Armada de Gran Bretaña
-
- Capitán
- Mensajes: 1299
- Registrado: 04 Abr 2005, 16:45
-
- Coronel
- Mensajes: 3306
- Registrado: 15 Feb 2009, 23:50
a615618 escribió:Éstos ingleses estan locos,
¡ 5.000 Millones de € por submarino !
Que burrada,
teniendo en cuenta que deberán estar en servicio 40 años aprox...
"Los tiranos no pueden acercarse a los muros invencibles de Colombia sin expiar con su impura sangre la audacia de sus delirios."...Simón Bolívar
-
- Capitán
- Mensajes: 1299
- Registrado: 04 Abr 2005, 16:45
- jupiter
- Comandante
- Mensajes: 1741
- Registrado: 25 Nov 2004, 22:39
TOPOTAMALDER escribió:And... escribió:a615618 escribió:Éstos ingleses estan locos,
¡ 5.000 Millones de € por submarino !
Que burrada,
teniendo en cuenta que deberán estar en servicio 40 años aprox...
pues dime cuanto nos salen la broma del s80 la unidad
No son submarinos comparables. Es como comparar nuestro PdA con un Nimitz
-
- Capitán
- Mensajes: 1299
- Registrado: 04 Abr 2005, 16:45
jupiter escribió:TOPOTAMALDER escribió:And... escribió:a615618 escribió:Éstos ingleses estan locos,
¡ 5.000 Millones de € por submarino !
Que burrada,
teniendo en cuenta que deberán estar en servicio 40 años aprox...
pues dime cuanto nos salen la broma del s80 la unidad
No son submarinos comparables. Es como comparar nuestro PdA con un Nimitz
yase pero calculo a ojimetro que el reactor no cuesta mas de 500 millones
pero claro si me incluyes que tienen que chuper del bote toda la industria naval britanica pues...
-
- Coronel
- Mensajes: 3306
- Registrado: 15 Feb 2009, 23:50
TOPOTAMALDER escribió:jupiter escribió:TOPOTAMALDER escribió:And... escribió:a615618 escribió:Éstos ingleses estan locos,
¡ 5.000 Millones de € por submarino !
Que burrada,
teniendo en cuenta que deberán estar en servicio 40 años aprox...
pues dime cuanto nos salen la broma del s80 la unidad
No son submarinos comparables. Es como comparar nuestro PdA con un Nimitz
yase pero calculo a ojimetro que el reactor no cuesta mas de 500 millones
pero claro si me incluyes que tienen que chuper del bote toda la industria naval britanica pues...
no son sub comparables, estos "muchachos" serán la disuasión nuclear del Reino Unido, el desplazamiento será mayor y me imagino que la autonomía será como la de los ASTUTE... en fin tecnología de ultima generación.... eso vale y mucho
"Los tiranos no pueden acercarse a los muros invencibles de Colombia sin expiar con su impura sangre la audacia de sus delirios."...Simón Bolívar
-
- Capitán
- Mensajes: 1299
- Registrado: 04 Abr 2005, 16:45
And... escribió:TOPOTAMALDER escribió:jupiter escribió:TOPOTAMALDER escribió:And... escribió:a615618 escribió:Éstos ingleses estan locos,
¡ 5.000 Millones de € por submarino !
Que burrada,
teniendo en cuenta que deberán estar en servicio 40 años aprox...
pues dime cuanto nos salen la broma del s80 la unidad
No son submarinos comparables. Es como comparar nuestro PdA con un Nimitz
yase pero calculo a ojimetro que el reactor no cuesta mas de 500 millones
pero claro si me incluyes que tienen que chuper del bote toda la industria naval britanica pues...
no son sub comparables, estos "muchachos" serán la disuasión nuclear del Reino Unido, el desplazamiento será mayor y me imagino que la autonomía será como la de los ASTUTE... en fin tecnología de ultima generación.... eso vale y mucho
cierto , cierto pero tampoco me negareis de lo de chupar del bote
-
- Coronel
- Mensajes: 3306
- Registrado: 15 Feb 2009, 23:50
HMS Daring fires Sea Viper for first time
The Royal Navy's flagship Type 45 destroyer, HMS Daring, has successfully fired her groundbreaking new air defence missile system for the first time.
http://www.mod.uk/DefenceInternet/Defen ... stTime.htm
The Royal Navy's flagship Type 45 destroyer, HMS Daring, has successfully fired her groundbreaking new air defence missile system for the first time.
http://www.mod.uk/DefenceInternet/Defen ... stTime.htm
"Los tiranos no pueden acercarse a los muros invencibles de Colombia sin expiar con su impura sangre la audacia de sus delirios."...Simón Bolívar
-
- Coronel
- Mensajes: 3306
- Registrado: 15 Feb 2009, 23:50
- Andrés Eduardo González
- General
- Mensajes: 30567
- Registrado: 05 Jul 2007, 17:33
- Ubicación: Bogotá (Colombia)
-
- Coronel
- Mensajes: 3306
- Registrado: 15 Feb 2009, 23:50
Andrés Eduardo González escribió:Lo único parecido que tendrá la Royal Navy a un portaaviones por los próximos 10 años...
estamos en 2011, luego si todo sale bien serán 8 años
"Los tiranos no pueden acercarse a los muros invencibles de Colombia sin expiar con su impura sangre la audacia de sus delirios."...Simón Bolívar
-
- Coronel
- Mensajes: 3306
- Registrado: 15 Feb 2009, 23:50
The unsung heroes of the Fleet are keeping the Navy's headline deployment of 2011 going thanks to an intensive spell off Cyprus.
Key to the success of Exercise Cypriot Lion, the first major test for the ships of the Cougar task group, has been keeping the front-line amphibious vessels and escorts constantly supplied.
The fortnight-long Exercise Cypriot Lion off the eponymous eastern Mediterranean island has just successfully ended.
And while most of the media coverage of the exercise has been focused on things that go whizz, bang and splash (helicopters, guns and landing craft/amphibious vehicles), none of it would have worked without the basics of food, fuel, ammunition, spare parts.
With four amphibious ships, two escorts and hundreds of Royal Marines committed to Cougar, long-term sustainability thousands of miles from the UK is key to the success of the deployment.
Over the two weeks of Cypriot Lion, Wave Knight and Fort Rosalie were very heavily in demand.
There were 25 replenishments at sea (or RASes). A dozen transferred dry stores – 232 pallets of food, ammunition and other goods transferred between ships by helicopter or jackstay.
http://www.royal-navy.mod.uk/operations ... ve_cyp.htm
Los Ejercicios navales de la Royal Navy en Chipre fueron a toda regla, ya parte desde Chipre el HMS Ocean con sus Apache embarcados
Key to the success of Exercise Cypriot Lion, the first major test for the ships of the Cougar task group, has been keeping the front-line amphibious vessels and escorts constantly supplied.
The fortnight-long Exercise Cypriot Lion off the eponymous eastern Mediterranean island has just successfully ended.
And while most of the media coverage of the exercise has been focused on things that go whizz, bang and splash (helicopters, guns and landing craft/amphibious vehicles), none of it would have worked without the basics of food, fuel, ammunition, spare parts.
With four amphibious ships, two escorts and hundreds of Royal Marines committed to Cougar, long-term sustainability thousands of miles from the UK is key to the success of the deployment.
Over the two weeks of Cypriot Lion, Wave Knight and Fort Rosalie were very heavily in demand.
There were 25 replenishments at sea (or RASes). A dozen transferred dry stores – 232 pallets of food, ammunition and other goods transferred between ships by helicopter or jackstay.
http://www.royal-navy.mod.uk/operations ... ve_cyp.htm
Los Ejercicios navales de la Royal Navy en Chipre fueron a toda regla, ya parte desde Chipre el HMS Ocean con sus Apache embarcados
"Los tiranos no pueden acercarse a los muros invencibles de Colombia sin expiar con su impura sangre la audacia de sus delirios."...Simón Bolívar
-
- Coronel
- Mensajes: 3306
- Registrado: 15 Feb 2009, 23:50
Apaches conduct operations over Libya
Apache Attack Helicopters, flying from HMS Ocean, conducted their first operational sorties over Libya last night as part of NATO's Operation Unified Protector to protect civilians under United Nations Security Council Resolution 1973.
Secretary of State for Defence, Dr Liam Fox, said:
"This was the first operational mission flown by British Army Apaches at sea. Their deployment from HMS Ocean demonstrates the flexibility of not just the aircraft, but also the Royal Navy's Responsive Force Task Group, held at very high readiness for contingency operations around the world.
http://www.mod.uk/DefenceInternet/Defen ... rLibya.htm
Saludos.
Apache Attack Helicopters, flying from HMS Ocean, conducted their first operational sorties over Libya last night as part of NATO's Operation Unified Protector to protect civilians under United Nations Security Council Resolution 1973.
Secretary of State for Defence, Dr Liam Fox, said:
"This was the first operational mission flown by British Army Apaches at sea. Their deployment from HMS Ocean demonstrates the flexibility of not just the aircraft, but also the Royal Navy's Responsive Force Task Group, held at very high readiness for contingency operations around the world.
http://www.mod.uk/DefenceInternet/Defen ... rLibya.htm
Saludos.
"Los tiranos no pueden acercarse a los muros invencibles de Colombia sin expiar con su impura sangre la audacia de sus delirios."...Simón Bolívar
- Mauricio
- Mariscal de Campo
- Mensajes: 25769
- Registrado: 21 Feb 2003, 20:39
Francia al rescate...
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/ ... rench.html
We should share aircraft carrier, say French
Britain and France are set to share an aircraft carrier as part of plans for far closer integration between the two navies, the head of France’s fleet has said in an interview with The Daily Telegraph.
Admiral Pierre-Francois Forissier also disclosed that the French navy was amazed by the swath of cuts last year that severely reduced the Royal Navy with the axing of aircraft carriers and Harrier jump jets alongside warships.
“From a French standpoint, I have to say that we were really stunned because the Royal Navy has always been a model for us and it is now faced with a very difficult situation,” he said.
He also highlighted the shortcomings of the weakened British fleet, suggesting that the Libya campaign could have been “more efficient” if there had been a second aircraft carrier in the Mediterranean. At present there is only the Charles de Gaulle. Its aircraft are responsible for more than a quarter of all attacks but soon it will need to dock for maintenance.
“If the UK did have another aircraft carrier in the Libyan theatre that would have been a support for the RAF because they would need less hours of travel and they would have been more efficient,” said the admiral.
“When you only have one carrier that means you don’t have permanent availability because of maintenance issues and, of course, it would be better to have two carriers.”
While France only has one carrier, it is possible that the second of two 60,000-ton British carriers being built could be shared by the two countries to be used only for training in a move that would save millions for both nations. Speaking at the French navy’s headquarters in Paris, Adml Forissier said: “If we have the necessary budget it would be useful to each have a national carrier then have an extra carrier — not as expensive and for training uses — for UK and French use.
“It would be useful to have a carrier in Europe for training pilots, otherwise we would need two carriers on both sides and I do not think this is economically feasible.”
British aircraft could fly missions off French carriers in the future, the admiral said. “When you carry out an attack it is the nationality of the aircraft [that is important], so potentially in the future you could have UK aircraft operating for a UK mission from a French base.”
With no Royal Navy carriers available for at least the next decade, the French navy will be a significant partner in helping train British sailors.
Adml Forissier said: “The Royal Navy has lost its know-how for 'catapult carriers’.
“To run a carrier to its full capacity you need 10 years [of training]. The challenge is to prepare ourselves during this 10 years so that when the Queen Elizabeth [the first 60,000-ton carrier] is ready it can be operable in a very short time.”
He also suggested French and British troops would eventually be needed in Libya for “humanitarian duties”.
The admiral added that more French sailors were learning English as a result of the agreement made last November between David Cameron and Nicolas Sarkozy, the French president.
“We need to represent European civilisation and values in a globalised world in which there are not as many Europeans,” he said. “We have no choice but to start working together.”
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/ ... rench.html
Imperialista entregado a las Fuerzas Capitalistas del Mal
¿Quién está conectado?
Usuarios navegando por este Foro: No hay usuarios registrados visitando el Foro y 1 invitado