Russ2146 wrote:On the side location, I think I read that the launch time was something like 45 minutes. Also, is that an 11m boat?
I don't think either one. 45 minutes is probably for a novice crew, and I don't know, but I think it's a 7 meter work boat. The crane could probably handle an 11 meter, but the alcove might be an issue.
Incredible that you have to stop the ship to launch a boat.
Okay, a lot of words on small boat operations. I know, it sounds easy, but launching boats can be pretty hard, and it is always very dangerous. People can be broken, crushed, or killed any time. San Antonio lost a sailor to small boat ops.
http://www.caaflog.com/2010/11/08/uss-s ... acquitted/
Wake and the ship's crews' in ability to lower a boat on the level, the boat crew's ability to start the engines quickly enough to begin making way with the ship, unhooking the at least two lines attaching the boat to the crane, all while dealing with the ship's wake makes things very, very hard. You can get thrown over the side, front, or stern, or get crushed or decapitated between the boat and the ship.
Even the stern ramps on PCs and well decks are hard to deal with. The stern ramp you have to race up onto, quickly cut your engines, and hope you can secure the boat fast enough on the ramp so you don't slide off back into the water. This is very dangerous.
Launching or recovering from a well deck while the ship is underway is kind of wild and fun, but getting back in the deck while it's underway is a real challenge and scary. It requires a lot of focus on the boat crew's part, because things can go bad quickly. Driving into a moving well deck is like having the belt stopped while you are running on a treadmill. Once you get inside the well deck, you fly forward, because the water in the well deck is nearly still. Your forward movement to over take the ship goes from just barely overtaking it to the combined speed of keeping up with overtaking.
Even that being said, the US Navy does not usually have the courage to make way with a flooded well deck. The British have no problem with it, though. The boat deck would be even more unforgiving, because you are trying to drive onto ramps while dealing with the wash. You could deploy them, and the ship would look like it's pooping out boats, but getting back in would be really, really scary, especially in a little boat deck like LCS-1 has.
This leads me to believe that underway recovery in a boat deck like LCS-1 has would have to be done at very slow speeds. Trying to accurately make it into a cradle, straight and true without being at an angle or not going far enough or going too far up, is hard, especially underway.
Stern ramp seems like it would be faster, though you'd probably still have to slow the ship to minimize wake.
Yes, there is no doing 15+ knots and safely deploying or recovering boats from a well deck. A ramp would be pretty dangerous. You can easily lose someone over the bow of the boat as he tries to unhook the line holding you to the ramp winch.
Russ2146 wrote:Would there be enough overhead to get a Mark V or two in there?

lol stop that! Mk5s are too big.

That's 82' in length, so your bay would have to be 90-95' to house service them. I don't think even an LSD could actually handle one. It might fit, but working it...I doubt it
So all of that said...deck crane or stern ramp

...still working on it!