carr wrote:
Each VLS cell must have room for exhaust handling/venting, cooling, electronics status monitoring, launch door machinery, etc. I don't have the exact numbers in front of me but the spacing between missiles in the VLS works out to around four feet or so. There's a cost associated with having every missile ready to launch and that cost is room.
Timmy C wrote:
Because the Mk13 magazine stores the missiles in concentric rings around the launcher like in a gun turret magazine, whereas VLS puts them each in their individual cells, each ready to fire. There's a significant difference between packing missiles as tightly as possible for storage versus packing them for firing with no physical preparations.
They both carry their missiles ready to use (as did the Mk26). The Mk13 (& 26) simply strikes them up onto the rail first, then they’re ready to fly. The exhaust system for the Mk41 is internal of the container which is about 2’ to a side, & the Mk13 holds is missiles in an elaborate Chain-link system (kind of like a sideways tank track with hooks, a similar system was used on the Mk26 but it wasn’t set as round).
The main difference in the mounts are the maintenance areas for the GMMs. The Mk13 had a cramped cubby hole in the middle, that all the maintenance had to be performed from, the Mk41 has huge gantries all around each 8-cell block (Ironic it has virtually no maintenance requirements to the actual cells). The cells themselves were much larger as well, as they were required to handle the RGM -109 Tomahawk (a missile about the size of a WWII torpedo). The Mk13 was never designed for such a large missile & couldn’t be refit for it (a whole new launcher would result from the attempt). Still the Germans fitted an 8-cell VLS forward of their Mk13 without removing it at all. As for it being round, any such refit would necessitate structural modifications to fit the new launcher (while your right that an “el-cheapo” refit would only allow 1 full rack (7’x14’), with full maintenance gantries, within the diameter (203”) of the Mk13) a proper rebuild would allow at least 3 to be fitted (that’s 24 tubes) & if the USN asked them nicely, I’m sure the manufacturer would be glad to build an independent (3 cell) loader arm which could be fitted just forward of the cells.
Having said that I still think the best fitting here would be the Mk49 RAM launcher with no reloads (21 on mount, which I believe is what’s planed). A Mk29 could also be mounted in this positions. If you place it a little forward you could also mount a pair of crossing Mk141s just ahead of the bridge (as someone previously suggested). The Mk75 cap-gun should be removed & replaced with point defense (though instead of 1-Mk15 amidships, a pair side by side (4 total) would be better).
The ships are old cheap tin cans that are not worth an elaborate rebuild.