Type 26 Frigate (City Class) (RN) [News Only]
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Re: Type 26 Frigate (City Class) (RN) [News Only]
If they're bright they'll effectively eliminate one bidder and make the other two fight over the terms and IP.
In a 'the committee wants more detail on the industrial benefits of x any y bid' sort of a way.
In a 'the committee wants more detail on the industrial benefits of x any y bid' sort of a way.
Re: Type 26 Frigate (City Class) (RN) [News Only]
well it doesn't look like there's anything in tomorrow's papers. I've just watched a late-night review program and there's nothing about Sea 5000. So it doesn't look like any quick announcements are coming tonight.
Re: Type 26 Frigate (City Class) (RN) [News Only]
Gabby Costigan CEO BAE Australia talks to sky news australia, interview on 21st May :-
https://www.skynews.com.au/details/_5787550229001
https://www.skynews.com.au/details/_5787550229001
Re: Type 26 Frigate (City Class) (RN) [News Only]
Probably keep dragging it on qnd on for a few mts ,wouldnt surprise me if it autumn before they anounce the winning design .let the contenders sweat it out and hopefully they up there pqckage
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Re: Type 26 Frigate (City Class) (RN) [News Only]
New article on the competition from Save the Royal Navy, here it states that the results will be announced in June.. Janes was under the impression it would be this week. But still the midpoint of the year hasn’t been reached yet so who knows
https://www.savetheroyalnavy.org/austra ... t-success/
https://www.savetheroyalnavy.org/austra ... t-success/
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Re: Type 26 Frigate (City Class) (RN) [News Only]
They got a tour of the yard and saw the progress being made on keel units of Glasgow.. more importantly though, still no news of the SEA5000 winner, but apparently the decision has been made. I saw a tweet on May 31st saying the public announcement would be made in the coming week.. The end of the week has happened in Australia now so could be next week possibly? Is it usual for the companies to receive much advance notice as to whether they’ve won or do they usually find out just before the public announcement?
Re: Type 26 Frigate (City Class) (RN) [News Only]
Great to see the Australian contingent in UK learning about the T26 GCS and BAE digital shipyard technology. I believe the announcement on the SEA 5000 is due early next week - though this timing has changed several times.CameronPerson wrote:
They got a tour of the yard and saw the progress being made on keel units of Glasgow.. more importantly though, still no news of the SEA5000 winner, but apparently the decision has been made. I saw a tweet on May 31st saying the public announcement would be made in the coming week.. The end of the week has happened in Australia now so could be next week possibly? Is it usual for the companies to receive much advance notice as to whether they’ve won or do they usually find out just before the public announcement?
It would be odd to have an announcement of the FREMM or F-100 winning whilst Australian suppliers were at BAE UK shipyards looking at T26 construction progress and BAE shipbuilding approaches...
Re: Type 26 Frigate (City Class) (RN) [News Only]
One of the comments on this tweet states that the Canadian decision on its future combat ship, has been delayed by at least 18 months. Can anyone throw any light on this claim, as the only delay I have seen quoted 3 months, as below from 'Janes'CameronPerson wrote:
They got a tour of the yard and saw the progress being made on keel units of Glasgow.. more importantly though, still no news of the SEA5000 winner, but apparently the decision has been made. I saw a tweet on May 31st saying the public announcement would be made in the coming week.. The end of the week has happened in Australia now so could be next week possibly? Is it usual for the companies to receive much advance notice as to whether they’ve won or do they usually find out just before the public announcement?
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New acquisition procedure further delays CSC decision
Ian Keddie, Toronto - IHS Jane's Defence Weekly
29 May 2018
A new naval acquisition procedure meant to ensure more complete bidder proposals will delay a planned decision on the Royal Canadian Navy’s (RCN) future warship for another three months, the Canadian government has said.
Public Services and Procurement Canada (PSPC) originally planned on announcing a winning bid for the Canadian Surface Combatant (CSC) programme in the second quarter of 2018, but the PSPC now expects this decision to be made later in the year.
The delay is a result of complications stemming from an amendment to the request for proposals (RFP) that requires greater feedback between potential bidders and the government, and adds a new acquisition wrinkle the PSPC could use for other future programmes.
Unquote
Re: Type 26 Frigate (City Class) (RN) [News Only]
I think the 18 months delay comment is misguided and I've not seen that officially stated anywhere. The last Canadian government statement about the CSC procurement was that all three bidders had failed to meet some of the requirements for the programme and that bidders would be given a chance to address this before resubmitting.jonas wrote:One of the comments on this tweet states that the Canadian decision on its future combat ship, has been delayed by at least 18 months. Can anyone throw any light on this claim, as the only delay I have seen quoted 3 months, as below from 'Janes'
http://nationalpost.com/news/canada/new ... quirements
The amendment to the RFP process stated in your quoted article refers to a new "cure" phase whereby any failed bids have a chance to address compliance with requirements by changing their bids - which is the process currently taking place. What we don't know is if any of the bids have issues complying with any "mandatory" requirements, which may be difficult to address. If any bids don't meet "mandatory" requirements after the "cure" phase these are immediately discounted from the competition. Any remaining bids are evaluated according to assessment criteria - of which not meeting "non mandatory" requirements plays a part.
http://www.tpsgc-pwgsc.gc.ca/app-acq/am ... 7-eng.html
Re: Type 26 Frigate (City Class) (RN) [News Only]
does anybody know if the australian suppliers are visiting navantia then fremm after the bae visit .ie doing all 3 contenders yards whilst over this part of the world ,kinda makes sense if they don't know who got it yet or is it only suppliers tied up with the type26 bae bid ?.thanks
Re: Type 26 Frigate (City Class) (RN) [News Only]
The trade mission is for BAE UK, Thales UK, and Rheinmetall in Germany only. There's also a trip to Bourges, France for a more general overview on defence opportunties. Fincantieri and Navantia are not part of the trip.inch wrote:does anybody know if the australian suppliers are visiting navantia then fremm after the bae visit .ie doing all 3 contenders yards whilst over this part of the world ,kinda makes sense if they don't know who got it yet or is it only suppliers tied up with the type26 bae bid ?.thanks
http://www.manmonthly.com.au/news/austr ... es-europe/
Re: Type 26 Frigate (City Class) (RN) [News Only]
Article on two Australian BAE engineers who were working in Glasgow to develop skills and help 'Australianise' the T26 for the SEA 5000 bid:
https://www.createdigital.org.au/young- ... bat-ships/
https://www.createdigital.org.au/young- ... bat-ships/
Re: Type 26 Frigate (City Class) (RN) [News Only]
I was under the impression they had delayed so they could see how the US FFG(X) program worked out first. Now I've written that, I don't remember why I think that.jonas wrote:One of the comments on this tweet states that the Canadian decision on its future combat ship, has been delayed by at least 18 months. Can anyone throw any light on this claim, as the only delay I have seen quoted 3 months, as below from 'Janes'
Re: Type 26 Frigate (City Class) (RN) [News Only]
As appealing as the thought is I don't think I've seen anything official as to that effect, and US-Canadian relations are not exactly peaking at the moment. They have their own budgetary amd industrial issues to grapple with, I'd look to those first to explain a delay.Ron5 wrote:I was under the impression they had delayed so they could see how the US FFG(X) program worked out first. Now I've written that, I don't remember why I think that.jonas wrote:One of the comments on this tweet states that the Canadian decision on its future combat ship, has been delayed by at least 18 months. Can anyone throw any light on this claim, as the only delay I have seen quoted 3 months, as below from 'Janes'
Re: Type 26 Frigate (City Class) (RN) [News Only]
Regarding the trade visit by Australian businesses last week, I just realise there's a photo which also shows us the progress of HMS Glasgow:
Re: Type 26 Frigate (City Class) (RN) [News Only]
No wonder these vessels are costing an arm and a leg. The snail like pace that government has decreed they be built at, is nothing short of farcical. After a year of build there is not a great deal to show for it, no doubt the unions are happy as it gives them long term employment.
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Re: Type 26 Frigate (City Class) (RN) [News Only]
I'm delighted you can tell all that from one photo of one block under construction less than a year after contract awardjonas wrote:No wonder these vessels are costing an arm and a leg. The snail like pace that government has decreed they be built at, is nothing short of farcical. After a year of build there is not a great deal to show for it, no doubt the unions are happy as it gives them long term employment.
You can help me, what can you read from that photo of state of the other blocks?
How is the design proceeding towards reached the required maturity for the hundreds of thousands of cables?
How are the marine systems doing on the design reviews?
Which combat systems have made adequate progress towards factory acceptance tests?
Which of the millions of parts have satisfactory maturity?
Are the numbers of issues being identified from zonal reviews more or less than you expected?
A warship is not just a hull. It is not even a hull with some stuff added. Everything nowadays is interlinked
Re: Type 26 Frigate (City Class) (RN) [News Only]
@ACC told you so, na na na nah naEnigmatically wrote:A warship is not just a hull. It is not even a hull with some stuff added. Everything nowadays is interlinked
Re: Type 26 Frigate (City Class) (RN) [News Only]
Enigmatically wrote:I'm delighted you can tell all that from one photo of one block under construction less than a year after contract awardjonas wrote:No wonder these vessels are costing an arm and a leg. The snail like pace that government has decreed they be built at, is nothing short of farcical. After a year of build there is not a great deal to show for it, no doubt the unions are happy as it gives them long term employment.
You can help me, what can you read from that photo of state of the other blocks?
How is the design proceeding towards reached the required maturity for the hundreds of thousands of cables?
How are the marine systems doing on the design reviews?
Which combat systems have made adequate progress towards factory acceptance tests?
Which of the millions of parts have satisfactory maturity?
Are the numbers of issues being identified from zonal reviews more or less than you expected?
A warship is not just a hull. It is not even a hull with some stuff added. Everything nowadays is interlinked
Before jumping in and lambasting me, please read what I said instead of what you thought I said, Where did I mention that I was refering to the photo of one block, which as you rightly say shows very little.
So after a year we actually have two blocks joined together, not a snails pace then after we where originally told the drumbeat would be a vessel every two years. So refresh my memory on the new timetable instead of taking my remarks out of context. Nothing you have stated above is anything new, and would have been taken into account in the original build time frame.
As asked in Parliament :-
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“Can the minister please explain why it will take at least 8 years to build the first Type 26 frigate and what steps are you going to take to accelerate delivery of these warships, critical to our national defence?”
Unquote.
Yes I realise that the 8yrs mentioned is the time to operational capability, and not actual build time so please don't use semantics to justify the still inordinate delay.
I suppose you will roll out the answer that our priority is now the T31 (design as yet to even be confirmed) in favour of the much more capable T26.
https://www.savetheroyalnavy.org/why-wi ... ntil-2027/
Re: Type 26 Frigate (City Class) (RN) [News Only]
Another question may have been How long if successful in the tendering of sea5oo would the first ship have been built in comparison?
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Re: Type 26 Frigate (City Class) (RN) [News Only]
Jonas, you said:
And the question then remains, what do you know of all the other work?
I agree that the interval between ships could be less, but that is nothing to do with the time taken to design, develop, build, integrate and test the first
So, what are you referring to as not much to show if not the photo?After a year of build there is not a great deal to show for it
And the question then remains, what do you know of all the other work?
I agree that the interval between ships could be less, but that is nothing to do with the time taken to design, develop, build, integrate and test the first
Re: Type 26 Frigate (City Class) (RN) [News Only]
I suspect the focus was on the first sentence and not intended as a criticism of the shipbuilders themselves.
Alright, they the Type 26s are expensive, but they are designed to fulfill a difficult role, a role that requires an expensive top-end ship. Cutting individual unit costs could be done, but only if you could crew and pay for a vast fleet of single-purpose specialised vessels as the Royal Navy historically did. However without a major rethink of defence organisation and funding those days have gone and our modern vessels must be multi-purpose, lightly crewed, highly automated, long-legged ‘cruisers’ and with that comes an unavoidable high purchase price per vessel.
Also,what kind of message does it send to the Australian and Canadian governments when the British government is constantly back-peddling on the Type 26 order and is so desperate to trade its capabilities for the paper promises of the next low-cost frigate even though it’s currently little more than a sketch on the back of a fag packet!
I’ll stop ranting now.
If the government had shown a little more confidence in the the Type 26 rather than slashing the required number and ordering them in such a piecemeal fashion I’m certain the unit cost could have been brought down substantially.jonas wrote:
No wonder these vessels are costing an arm and a leg. The snail like pace that government has decreed they be built at, is nothing short of farcical.
Alright, they the Type 26s are expensive, but they are designed to fulfill a difficult role, a role that requires an expensive top-end ship. Cutting individual unit costs could be done, but only if you could crew and pay for a vast fleet of single-purpose specialised vessels as the Royal Navy historically did. However without a major rethink of defence organisation and funding those days have gone and our modern vessels must be multi-purpose, lightly crewed, highly automated, long-legged ‘cruisers’ and with that comes an unavoidable high purchase price per vessel.
Also,what kind of message does it send to the Australian and Canadian governments when the British government is constantly back-peddling on the Type 26 order and is so desperate to trade its capabilities for the paper promises of the next low-cost frigate even though it’s currently little more than a sketch on the back of a fag packet!
I’ll stop ranting now.
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Re: Type 26 Frigate (City Class) (RN) [News Only]
It would be interesting to know how much the five GP T26's would have cost bearing in mind the increased speed of the building process.Simon82 wrote:If the government had shown a little more confidence in the the Type 26 rather than slashing the required number and ordering them in such a piecemeal fashion I’m certain the unit cost could have been brought down substantially.
A very poor one and if we actually had T26's hitting the water now I expect chances of success would have been massively higher.Also,what kind of message does it send to the Australian and Canadian governments....
Carry on, I was thoroughly enjoying itI’ll stop ranting now.
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Re: Type 26 Frigate (City Class) (RN) [News Only]
I'm hearing that the T26 has won SEA5000..
News to be released soon.
News to be released soon.