Time to stir up the pot again. Anyone remember this:

It's one of the many different Sea Control Ship concepts explored by the US Navy. The idea was to build a lot of smaller ships for convoy escort, anti-submarine patrol, and other missions where risking a supercarrier wasn't required. A few years later the US Navy sold those plans to Spain (Spain sold them to Thailand) and they became this:

Is it better to have a lot of smaller ships that can be easily replaced, or a few large ships that cannot? Are the US Navy supercarriers "too many eggs in one basket"? Weapons free... You may fire at will.

Time to stir up the pot again. Anyone remember this:
[img]http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/systems/ship/images/scs-1972-image01.jpg[/img]
It's one of the many different Sea Control Ship concepts explored by the US Navy. The idea was to build a lot of smaller ships for convoy escort, anti-submarine patrol, and other missions where risking a supercarrier wasn't required. A few years later the US Navy sold those plans to Spain (Spain sold them to Thailand) and they became this:
[img]http://www.naval-technology.com/projects/asturias/images/asturias6.jpg[/img]
Is it better to have a lot of smaller ships that can be easily replaced, or a few large ships that cannot? Are the US Navy supercarriers "too many eggs in one basket"? Weapons free... You may fire at will.
[img]http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/europe/images/r-11-asturias-DN-ST-92-01129.jpg[/img]
:destroyer: