succeeds the Burke's. Hell, make them submersible to impede surface attack.

    • @mrvwbug4423
      @mrvwbug4423 Před 4 měsíci +4

      It would operate in a CVBG so would have a ring of ASW destroyers and aircraft to protect it

    • @advanceaustralia3513
      @advanceaustralia3513 Před 4 měsíci +5

      Which submarines? Only the USN and RN have attack submarines that aren’t easily detected.

    • @schlirf
      @schlirf Před 4 měsíci

      @@advanceaustralia3513 That we know about, dude.

  • @videoviewer2008
    @videoviewer2008 Před 4 měsíci +485

    Multiple smaller ships holding 100 missiles each would be much more flexible and have better redundancy.

    • @dwwolf4636
      @dwwolf4636 Před 4 měsíci +22

      Yep, the Dutch navy is exploring such a concept based on a commercial utility vessel.

    • @Di3Leberwurst
      @Di3Leberwurst Před 4 měsíci +27

      Also better for maintenance. You need at least 2 to always have one in Service. Even better would be 3 in Case some bigger problem comes up while one is in dock. Also a much smaller target than a smaller vessel.

    • @casbot71
      @casbot71 Před 4 měsíci +28

      ​@@Di3LeberwurstOne big arsenal ship is going to be a very high priority target.
      And if it gets hit..... well hopefully the rest of the task force isn't too close.....

    • @TheMoukis
      @TheMoukis Před 4 měsíci +11

      I would even argue less, 64 VLS cells with no helipad. Just some guns for AA defense and a single 75mm gun.

    • @Pilvenuga
      @Pilvenuga Před 4 měsíci +8

      The size/scale of the ship can vary due to different nations having different funding available for such ships. In essence this is a revival of the "all big guns ship" concept, a Dreadnought 2.0. Just like Dreadnoughts came to be, because the systems developed for such a ship had matured enough, it would seem missile systems have matured enough to make this a viable project. In the end it doesnt matter if your Arsenal ships carry 50 or 500 VLS cells, as long as its built with a singular purpose of bringing superior firepower against the enemy, it's going to be an Arsenal-class

  • @mikeb.5039
    @mikeb.5039 Před 4 měsíci +47

    Back in the 1990's I was part of a group of sailors (USN) that concluded the arsenal ship was useless because it concentrated all it's eggs in one hull and of its inability to defend itself.
    also I was ADM Broda driver for the decommissioning of USS Richmond K Turner CG-20 after the LEAP testing, I miss the old girl.

    • @steveyoutub76
      @steveyoutub76 Před 3 měsíci

      Where is rhe problem to defend this ship, install this and ready

    • @matthewnovak3095
      @matthewnovak3095 Před 2 měsíci +2

      As we’ve seen in the Red Sea lately, AEGIS is pretty capable at protecting ships. Wouldn’t an arsenal ship with potentially over 100 VLS cells filled with all the SM variants be perfectly capable of protecting itself and any of the ships around it?
      Genuine question because from what I’ve heard the main concern with the Burkes is they might not have enough VLS to balance defensive and offensive load outs.

    • @jgw9990
      @jgw9990 Před 2 měsíci +1

      ​@matthewnovak3095 The main threat to an arsenal ship is submarines. Arsenal ships will be big, noisey with no anti submarine capability. Now you might say, well let's add some ASW then - but at that point you've basically just made a Cruiser ship.

  • @user-ru2yl8ts9b
    @user-ru2yl8ts9b Před 4 měsíci +83

    The Korean Navy is actually building a JSS (Joint Strike Ship) with a similar concept to the Arsenal Ship. What makes the Korean JSS different from the American Arsenal ship is that it does not carry thousands of cruise missiles. Instead, it launches about 100 large ballistic missiles.

    • @constantinethecataphract5949
      @constantinethecataphract5949 Před 3 měsíci +4

      Why ? It's better to put those in a submarine.

    • @user-ru2yl8ts9b
      @user-ru2yl8ts9b Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@constantinethecataphract5949 Koreans also want SSBNs, but the US government does not allow them.

    • @Gentleman...Driver
      @Gentleman...Driver Před 2 měsíci +4

      @@user-ru2yl8ts9b Yesnt. ROK-US nuclear agreement restricts the use of nuclear material for war efforts. So a nuclear powered SSBN with nuclear warheads on board isnt going to happen. They could have a sub with a diesel engine/hydrogen power cell-hybrid drive with conventional missiles no problem (they already have those).
      A surface ship faces the same limitations really...

    • @thebravegallade731
      @thebravegallade731 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@constantinethecataphract5949
      Its mostly an issue of not having enough space for land silos anymore.

    • @thatginger8897
      @thatginger8897 Před 2 měsíci +5

      South Korea has a very specific geopolitical situation that makes the arsenal ship make a bunch of sense. There is a video by a channel named named Perun that goes into detail over the defense economics of South Korea, and he does a pretty good idea of explaining why they are making them.

  • @CaptRR
    @CaptRR Před 4 měsíci +59

    Here’s the problem with an arsenal ship. It’s only one ship that can only be in one place at a time and is a huge high priority target in any ear peer conflict. A better use is multiple destroyers and frigates that can give you more flexibility in missions. As for shore bombardment, air power has taken over that role and drones will fill it further. I could see a cruiser sized drone carrier in future, it that’s a different mission.

    • @BeKindToBirds
      @BeKindToBirds Před 3 měsíci +1

      What about multiple arsenal ships.

    • @jvbutalid8316
      @jvbutalid8316 Před 3 měsíci +3

      better yet, build lots of unmanned missile boats and use the manned ships (not only the burkes or the ticonderogas, but including the carriers, too) as command nodes

    • @BeKindToBirds
      @BeKindToBirds Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@jvbutalid8316 exactly. It's already happening and these people can't wrap their head around a trailer that follows a truck or what missiles have been doing since the missile age began.

    • @jvbutalid8316
      @jvbutalid8316 Před 3 měsíci

      @@BeKindToBirds I think the problem lay in that the military industrial complex is already so used to built gigantic warships with complex systems since they've been doing that over decades already to the point that they don't have the organizational power to go back to making big fleets of smaller ships. Besides there's also the pride element. Optics speaking, it would mean america is so desperate as of late to keep its position as world number one that the title might as well be stripped away for such disgrace

    • @BeKindToBirds
      @BeKindToBirds Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@jvbutalid8316 I think the number of vls cells on ships is advancing in line with a trend towards arsenal-type vessels.

  • @keirangray902
    @keirangray902 Před 4 měsíci +59

    Looks like a boss from Ace Combat

  • @gardnert1
    @gardnert1 Před 4 měsíci +11

    Semi-submersibles and subs are the only thing that will survive future combat. Being able to go just below the waves would make your ship stealth while also giving it the best possible armor.

    • @mtsky-tc6uw
      @mtsky-tc6uw Před 4 měsíci

      not true,a fantasy--every sub in the world is tracked within a 100 ft 24/7--a nuke tact missile coming in at 20,000 mph only need to get within a mile to take out a sub--only when a sub sits in a deep trench for days it may avoid detection but that is secret unknown info--one tact nuke will take out a whole carrier group

  • @dancasey9660
    @dancasey9660 Před 4 měsíci +51

    Imagine taking an old fleet carrier, stripping off the flight deck and hangers, and putting missle launch systems instead. Bet you could get quite a few missiles in ship that's up to 1000 ft long.

    • @powdemonic7121
      @powdemonic7121 Před 3 měsíci +9

      How about cargo ship disposable cheap and easy to fit and get

    • @wanderer10k
      @wanderer10k Před 3 měsíci +4

      @@powdemonic7121exactly and just use networked ships to do the fire control.

    • @tonylam9548
      @tonylam9548 Před 2 měsíci

      A big juicy target.

    • @markeh1971
      @markeh1971 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Hi, a carrier or LHD might be an easier refit.
      They offer better structures and inbuilt military spec systems.
      Take care all M

    • @jonathantalbot6513
      @jonathantalbot6513 Před měsícem

      I’m sure I saw a concept on this. It had missile units the size of a standard shipping container. Easy to replace and can be used on any ship singularly as a battery.

  • @BravoCheesecake
    @BravoCheesecake Před 4 měsíci +47

    I've always been obsessed with this concept. Played around with the scaling using 3d renderings and it turns out that you can put A LOT of VLS cells on a ship if you try hard enough. The only argument against it would be cost. The role they would play is essentially a replacement for the current aging CG Ticonderoga's. You can also argue that the Ohio SSGN's play this role but have a higher survivability.

    • @hnhgnjj6078
      @hnhgnjj6078 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Yeah but you could make the crew very small which offsets the price and reduces the chance of human error

    • @DERP_Squad
      @DERP_Squad Před 4 měsíci +11

      The main argument isn't cost, but vulnerability. Having an arsenal ship concentrates your VLS and related systems in one hull. Spending the same amount of money, or even slightly more on a similar number of VLS on multiple smaller hulls makes them less vulnerable.
      To defeat a defensive system, the attack needs to launch more missiles than the defender can intercept. The bottleneck for the defender isn't the number of VLS, but the number of individual targets the sensor systems can detect, identify, calculate the trajectory of the missile, create a firing solution for the interceptor, launch the interceptor, and have the interceptor hit the incoming missile in the time between possible detection and impact on the target. Realistically the time to between detection and impact is roughly 35 seconds.
      Having the defensive sensors spread over more, smaller ships each with their own VLS capability creates a larger defensive screen around the task force than if those capabilities are concentrated in a single arsenal ship at the centre of the task force.

    • @samoldfield5220
      @samoldfield5220 Před 4 měsíci +1

      It can't replace the Ticonderogas because it doesn't have an air warfare system installed. It's basically just a missile ferry. If you wanted to build a guided missile destroyer with that many VLS cells, you still need to install all the other things a modern destroyer does, and while I think the case for much larger ships is good, it doesn't bear any resemblance to the arsenal ship.

    • @sonnyshaw3962
      @sonnyshaw3962 Před 4 měsíci

      How would you replenish this monster after it shot it wad? I don't know the more I think about it the more questions come to mind.

    • @BravoCheesecake
      @BravoCheesecake Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@DERP_Squad In modern naval warfare the bottleneck is precisely the VLS magazine depth. Spy-6 can detect and track hundreds of individual targets at the same time. The ship would be used as a missile truck to supplement a carriers defense. I do agree with you that a larger defensive net with several smaller ships makes more sense but I'm just playing devils advocate. In total a standard CSG has about 500 VLS cells. A lot of those are LACM's, RUMs and short range ESSM. I would concentrate the LACM's on this platform to allow the DDG's and CG's to carry nothing but SM's bolstering the formations air defense while also off setting the range/sensor problem you talked about. We're also all leaving out the fact that an Ohio SSGN is basically exactly what I'm talking about. lol

  • @55Reever
    @55Reever Před 4 měsíci +12

    A one function ship. Very vulnerable.

  • @randyross5630
    @randyross5630 Před 4 měsíci +95

    I like the Arsenal Ship Concept, to bad we picked the Zumwalt over it all those years ago... BUT! I Really Feel as though besides the Arsenal Ship we need a Large Multi-Role Cruiser!!!

    • @mastathrash5609
      @mastathrash5609 Před 4 měsíci +10

      And stop building the LCS as well and meltdown anything half finished for the metal to build something like an Arsenal ship or two.

    • @shaider1982
      @shaider1982 Před 4 měsíci +8

      Perhaps they should have packed more missiles on the Zummwalt. Or made more destroyers instead of the LCS, at least the Zummwalt can be used for the new hypersonic missiles.

    • @Sirilere
      @Sirilere Před 4 měsíci +1

      "Battle cruisers" were a thing once.

    • @johnsilver9338
      @johnsilver9338 Před 4 měsíci +4

      Zumwalt class destroyers already started modifications this year removing its guns so that it can accommodate a larger VLS able to house CPS (Conventional Prompt Strike). LCS on the other hand can still be repurposed otherwise if they scrap it it will be a failure indeed.

    • @unknown14191
      @unknown14191 Před 4 měsíci +3

      If anything, I believe that the current US don't have capability to build big ships anymore because of defense market monopoly or condensation (I forgot the term) down to only a handful of contractors to work with. This makes bidding very difficult since there is not a lot of competition and anyone serving the defense market can just quote high and get away with it.
      Don't forget that they can increase cost over the years as the project get's developed and implemented stating inflation and splurging the fundings provided to obtain "technological miracles". They could do that because there are barely any competitors able to develop the capabilities the military planners wanted.
      This is the reason why most defense equipment and system procurement projects ended up grossly going over budget and getting cancelled by government due to funding problems.
      The US Navy even had to purchase new frigates that are already developed from overseas defense industries because they knew that it is impossible to get the X number of new ships newly developed by the likes of Lockheed Martin, General Dynamics etc with the assigned fundings.
      The era where there is like 1000 organizations bidding to enter into military projects is long over after all the scheming, buying overs and collapses.
      One method to mitigate this when building new capabilities is unfortunately aggressively allowing overseas defense contractors to bid for new warship projects, the more the merrier. Another method is to limit the scope of development to individual systems instead of trying to extract 1 million (exaggeration) new capabilities out of one single project, and using a mix mash of already fully developed and available new/existing systems into the new platform ( I assume this is currently the method/done in the past).

  • @mr-huggy
    @mr-huggy Před 4 měsíci +10

    Actually the Japanese Navy is looking to make 2 'Arsenal Ships'. they have 2 AEGIS Ashore systems unused which have a much larger and more powerful radar system than the one they use on ships. So they are going to be mounting it on to a large ship and fitting it with as much VLS silos as they can so they can use them in ballistic missile defence but as they are more mobile and harder to take out.

    • @mtsky-tc6uw
      @mtsky-tc6uw Před 4 měsíci

      just another expensive toy the "defense" industry wants to conjure up to make more money on--china,russian tact nukes,missiles,rockets will take out all floating,flying,rolling targets in the first few hours of any real conflict--it is a pathetic joke

    • @markeh1971
      @markeh1971 Před 2 měsíci

      The idea is sound, there will be a need for more missiles than the existing fleet can bring to bear. The lack of missiles is a seperate issues and one that shows you have an issue with manufacturing for defence.
      The whole lack of defence capacity has come to light of late with the Ukraine war.
      Take care M.

  • @MWR-lg9qp
    @MWR-lg9qp Před 4 měsíci +14

    USS Long Beach was one of the most beautiful naval vassals ever built. As a US Navy sailor, I've personally seen a number of ships. Seeing the Long Beach in person was truly inspiring.

    • @jeffreygunter417
      @jeffreygunter417 Před 4 měsíci +1

      It came to soon, an early Missle boat the digital control system was not reliable enough…

    • @TheBaCoNzzzz
      @TheBaCoNzzzz Před 4 měsíci +1

      Jealous of this, though I wouldn’t call it beautiful 😂. I served on a CG recently and enjoyed the platform.

  • @Grehmdel
    @Grehmdel Před 4 měsíci +37

    We have arsenals "ships" our SSGNs: Guided Missile Submarines.
    My favorite ship is the America-class amphibious assault ship. Semper Fi.

    • @dwwolf4636
      @dwwolf4636 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Costly for the VLS numbers it provides...

    • @volvo245
      @volvo245 Před 4 měsíci

      Hava nagila to you too, ZOGbot.

    • @ronjones9447
      @ronjones9447 Před 4 měsíci +3

      The SSGN Ohios can only carry tomahawks and torpedos. A arsenal ship would carry 100s of anything that would fit in the cell. Tomahawks, SM2s, SM3s and SM6s as well a quad packing smaller missiles. I would station them mainly in the pacific. Japan, Guam and Hawaii

  • @northerncaptain855
    @northerncaptain855 Před 4 měsíci +14

    While a smallish crew by naval standards might make sense, sending such an incredibly expensive and important naval asset to sea with a tiny crew is madness. Many things go wrong on a ship at sea and they all require someone to deal with the problems.

    • @MostlyPennyCat
      @MostlyPennyCat Před 4 měsíci +1

      Not a lot to go wrong with a tube though.
      You'd only need a crew of about 150.

    • @PeachDragon_
      @PeachDragon_ Před 4 měsíci +3

      Small crews are good for easily replaceable attrition assets, not for something as expensive, powerful and specialized as this

  • @AlessandroRodriguez
    @AlessandroRodriguez Před 4 měsíci +14

    When you use the "Macross Missile Massacre Trope" as a strategic development plan...

  • @Shatterwings060
    @Shatterwings060 Před 4 měsíci +16

    Missile madness taken to its next logical step.

    • @VunderGuy
      @VunderGuy Před 4 měsíci +2

      Why call it madness when the missile is literally the primary weapon on the seas even for carriers?

    • @Shatterwings060
      @Shatterwings060 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@VunderGuy it's a anime thing, but in that media it's more know as missile massacre, due to the sheer amount of missile fired in complete abandonment of logic.

  • @tn_bluestem
    @tn_bluestem Před 4 měsíci +24

    This concept is gorgeous. Modern day battleship really. My favorite warship is the North Carolina Class USS Washington BB-56. My grandfather was a 16" crewman from 1940-1945

    • @mtsky-tc6uw
      @mtsky-tc6uw Před 4 měsíci

      just another expensive toy the "defense" industry wants to conjure up to make more money on--china,russian tact nukes,missiles,rockets will take out all floating,flying,rolling targets in the first few hours of any real conflict--it is a pathetic joke

    • @trob1173
      @trob1173 Před 4 měsíci +3

      If there was one battleship that should have been kept after WW 2, the USS Washington was it.

  • @dennisleighton2812
    @dennisleighton2812 Před 4 měsíci +8

    Hi there. A fascinating study, and likely to sparks some comments. I have a number
    Firstly, the use of missiles in a modern war has one MAJOR drawback. One is limited to the number of missiles you actually have at the time. Once they have been shot away, you are toothless! Also, missiles, once manufactured, actually have a certain shelf life, after which they become increasingly more obsolete. This scenario places a HUGE burden on the Arms Industry to replenish stocks quickly enough to keep operational forces fighting in the field. Also, there is the problem of cost - missiles, especially the more sophisticated ones, are enormously expensive, and unless budgeted for years in advance, might not be so easily acquired in a hurry!
    Now, the ship itself. My first impression is that such a ship would be very vulnerable to attack from a potential enemy. The ship would need to be within the range of the missiles it intends to launch - let's say a cruise missile. If the missile range is say 1000 kms then the ship has to be closer than that to the target. That means any enemy missile (say land-based) with a range of 1 000+ kms would be able to engage the ship quite safely. This means the ship would need considerable supporting vessels to supply a pretty comprehensive anti-air/missile/drone capability to ensure it can get its payload in the air and scoot away quick damn smart to safety. Something in the order of a carrier strike group defensive suite! This is hugely expensive.
    Alternatively, it would have to be in the nature of a massive AAA/missile ship to enable it to defend itself from air/missile/drone attacks. This complicates the deign by several orders of magnitude, to the point of not being feasible. Just a few AAA wouldn't help either, as just one strike by a major enemy missile could destroy the whole ship (there's a lot of stuff there that would probably blow up in the event of a successful strike!).
    Note: in the light of the effect of even very crude missile/drone activity in the Red Sea area at the moment, it demonstrates that defending against incoming missile/drone/air attacks uses up missile stocks at a pretty rapid rate, after which the defending forces have to replenish, or go to Plan B which (at the moment, in the West at least) is a rapidly diminishing asset!
    I have read several opinions that even US Carrier Strike Groups have a limited defence capability against such air/missile/drone attack possibilities, and it seems that there are some very worried people in the Navy! The Royal Navy have demonstrated that their Sea Vixen missile system is VERY capable in this scenario, BUT, how many missile are available on each ship, and how rapidly can launchers be reloaded, if at all without dockside assistance? Interesting points to ponder. Any insider info? Also, how many such ships does the Royal Navy actually have?
    Another issue that worries me is the number of US supercarriers not actually operational at the moment! [4-5 I think?] The Nimitzs are approaching their "end-of-life' phase rather rapidly! Much quicker than they can Build Fords! It appears that several Nimitzs might have to go into short service-extension phase, despite the unwillingness to do so. Do they have enough support vessels good enough to form additional carrier strike groups? I doubt it! The Chinese Navy is currently outbuilding the US Navy by a considerable margin, and the US Navy has a much wider area to cover than they do! Could a Nimitz go into a long service-extension without a refuel (which takes 2-3 years! and costs $billions!) ?
    These are vexing questions!

    • @mtsky-tc6uw
      @mtsky-tc6uw Před 4 měsíci

      just another expensive toy the "defense" industry wants to conjure up to make more money on--china,russian tact nukes,missiles,rockets will take out all floating,flying,rolling targets in the first few hours of any real conflict--it is a pathetic joke

  • @sebastianriemer1777
    @sebastianriemer1777 Před 4 měsíci +4

    That's a floating powder keg with a to small crew for handling the battle damage.
    Basically the ship version of a glass cannon.
    It could work if its part of a carrier group but airplanes are more versatile.
    But it's an interesting project, the ammunitions it carries could cost more than the ship itself. 😁

  • @christopherwang4392
    @christopherwang4392 Před 4 měsíci +3

    At the 2013 Navy League's Sea-Air-Space Exposition, Huntington Ingalls Industries unveiled a ballistic missile defense variant of the San Antonio class LPD equipped with thirty-six 8-cell Mark 41 strike-length VLS (288 total) and an electromagnetic railgun turret. If the electromagnetic railgun turret was removed, a further two 8-cell Mk 41 VLS (16 total) could be mounted in the bow as proposed in the original San Antonio class concept. There also seems to be space amidships for an unspecified number of BAE Systems' Adaptable Deck Launcher.

  • @donchaput8278
    @donchaput8278 Před 4 měsíci +14

    I like the idea of a modern shore bombardment and missile ship hybrid. A couple auto-loading 16" guns and a whole bunch of missiles.

    • @samoldfield5220
      @samoldfield5220 Před 4 měsíci +1

      The trouble with large caliber guns is the barrels are extraordinarily expensive and wear out after a few hundred shots. Even with a standard dumb shell once you include the cost of barrel wear you may as well just use a tomahawk or a harpoon. If you're talking about guided rounds or rocket assisted rounds, a tomahawk IS more cost effective for anything about a 5".
      A tomahawk only costs about 1.8 million a round and carries a 450kg warhead with 1000nmi range. The Excalibur 155mm smart round costs 120k and carries a 4.5kg warhead with a range of about 10nmi.

    • @silverbladeTE
      @silverbladeTE Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@samoldfield5220 Large calibre gun barrels last for tens of thousands of rounds now, due to use of additives and wraps to powder charges :)

    • @solarissv777
      @solarissv777 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@samoldfield5220 BAE is currently testing 58 caliber M109 howitzer with a range of ~40nmi. As for the higher calibers, it should be even longer. Although, I wouldn't go beyond 9", to be able to use the similar gun on land (basically Caesar on steroids with the range of the GMLRS). The benefit of the higher caliber is that you basically, have much more space for the explosives, with the same electronics as in the smaller round. Also, provided that it gonna use huided rounds anyway, the barrel can be smoothbore, and thus have much longer lifespan. Also, instead of giant battleships, IMHO, it would be much more sensible to put such guns on a smaller frigate class ships, that would much easier to navigate around the small islands.

    • @vulpinemac
      @vulpinemac Před 4 měsíci

      @@solarissv777 The idea with guns is not so much explosive rounds but rather kinetic impact... especially the larger guns. The need was to smash through armor and defenses intended to pre-ignite high-explosive rounds before they can do more than surface damage on the target. We already know, for instance, that most land targets are layered in such a way as to prevent the explosive to ever reach the heart of the bunker... so you have to smash through a lot of steel and concrete collectively before the explosive itself triggers. Yes, they can be impressive offensive weapons but a bigger gun fires a heavier round, which means the overall range isn't that much better than a modern artillery cannon; it can just punch through a lot thicker armor.

    • @donchaput8278
      @donchaput8278 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@samoldfield5220 No need for expensive smart rounds for general bombardment, that's the point of also having a bunch of missiles. Different options for different scenarios and dumb shells are cheap. 14" guns would work as well but any smaller than that you should probably just use a missile.

  • @mrjmorovis
    @mrjmorovis Před 4 měsíci +4

    A large cargo ship could carry shipping containers with missile launchers in them. Considering that Himars is going to be ablle to fire more types of missiles putting a battalion of launchers on a separate ship could be done. That prof of concept is already deployed now. There are images of Himars launchers positioned on deck.

  • @TheShrike616
    @TheShrike616 Před 4 měsíci +8

    I think the original concept was launched by French engineer René Levasseur. His design would have been semi submersible as well. In his argumentation the sheer economy of scale of having to build all those missiles would partially fund such a program.
    My fave warship would be HMS Warspite, grand ol' lady of the plot armour.

    • @RouGeZH
      @RouGeZH Před 2 měsíci +1

      René Levasseur is a 18th century naval engineer. You think of René Loire, the designer of the "Frappeur" (striker) arsenal ship.

    • @TheShrike616
      @TheShrike616 Před 2 měsíci

      @@RouGeZH true

  • @2bittesla
    @2bittesla Před 4 měsíci +5

    The sensible way for this class to materialize is modular in nature. When the need arises, pull a container cargo ship out the merchant marine fleet. Load it up with the appropriate modules covertly, send it towards the fleet, or not. The payload is managed by a navy ship that controls targeting, launch and so on. The crew aboard would not even be aware of the capability of there cargo.

  • @donteh58
    @donteh58 Před 4 měsíci +1

    long before I made the jump to Army geoint I worked for Navsea systems as a Jr designer on Arsenal ship and CGX . The continued refinement of DDG, the 4 SSBN to SSGN and LCS were chosen over Arsenal ship and CGX.

  • @archmageofmetal8883
    @archmageofmetal8883 Před 4 měsíci +5

    Ah a new Matsimus video. Just in time for my birthday tomorrow. Must be my lucky day.

    • @_Matsimus_
      @_Matsimus_  Před 4 měsíci +1

      HAVE A GOOD BDAY TOMORROW! 🙂

  • @therocinante3443
    @therocinante3443 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Duuuude i hope these come into existence

  • @SGTvolcan
    @SGTvolcan Před 4 měsíci +13

    I think a dedicated drone carrier is the future for an "Arsenal" ship. Just two thousand drones with a lobby of gamer chairs and a mountain dew powered reactor. The future is now old man.

    • @mrvwbug4423
      @mrvwbug4423 Před 4 měsíci +1

      That's what the LCS was supposed to be and we saw how that turned out

  • @randallpetroelje3913
    @randallpetroelje3913 Před 4 měsíci +2

    An absolute beautiful war machine❤

  • @vromansaltzman5276
    @vromansaltzman5276 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I like this concept. With the diversity and quantity of missiles it could carry would almost completely protect itself and any other ships around it. With the range of modern missiles it could stand off the coast and devaste large areas or other enemy task forces. Also it would provide awesome air protection for miles.

    • @DERP_Squad
      @DERP_Squad Před 4 měsíci

      The main argument against the concept is that a number of smaller, cheaper ships do the same job better. A task force with one arsenal ship has one defencive system to overwhelm for the attacker. A task force with 5 or 6 guided missile destroyers has 5 or 6 networked defensive systems for an attacker to overwhelm, a much more difficult prospect.

  • @whitepony8443
    @whitepony8443 Před 4 měsíci +9

    Also HMS Victory but I do love HMS Warspite as well.

  • @elliotyourarobot
    @elliotyourarobot Před 4 měsíci +15

    An expensive target for sure.

    • @videoviewer2008
      @videoviewer2008 Před 4 měsíci

      500 missiles x 11 million per SM3. Only 5.5 billion I guess.

    • @gerrya4818
      @gerrya4818 Před 4 měsíci

      expensive to sink it,youd need a billion$ worth of missiles

    • @elliotyourarobot
      @elliotyourarobot Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@gerrya4818 no you don't.

    • @elliotyourarobot
      @elliotyourarobot Před 4 měsíci

      @videoviewer2008 So what's the real cost of these things minus the kickbacks?

    • @shaun469
      @shaun469 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@gerrya48183 or 4 captor mines and its done.

  • @apegues
    @apegues Před 4 měsíci +1

    The Mighty “Mo” USS Missouri BB-63, Iowa Class Battleship… Thats my Favorite

  • @michaelpfister1283
    @michaelpfister1283 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I like the concept, but rather than build from scratch I think this would be an AWESOME refit for aging Ohio-class SSBNs. We have already converted 4 of them to the SSGN standard, we should continue that trend with the remaining Ohios as well as any future SSBN hulls that are retired from nuclear deterrence roles. They would be like concealed weapons. You just don't know when they might pop up and rain fire on an enemy. They could also cruise with carrier strike groups or Amphibs, providing both land-attack punch and saturation strike capability against enemy ship formations. They could also be turned loose to hunt enemy subs or shipping, as needed. Far more flexible than a missile truck, and far more stealthy than any surface ship will ever be.

  • @johnsmith91528
    @johnsmith91528 Před 4 měsíci +8

    i really like the idea of this kind of ship
    but the more I look at it, the more I wonder why you wouldn't just want to build a large submarine
    with it being such a big target, you'd want to be able to hide for a bit-
    a submarine is really the perfect arsenal ship, given how much more stealthy they are

    • @Bonedagi
      @Bonedagi Před 4 měsíci +1

      the merit of an arsenal ship is its large payload at a cheaper price than a destroyer. Submarines are expensive.

    • @samuelgibson780
      @samuelgibson780 Před 4 měsíci

      Well I'm no expert, but all the experts I watch (including in this video) suggest that building large numbers of cruise missiles (like, 1000s) is just too expensive. If you really wanted a "new battleship" that could do it all, then it would ideally have way more than just cruise missiles. You'd want it to have every kind of missile, from air defense to anti ship to rocket-assisted torpedos to drone missiles which drop sonobuoys or loiter like a drone CAP, and all kinds of things which probably don't even exist yet. With such a ship, if it had literally thousands of missiles, then you could maybe build a new kind of "battleship" for the modern day. And if you had a lot of them, then maybe you could change the way people do surface warfare. But that would require more missiles per such ship than any nation can comfortably produce in any reasonable frame of time. And they would be huge targets that would still need to be protected (even aircraft carriers have escort ships). It seems like an idea that would be awesome if you had infinite money and it were much cheaper to build every kind of missile en masse. But what little I know about navy stuff and missiles suggests to me that it probably would be smarter to not put all your eggs in one basket, and keep the mass of your missiles spread out amongst ships that can do other things, and which can protect each other or hide. So if it were just going to carry cruise missiles for striking land targets, why not scale down the idea and make it carry just a few hundred, for supporting specific situations? That's a pretty cool idea, maybe. I dunno. Not an expert. Naval warfare is cool af.

    • @rtbdmd
      @rtbdmd Před 4 měsíci

      the main proponent in the US navy committed suicide after being exposed for lying about his credentials. This event was what stopped the program. also it was not survivable . too many eggs in one basket imo. the current paradigm of naval warship design evolved into what they are for a reason. you cant wave a hand and ignore threats that have been countered in current designs. lcs anyone?

  • @laughingowl7896
    @laughingowl7896 Před 4 měsíci +5

    The arsenal ship as rendered is a pretty good idea, but I think it would essentially be an LST, a Large Slow Target. Now I'm going to spitball a bit:
    If it were stealthy and semi-submersible to some snorkel depth, they could be pre-positioned with crew rotations done by submarine. Or better, fully unmanned. And add hyper sonics. Though I'd really only deploy them in the Pacific to counter China's growing tonnage and fire power advantages. Too, it seems it could fit really well with the Marines A2/AD Force Design 2030.
    The USAF is still trying to figure out how to manage an arsenal aircraft to overcome the payload limitations of the F-22 and F-35, but like the arsenal ship, thus far to no avail.

    • @stevengrant8668
      @stevengrant8668 Před 4 měsíci +2

      The Zumwalts were designed around the large scale rail gun concept...oops. Guns were too faulty, slugs were too expensive, nothing stealthy about a floating power plant using enough electrical energy to power a whole county, to launch a slug with a lightning bolt. So they thought: missles instead! And removed the rail guns. BUT...we already have missle ships...destroyers and subs! So they thought of hypersonic...and that's where the 3 ship class will sit...for now. A destroyer the size of a cruiser, that costs as much as a battleship, but has the crew of a frigate and a lot of electronics to reduce the size of human crews. Sigh...

    • @grahamstrouse1165
      @grahamstrouse1165 Před 4 měsíci

      A semi-submersible might be doable. Nobody’s building an unmanned warship any time this century.

    • @laughingowl7896
      @laughingowl7896 Před 4 měsíci

      @@grahamstrouse1165 Ukraine has been sinking Russian warships with them. Their kamakasis, but they're proofs of concept. And as I understand it, Ukraine is working on UUV's as well.

  • @keithmoore5306
    @keithmoore5306 Před 4 měsíci +2

    the arsenal ship did partially come true in the converted Ohio class subs that carry 250-ish tomahawk missiles! i can see a new sub somewhere between an Ohio class and a typhoon in size with new sensors and added launch tubes for different missiles working out well in this role!! the purpose built surface version is a dead concept plain and simple to easy to track down and kill although a system using containerized weapon modules that could be loaded of freighters maybe an option for surface use!!

  • @PapaOscarNovember
    @PapaOscarNovember Před 4 měsíci +1

    Arsenal ship may come in the form of commercial cargo vessel loaded with containerized missile launchers. There are a couple defense contractors (BAE and another European company) developing container modules that can be placed on decks of destroyers.
    During an extended conflict, in a pinch, these containers could be placed on drafted cargo vessels to accompany other naval ships, so as to minimize naval ships being put out of action due to exhausting missile inventory and returning to port.

  • @bryanshoemaker6120
    @bryanshoemaker6120 Před 4 měsíci +10

    About time. I was thinking of that concept for the nearly 20 years ago.

  • @Generik97
    @Generik97 Před 4 měsíci +12

    The Arsenal ship is the 21st century equivalent of a Dreadnaught/Battleship.
    I wish Canada would build one, even just a small one.

    • @mastathrash5609
      @mastathrash5609 Před 4 měsíci +2

      I think smaller would be the way to go like an Ticonderoga 550' deal Kirov kinda thing. Like just see how much boom boom we can realistically fit In the hull. Give it a standard 5-inch gun and a butt load of missiles and powerful radar.

    • @elliotyourarobot
      @elliotyourarobot Před 4 měsíci +1

      Do you remember what happened to the Dreadnought?

    • @elliotyourarobot
      @elliotyourarobot Před 4 měsíci

      How about that money go towards domestic spending instead.

    • @Generik97
      @Generik97 Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@mastathrash5609 The Ticonderoga-clsss cruisers carry 122 VLS Cells depending on how you modify the ship you could probably fit up 244 cells onboard if not more.
      Realistically you would probably have to move the super structure aft and remove the helo deck and I would definitely keep the CIWS defenses onboard the vessel.

    • @Generik97
      @Generik97 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@elliotyourarobot Dreadnoughts/Battleships we're made obsolete because of their vulnerability to aircraft as well as the fact that they had to be close to shore in order to effectively act as an artillery battery of up to 25 miles but a warship loaded with basically nothing but Tomahawks can have an effective range of 1553 miles.
      If you put even just one or two Arsenal ships into a flotilla of aircraft carriers and destroyers the amount of fire power they could provide is unprecedented.

  • @Petriefied0246
    @Petriefied0246 Před 4 měsíci +2

    These things always struck me as a sensible thing to have, given the nature of modern communications. I think a better classification for these ships is as a Monitor because it carries out that function within the fleet.

  • @robinwhitebeam4386
    @robinwhitebeam4386 Před 4 měsíci +2

    A floating gun/missile platform makes sense. If ship to shore bombardment is required in a future war , then smaller multiple versions of this idea would useful. A secondary use as an unmanned munitions supply vessel could be safer for the Navy. The same unmanned ship could ultimately be used as a drone attack ship to attack an enemy fleet in a port after firing all missiles simultaneously launching many flying drones ( from tubes) to accompany its final attack.
    A scary weapon , but would it ever be necessary ?

  • @dennisleighton2812
    @dennisleighton2812 Před 4 měsíci +3

    I almost forgot - my favourite ship.
    USS Rattlesnake! This was a large American built frigate that was unique at the time and posed a real threat to other Navies.
    It was large, and sported more guns (on a single gun deck) than all other frigate class, and was significantly faster than they were. In other words, they could confidently engage ships the could catch, and outrun ships more powerfully armed then they were.

  • @paleoph6168
    @paleoph6168 Před 4 měsíci +9

    This is what inspired Arsenal Gear in MGS2.

    • @VunderGuy
      @VunderGuy Před 4 měsíci

      Just like Kojima. Taking really awesome concepts that already exist and making them lame. XD

  • @markredacted8547
    @markredacted8547 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I like the arsenal ship idea, I think one of these attached to a carrier group would benefit if large scale conflict was to take place. Have the arsenal ship protect the carrier group while the destroyers combine their aegis to focus on target selection. When arsenal needs resupply the destroyers take main defence role until it returns.
    As for my favourite warship of all time it had to be Leander class. Weird choice but my old man worked on a HMAS one and I got to experience sea time on board as a kid. Nothing like steam powered ships 💪

    • @mtsky-tc6uw
      @mtsky-tc6uw Před 4 měsíci

      just another expensive toy the "defense" industry wants to conjure up to make more money on--china,russian tact nukes,missiles,rockets will take out all floating,flying,rolling targets in the first few hours of any real conflict--it is a pathetic joke

  • @davidm3118
    @davidm3118 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Gosh this idea has been around for years - I remember reading a piece on the Arsenal concept in "Proceedings" back in the 1990s..

  • @Jreg1992
    @Jreg1992 Před 4 měsíci +3

    This arsenal ship concept would have become a great deterrent against the china 2035 war. I'd still rather canada buying a portion of the Lcs fleet and using them for securing the northwest passage.

  • @samoldfield5220
    @samoldfield5220 Před 4 měsíci +3

    The reason the VGAS was replaced with the AGS is the VGAS was actually just a more expensive but less effectvive VLS. It's a gun mounted vertically below deck so it can only fire at very high angles at which point the "smart" rocket assisted ammunition would operate just like a missile. Only with a much smaller payload, a much shorter range, and a higher price. The AGS, which is a cut down version of the VGAS, was theorized to offer everything the VGAS did with the added bonus of being able to use standard 155mm ammunition, except no because naval ammunition is one piece and longer, meaning what you actually got was a round that was about the same price, payload, and range as the current 5" ammunition, only with a fraction of the accuracy or rate of fire.
    The arsenal ship concept was reworked over the years into Virginia Blk V submarine which does everything the arsenal ship was specced to do, but is actually stealthy, faster, more survivable and with unlimited operational range. The arsenal ship itself was never a serious prospect for acquisition.

    • @VunderGuy
      @VunderGuy Před 4 měsíci

      So what you just admitted is that a surface fleet as an idea, including aircraft carriers, are dumb and redundant and that the navy should have scrapped it all and gone full submarine decades ago if it wanted to be effective. Good to know!

    • @samoldfield5220
      @samoldfield5220 Před 4 měsíci

      @@VunderGuy Well that's stupid. How are you supposed to fly planes off an aircraft carrier that's under water? And if the aircraft carrier has to be on the surface so do it's escorts. Then you've got auxiliaries like oilers, supply, and landing ships. Finally patrol boats and such that work in water too shallow for submarines, and oh look, we've just listed everything in a modern navy that isn't a submarine.
      It's as if there's a plan!

    • @grahamstrouse1165
      @grahamstrouse1165 Před 4 měsíci +1

      The Block V Virginia is an expensive half-measure. Honestly, it makes more sense to use the larger hulls (Ohios, Columbias) as tactical missile carriers & spread nukes out around on smaller ships. As for the AGS, it’s dead. The shells didn’t have as much ranged as advertised & cost $800k a shot. Really stupid idea.

  • @sec808
    @sec808 Před 4 měsíci +1

    The Arsenal Ship concept came from a Naval War College thesis in the 80's. ADM Metcaft (I believe he was ACNO for Surface Warfare at the time) was a huge proponent for it. There were constant discussions about it at all levels. Thankfully it was decided against, however the basic tumblehome hull design that was being pushed for the arsenal ship found life in the DDG 1000 class). The concept had numerous drawbacks (including the fact at the time it would hold more tomahawk cruise missiles than the Navy had in it's inventory), but the final nail in it's coffin was the collapse of the Soviet Union.
    Favorite warship is of course the USS Constitution, followed by the USS Johnston (DD-557) then by the mighty USS Sterett (CG-31)

  • @Cherb123456
    @Cherb123456 Před 2 měsíci

    I just love everything about it! Thank you!

  • @apokalipsx25
    @apokalipsx25 Před 4 měsíci +3

    This ship could be a good choice to replace aircraft cerriers. There is no need to wait until the pilot gets in the air, just push the button and its done. Probably it would be not even so expensive if we compare it with a carrier in the long use.

    • @DERP_Squad
      @DERP_Squad Před 4 měsíci +2

      The carrier is a lot more versatile than the arsenal ship. A carrier can do strikes like an arsenal ship, but it can also do missions like recon and surveillance, humanitarian aid, etc.
      The cost of an arsenal ship would also be better spent on several guided missile destroyers. The multiple DDG are able to provide a 80-100 VLS tube capability in many places at once while the arsenal ship provides the capability of 500 VLS tubes in only one place.
      Dispersion of the capabilities within a task force is preferable too. If the arsenal ship is hit, the task force VLS capability is seriously degraded. An attack against 5 or 6 DDG is unlikely to be able to degrade the capability of a task force as much. A couple of the DDG might be sunk or made inoperable, but that still leaves the others in a position to respond with a significant counter attack.

  • @theromanorder
    @theromanorder Před 4 měsíci +3

    Theres been talk on battle ships coming back, rockets are exsplensive so a battle ship with lots of artillery with lots of amo although less accurate and this modern version have the lighter armor of modern warships for speed and cuting more costs is able tl protect itself with modern stealth and destroying enemies fire abilities on shore softing them up for much chesper price then missles/aircraft for marines to then take the coast...

  • @commandingjudgedredd1841
    @commandingjudgedredd1841 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Looks like an end of level 'Boss' that wouldn't go amiss in that old classic coin op game, "Thunderblade".

  • @therealfearsome
    @therealfearsome Před 4 měsíci +1

    I can see this concept used for nothing else but Air Defense with saturation attack being the dominate strategy being employed now, you could mix Sea Sparrow with SM 2 and SM6 to provide fleet-wide multi-layer defense with a very deep magazine and very rapid multi launch capability.

    • @scottfarland6795
      @scottfarland6795 Před 3 měsíci

      To further this thread, I could see the B-2 used as a missile truck (when airframes are retired). This would allow the F-35 sensor platform to coordinate a massive anti-air launch from a couple B-2 whose stealth capabilities, while not as good as the B-21 and future airframes should allow them to get well within strike range of all current near peer aircraft. What a surprise!😉

  • @shaider1982
    @shaider1982 Před 4 měsíci +4

    I am thinking that part of the issue with the Arsenal Ship is that it some of its capabilities is spread in other platforms which includes the Ohio SSGN's (cruise missile sub, like the Oscars). Though, if the USN cannot get enough sailors, perhaps something like this becomes more attractive (i.e. all those missiles under a small crew).

    • @orbiradio2465
      @orbiradio2465 Před 4 měsíci

      An additional section with an 64 cell VLS added to an Arleigh Burke destroyer or a Tico would not have required any additional crew.

  • @DEADB33F
    @DEADB33F Před 4 měsíci +4

    Can't wait to hear about the Man U ship.

  • @soumyajyotimukherjee4752
    @soumyajyotimukherjee4752 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Thanks for doing this video. I love the Arsenal Ship

  • @kevinbryer2425
    @kevinbryer2425 Před 4 měsíci +2

    The achilles heel of the Arsenal Ship concept is the mk41 vertical launch cell itself. Yes, they achieve great launch cadence, but even with 500+ cells, all too soon they will have to withdraw from the theater to a friendly port to reload, a process that could take weeks and leaves them stationary and vulnerable to a capable foe. The mechanical launchers they replaced, the Mk13 Single and Mk 26 Twin Arm guided missile launching system have far more potential to be reloaded while underway, with missiles delivered by container via CH-53K from a supply ship. They would also allow missiles to be swapped out to adapt to a changing mission. They wouldn't replace the VLS cells, that launch cadence is still useful in warding off air attacks, but such a rate of fire is not as necessary for offensive operations. The Mk57 PVLS cells used on the Zumwalt allow the best of both worlds.

  • @robertalaverdov8147
    @robertalaverdov8147 Před 4 měsíci +7

    Aside some potential future tech like lasers making missiles obsolete. The biggest issue with arsenal ships is their lack of flexibility and a limited mission role. Yes they can kill ships or launch a salvo at a ground site, even take out aircraft. But what if you need to patrol a shipping lane against pirates, support an amphibious insertion and or provide a loitering platform above a battlefield in support of ground forces? This is why traditional platforms are still preferred.

    • @christophero55
      @christophero55 Před 4 měsíci

      I don't agree that lasers will make missiles obsolete. People have been saying that all sorts of things will make other things obsolete for a long time. HEAT shells made armor on tanks obsolete, then they made armor effective against HEAT shells. ATGMs were supposed to make tanks obsolete then came active protection systems and other defensive aides. SAMs were supposed to make anti-aircraft guns obsolete. Firearms made body armor mostly obsolete until kevlar and ballistic ceramic plates. Of course some things really do become obsolete but it can be hard to predict when that will actually occur. Every time an offensive system is introduced or becomes more potent defensive technology is developed to counter it and vice versa. Lasers are not a foolproof defense against missiles. You can overwhelm a defensive grid of lasers if you fire enough missiles. Any defensive grid can be overwhelmed. Even if the grid includes SAMs, AAGs and lasers a time on target attack of drones and different types of missiles (stealth cruise, hypersonic cruise, ballistic) which have different attack patterns/must be countered differently (one type of missile may be optimized against ballistic missiles but not do well against a low flying stealthy cruise missile etc.) can overwhelm such a system. Right now lasers are not particularly powerful. They take a while to actually shoot something down as it takes some time to burn through the target enough. They can not engage a lot of targets quickly within their range because of this. They also have limited range due to laser diffraction. The beam becomes less focused and therefore less powerful the further away it extends from the emitter. More powerful lasers will allow for greater ranges and to burn through targets faster allowing them to engage and destroy targets more quickly in the future.
      I do agree with your argument that arsenal ships lack flexibility. They are also particularly vulnerable because you are putting a lot of resources on a single target. If you spread that arsenal of missiles onto multiple ships, the enemy must then sink multiple ships to destroy that arsenal of missiles. If all those missiles are on one ship, that one ship being destroyed takes out the lot. Multiple ships can also attack targets in different areas of operation. One arsenal ship can only engage targets within the range of the missiles at the physical location of the ship. Spread that onto say, five ships, and those ships (and therefore their missiles) can be at five totally different places on the globe and can then attack targets over a much wider area at the same time. Need to have all the missiles in one place? Gather the five ships in one fleet then. The enemy still needs at least five torpedoes, or five ballistic missiles or whatever, rather than maybe just one, to destroy all of those weapons.
      Of course there are also pros to having an arsenal ship. In some ways it is more efficient. You wouldn't need as many systems (and the crew to operate and maintain them) on one ship as you would five. One fire control system rather than five etc. I myself think the cons outweigh the pros.

    • @mrspeigle1
      @mrspeigle1 Před 4 měsíci

      Patrolling is for frigates.

    • @DERP_Squad
      @DERP_Squad Před 4 měsíci +1

      I'd add that another issue, that battleships also had, is that it can only be in one place. For the same cost, a number of guided missile destroyers can provide 80-100 VLS tubes in multiple places around the world. There are very few circumstances where having more guided missile destroyers operating wouldn't be more useful than a single arsenal ship.

    • @jmjones7897
      @jmjones7897 Před 4 měsíci +1

      ​@christophero55 Lasers cannot fire a ballistic trajectory/ in Defilafe/ beyond line of Horizon.
      Pretty limited for surface to surface engagement beyond d line of sight

  • @brucegoodwin634
    @brucegoodwin634 Před 4 měsíci +2

    It's great to have you back, Matsimus! Super insight.

    • @_Matsimus_
      @_Matsimus_  Před 4 měsíci

      I have no been anywhere lol CZcams just hates me and never shares my stuff haha

    • @brucegoodwin634
      @brucegoodwin634 Před 4 měsíci

      @@_Matsimus_ damn! That’s uncool! I’ve enjoyed your previous content! Keep plugging/respect!

  • @smackncheesey9784
    @smackncheesey9784 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I love the Cleveland class of American light cruisers, also about the arsenal ship or any other similar concept I did get an idea a few days ago while watching another video talking about a plausible return of battleships. That a modern arsenal ship or battleship as some would prefer to call them, would be like an up armored(not too much but slightly thicker than most ships today) and slightly bigger version of the Ticonderoga class cruisers while carrying 1.5x or more missiles than even the Ohio class submarines outfitted with tomahawk missiles. Not saying it is what I think would be the best, but rather thinking that if in the future when arsenal ships might be built this might be the most sensible route considering that you're basically going to be building a heavy cruiser with armor to protect vital components to an extent but not too much armor since even bunkers don't stand a chance against missiles. But is big enough to fulfill it's purpose of basically being a floating missile battery capable of fulfilling the missions it has to do.

  • @ViolentCabbage-ym7ko
    @ViolentCabbage-ym7ko Před 4 měsíci +4

    It's basically a floating ammo depot. If the ship caught fire or if it was hit by a missile or torpedo, the whole ship will explode like a storage room full of powder keg.

  • @oldsarj
    @oldsarj Před 4 měsíci +9

    Well, something has to follow onto fleet carriers and if the missile builders could ramp up production, it seems to me that the arsenal ship is a reasonable contender.

    • @charlesmaurer6214
      @charlesmaurer6214 Před 4 měsíci

      I just posted an idea that would make more sense blending the Idea with 2 dual rail guns in place of the old battleship's main guns and a mini verson of our land assault carriers in the aft. A well rounded multirole battleship sized warship built for independent and special ops away from the main fleet.

    • @mtsky-tc6uw
      @mtsky-tc6uw Před 4 měsíci

      just another expensive toy the "defense" industry wants to conjure up to make more money on--china,russian tact nukes,missiles,rockets will take out all floating,flying,rolling targets in the first few hours of any real conflict--it is a pathetic joke

  • @JamesSavik
    @JamesSavik Před 4 měsíci +1

    Most beautiful ships IMHO were the Japanese WW2 era Takao class heavy cruisers. The Mogami class is also quite striking. They were both a nasty handful in combat.

  • @cliffcampbell8827
    @cliffcampbell8827 Před 4 měsíci +2

    I think one of the biggest challenges to an all missile ship would be anti missile systems. Instead of overwhelming a target with multiple, expensive missiles attempting to destroy one, well protected target (C.I.W.S., decoys, chaff, flares, ECM...other stuff), maybe it's time to slap some of that "stealth tech" onto missiles themselves. Combine stealth tech with hypersonic speed and the Navy can go back to launching one expensive missile per target. An enemy won't have their anti missile defense systems active if they don't know it's there and it wouldn't need any explosives because the kinetic energy from a missile traveling at mach 6 should do the trick to break a ship in half or collapse just about any building it hits.

  • @user-tn3om9wi9j
    @user-tn3om9wi9j Před 4 měsíci +4

    Surely the correct class designation for this wonderful ship is a Monitor. It looks fantastic, but in reality it would be vulnerable, and as previous posts suggest there are numerous platforms which perform this function.

    • @mrvwbug4423
      @mrvwbug4423 Před 4 měsíci +1

      A monitor is a heavy gunship designed for use in estuaries and close littoral areas, mostly a defensive ship to protect ports and estuaries from enemy incursion. They usually have a shallow draft and low freeboard to operate in shallow water and keep a low target profile, so are not stable in heavy seas.

  • @minhmeo9506
    @minhmeo9506 Před 4 měsíci +17

    As far as I know, South Korea is the first country to start building a real Arsenal ship. Will this open up a new Dreadnought race?

    • @SnowmanTF2
      @SnowmanTF2 Před 4 měsíci +7

      One could argue the four Ohio class subs that were converted to hold 154 tomahawk missiles around twenty years ago were a trial of the Arsenal ship concept, even if it was no longer a surface ship.
      The issue with it becoming a race over SK building some, is the NK Navy looks more like a costal defense navy and not exactly active in building large ships, so they do not seem likely to be building one. The US is not exactly going to be threatened by SK building one. China has long enough range land missiles, it is not exactly needed till are sure can get outside the first island chain around them, plus the components of the chain seem who they are most likely to get in conflict with. Russia is hardly in a position to be throwing resources at this type of ship now, and even if peace were declared today could spend a decade or two just on replacing military equipment/vehicles that were depleted during the war. Japan has kind of toyed around with the concept for decades as well, but more recent comments imply may just go with more conventual destroyers instead.

    • @andrewmcalister3462
      @andrewmcalister3462 Před 4 měsíci +2

      This is probably the type of ship LEAST likely to open a dreadnought race. If you are concerned about the threat of an enemy arsenal ship, you will deploy submarines, aircraft carrying anti-shipping missiles, or missile interceptors. You would not deploy your own arsenal ship to counter it, as they are incapable of surface ship warfare.
      This is completely unlike the dreadnought arms race of the early 20th century, where the only counter to an enemy dreadnought battleship was a dreadnought of your own.

    • @jgw9990
      @jgw9990 Před 4 měsíci +2

      ​@SnowmanTF2 Those submarines cost about 20 times more than a surface ship. Further because they're just converted existing submarines, the ability to scale up numbers is limited. Building new nuclear submarines takes a LONG time as well. So they aren't the answer at all.
      Most of the benefits of an arsenal ship revolve around being cheap, as opposed to aircraft carriers. If you use expensive nuclear submarines then that selling point is lost.

    • @andrewsuryali8540
      @andrewsuryali8540 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@jgw9990Building nuke subs doesn't take that long. Build time for a Yasen is about 6 years, a Borei 5 years, and China can build 093s at 4 years each. The FIRST OF CLASS of any nuke sub is the one that takes forever to build, but subsequent copies and iterations take much less time to build. The current US issues with the Virginia-class being very delayed and slow to build are a reflection of the hollowing-out of the US shipbuilding industry, not a real metric of how long it actually takes to build subs. The exact same issues would crop up if the yards are told to build arsenal ships - or any other type of warship. The LCS catastrophe is a good indicator of how much fixing needs to be done in the US shipbuilding industry.

    • @jgw9990
      @jgw9990 Před 4 měsíci

      @@andrewsuryali8540 It's just a fact that building a nuclear submarine takes longer than a normal ship, I'm not sure why you'd even try and dispute that.
      The LCS are a very American failure. The military wanted a cheap basic ship. But everyone got hysterical about it not being powerful enough so added a load of stuff which made it too expensive. It should have been like a naval M113 APC, cheap as chips and providing basic capability.

  • @generalrendar7290
    @generalrendar7290 Před 4 měsíci +1

    CVN-6 USS Enterprise. It's my favorite ship ever.

  • @user-tn3om9wi9j
    @user-tn3om9wi9j Před 4 měsíci +1

    Oh my favourite ship is HMS Surprise from the Patrick O Brian novels!

  • @jarodarmstrong7836
    @jarodarmstrong7836 Před 4 měsíci +2

    My favorite ship is the KMS Scharnhorst, most beautiful ship in my mind. The "arsenal ship" was an idea when we were teenagers. In the old days, being able to send million dollar missiles down home was valued. Now we have to deal with multiple small threats, we need smaller missiles.

  • @willfrankunsubscribed
    @willfrankunsubscribed Před 4 měsíci +1

    A variant of this idea that was considered is to create missile launch systems that fit in standard shipping containers. Because of this, in the event of a future war, any container cargo ship could be used as an arsenal ship, by loading it with these missile containers.

  • @douginorlando6260
    @douginorlando6260 Před 4 měsíci +1

    If it can’t hide under water, then it’s gonna have a dozen hypersonic missiles coming in. And one missile can detonate a missile in a cell and create a blast wave that detonates all the missiles. Kinda like the Battleship Hood exploding from a direct hit on the magazine

  • @sgtrock68
    @sgtrock68 Před 3 měsíci

    The PT boats of WWII have always been my favorite since I was a kid. I built a model of JFKs PT 50 years years ago with a small motor meant to go in the water, but not RC. They were just a cool concept, cool construction, and cool kill stats.

  • @scottharper9645
    @scottharper9645 Před 4 měsíci +2

    The first mention of an arsenal ship was in a Syfy book 25 years ago. After the US was devastated in a world war and forced to defend the homeland from invasion, in order to do so it had to return to the sea. The concept was to build a few giant arsenal ships containing 100,000 intelligent missiles each that could overwhelm any naval fleet sent against the US. Easier to build several million missiles then hundreds of ships filled with a limited number of missiles each.

    • @mikehurst8223
      @mikehurst8223 Před 3 měsíci

      @scottharper9645 can you please mention the name of the book

  • @Sirilere
    @Sirilere Před 4 měsíci +1

    Favorite modern ship type would be an "assault ship."
    My favorite ship type of all time would be the "battle cruiser."
    An amphibious assault group would be well served by a naval force consisting of well kitted light carriers, assault ships and fast battle cruisers, escorted by a minesweeper/layer, missile frigates and multipurpose (ASW/AAA/Fire Support) destroyers. Supported by an appropriately numbered naval auxiliary group with supply ships, tankers, and a hospital ship.
    3 or 4 of these groups operating together would allow for the rapid invasion and securing of island chains, whilst the main fleets take care of the Op. Force fleets.
    Just the wild thoughts of an old marine and avid wargamer.

  • @oldgoat142
    @oldgoat142 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I read about this concept in an edition of Naval Institute Proceedings magazine in the mid-90s. I thought it was really, really cool. Too bad it never became a reality. I think it could be a real asset.

  • @harleycriswell8504
    @harleycriswell8504 Před 4 měsíci +1

    There has been a few updates to this concept. From what i understand the navy is looking as making this a drone type ship that would just follow along for cheap launch a bunch of missile and if it goes down we didn't lose any crew and hopefully it would be relatively cheap. Edit they are also looking at making them smaller. 100 missiles or so. And as a drone in theory submerge able

  • @andrewmcalister3462
    @andrewmcalister3462 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Basically this is a modern version of the early 20th century monitor - which was a cheap, unarmoured ship equipped with battleship guns for shore bombardment.

    • @chun-mailiu4329
      @chun-mailiu4329 Před 2 měsíci

      Yes, this is the 21st century Monitor. However, with the advent of AI, the autonomous stealth "Monitor" fleet may make sense, (solar powered?) if we can build them cheap enough.

  • @mclovinU2night
    @mclovinU2night Před 4 měsíci +2

    Remember when Canada had aircraft carriers. ,*sigh. Still rumblings of bringing back battleships. I think the idea of the autonomous ghost ships the navy is testing will basically be a smaller but numerous version of the assault ship concept.
    Favorite ship to read because of its captain- HMS speedy or USS Ranger.
    Favorite ship to look at - USS Missouri.

  • @dulio12385
    @dulio12385 Před 4 měsíci +1

    My favorite is the Georgis Averof. Closest thing there ever was to a one-ship navy that the Bismarck or Prince of Wales pretended to be.
    The arsenal ship isn't a bad concept, it just wasn't ripe for implementation back in the day. Cruise missiles were and still are expensive. Fast forward to today, a drone that costs less than a Honda Cub can blow up a tank or a building. I reckon the arsenal ships of the future will be much smaller, cheaper and be stocked with swarms and swarms of drones and you could vary their role from sea control to fire support just by changing the composition of the drones it carries.

  • @bitterblossom19
    @bitterblossom19 Před 4 měsíci +1

    It's like the designers and engineers played battletech and took the term missileboat to extreme irl levels.

  • @slmyatt
    @slmyatt Před 4 měsíci +2

    Author David Weber goes deeply into missile salvo warefare.

  • @Grafknar
    @Grafknar Před 4 měsíci +1

    I followed the concepts of the USN in the 90s. Played “Harpoon” on PC, etc.
    We really screwed the pooch disarming the USN in the GWoT. Make no Mistake - that’s what we did.
    We need multi-role CG’s NOW instead of LCS’s.
    An Arsenal Ship honestly back then… was the way to go in retrospect.

  • @CrassSpektakel
    @CrassSpektakel Před 4 měsíci +1

    Reminds me of the "Atlas Missile Boat" from "The Defence of Kailos", a military SciFi Classics.

  • @thomasromanelli2561
    @thomasromanelli2561 Před 4 měsíci +2

    The "arsenal ship" concept has evolved, and currently refers to a number of potential configurations: a single, large hull that is equipped with 150-200 VLS cells; a strike group of destroyers/cruisers (each carrying 50-100 VLS cells) with integrated sensors that can share targeting and guidance data; or a strike group consisting a single C&C hull coordinating numerous semi-autonomous platforms with VLS.
    One of the more interesting proposals at MADEX 2023 was the Joint Strike Ship concept from the ROK navy- a single hull capable of launching a number of missile types, including an erector system that could fire large, ballistic missiles.

    • @grahamstrouse1165
      @grahamstrouse1165 Před 4 měsíci

      China’s Sejong the Great class destroyers already have enormous missile magazines. I think their capacity is a 128 weapons. Not sure if that includes quad-back ESSMs or not. Even the Ticos can’t carry that many weapons.

  • @andrewsuryali8540
    @andrewsuryali8540 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Arsenal ship is making a comeback in the Marines's new battlebarge concept, although it does sound like someone there has been playing too much 40K.

  • @Music5362
    @Music5362 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Seems like a no brainer. I think it should be an auxiliary ship.

  • @boblawblaw892
    @boblawblaw892 Před 4 měsíci +1

    This was one of the proposals for the Zumwalts when the Navy was being indecisive on what the ships roles would be.

  • @jamesoldham9995
    @jamesoldham9995 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I actually had an idea for this quite some years ago. Basically just a small aircraft carrier, but the whole flat deck is just missile cells.

  • @kennyfox7055
    @kennyfox7055 Před 4 měsíci +2

    This is exactly what the U.S. military Need's

  • @miltonturney453
    @miltonturney453 Před 2 měsíci

    Love this idea

  • @Lndmk227
    @Lndmk227 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I think a ship like this could be useful in multiple roles. It doesn't take a lot of imagination to picture them launching swarms of drones or missiles. These ships could either be used for attack or to protect the rest of a fleet from attack. It isn't inconceivable that you could replace both DDG and CCG ships with a singular bombardment and escort-type battlecruiser. This thing alone could roll multiple surface elements of a naval task force into just one or two ships. Air defense, off-shore bombardment, and fleet attack, of course, were already mentioned.
    Or, imagine if you equipped these things with missile-launched torpedoes. They could serve in anti-submarine warfare. You could even conceivably develop something along the lines of a "point-defense" torpedo for intercepting incoming undersea attacks against the rest of the battle group. And if you made it modular you could have them equipped with any number of weapon combinations and swap them out at will. Hell, you could argue this ship would potentially be a task force all its own if outfitted with both offensive and defensive weapons.
    Or imagine lining the decks of these things with railguns. Talk about a modern-day battleship....

  • @Hughejazshole
    @Hughejazshole Před 4 měsíci +1

    Well done

  • @leegillow3475
    @leegillow3475 Před 4 měsíci +1

    thank you

  • @1Maklak
    @1Maklak Před 4 měsíci +1

    This looks like some kind of super weapon that an empire in an anime would field for it to be blown up by the protagonists.

  • @nadermansour7487
    @nadermansour7487 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I remember reading in a C.B. Colby book (anyone remember those?) in my elementary school library about a hovercraft or smaller ship the US Navy had which just had early missiles or rockets for shore bombardment.

  • @iangwaltney2316
    @iangwaltney2316 Před 4 měsíci +1

    USS Enterprise CV-6 the Gray Ghost. Pure wwii Era badassery