Thursday, October 24, 2024

PT Gunboat Reaction

Wow!  I mean … wow!  The almost universal reaction to the last post on a PT gunboat was to hugely upgrade it by doubling the size and adding large guns (up to 76 mm), anti-ship missiles, radar fire control, UAV aviation, mines, etc.  No one was content to let the gunboat be a simple, small gunboat with the missions listed in the post.
 
Speaking of missions, no one really objected to the mission list nor did they amend the list to account for their proposed changes in weaponry and sensors.  Instead, they instantly jumped to more and bigger hulls and weapons.
 
Does this sound familiar?  It should.  It’s exactly how the Navy designs ships.  They start with a potentially focused, common sense idea and then instantly double the size, add every thing  and every function they can think of, and gold plate the entire design.
 
Don’t get me wrong, I have nothing against discussing a large patrol ship (corvette) which is what almost everyone was describing (even the ‘you should look at xxxx’ references were, invariably much larger vessels), however, none of the proposed ships retained any real relationship to the original PT gunboat subject of the post.
 
Don’t understand why the Navy designs are always so bad?  This is why.  We did it, ourselves!
 
Re-read the post and then the comments and note the instant upsizing.  Not a single person stuck with the scope and missions of the PT gunboat.  Hey, maybe you didn’t like the gunboat idea.  That’s fine but to start designing a vastly increased substitute without modifying the mission list and CONOPS is exactly how the Navy gets it wrong.
 
This was an eye opener!  I honestly didn’t expect that.  I guess I have more work to do to hammer home the proper design principles.

42 comments:

  1. I think comes from American culture where we have to have better toys than our friends and neighbors. Good enough isn't good enough, have to out-do the other guy with more horsepower, more wattage, faster processors, etc.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's interesting that we cram all manner of extra, unnecessary stuff on our ships but the one thing we don't cram on is firepower. I could almost (but not) go for the gold plating if it was in the form of firepower. Instead, we add outlandish sensors, over the top crew comforts, unmanned everything ... but no firepower. I think that also says something about our society. It says that we've lost the combative, aggressive, confrontational mindset that allowed us to conquer a continent and build a country. Now, we've become passive, squeamish, milquetoast, societal leeches. How's that for some root cause analysis?

      Delete
    2. The British start with a decent design, then they nickle and dime to it death. Instead Gold Plating, they take systems out and mark them FFBNW (fitted for but not with),
      but hey we left space for stuff we have no intention of ever fitting.

      Delete
    3. "Don't cram on firepower"
      I think that is always a problem in peacetime. We don't really get how much firepower we will really need. Destroyer Escorts started the war with 1.1 inch AA and 3" main guns. By the end of the war we saw 40mms for AA and some were given 5" guns. The armament you listed for a PT boat was later war. The 37mm on the PT boats wasn't even meant for Naval vessels, it was meant for aircraft like the P-39 Air Cobra.

      I have no doubt that after the first Burke is sunk by enemy action, we shall suddenly see 3 or 4 CIWS or SeaRAM added, boxes of anti-ship tomahawks on the helipad, and someone screaming to dust off the blue prints for the 8" MCLWG so they can rush it into production.

      Delete
  2. Let's reel it in then. Mk VI got little mention the first go yet was held up as the modern PT boat. Aside from Mk VI, similar size ships:
    Swiftships has an 85 footer 26m for the Egyptian coast guard with a little more range and endurance since it doesn't need to nest in a well deck. Metal Shark also has a modified version of USCG's Marine Protector class which also has some more endurance, but less speed. Given we know Ukraine's Mk VI, if ever delivered, are to have 30mm rather than 25mm, I'd say fore and aft 30 x 173 is the modern main armament. If you use Mk 38 mod IV you get an M2 coax too. Again looking at the Mk VI, secondary armament are 2 M2s. Lets take that up a notch and use the 30 x 113 XM914 with coax 7.62 and ability to mount Javelin or 2 Stinger. Put a UAV jammer on it like the Baihrain FRCs or LMADIS. Ship will need to be a little fuller than Mk VI to provide some bunks. Keep a zodiak in a box and maybe a hand launched UAV or some loitering munitions in a box. Basically keep some of the what if designed into the Mk VI.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Okay, you've stuck somewhat closer to the original concept size of 80 ft so that's good. However, I get the impression that you've selected weapons independent of the mission(s). For example, the 30 mm fore/aft guns have no anti-air or land attack capability so what are they intended for? They could be useful against other very small boats. Compare the weapons against the mission list in the original post. You need to either select weapons for the mission list or modify the mission list to reflect the weapons (which is a backwards approach).

      The original mission list emphasized land attack and, secondarily, barge-busting type work. Thus, the WWII PT gunboat emphasis on explosive weapons like mortars, grenade launchers, cannons, and rocket launchers.

      Specific to the Marine Protector version, note the superstructure/cabin. It's huge relative to the size of the boat! Compare that to the cabin on the WWII PT boat which was vanishingly small and left lots of room for weapons. I've posted on ship superstructures and how they negatively impact stealth, visibility, and weapon/sensor placement and this class is a perfect example of those problems. Of course, the class isn't intended for combat so the designers had other goals in mind but the boat would have to be completely redesigned to be effective in the modern PT gunboat role.

      Delete
  3. In 1939 my father volunteered for the Royal Navy, keen to skipper an MTB (Motor Torpedo Boat). They courteously declined his offer mentioning the fact that he wore glasses. I suspect, though, they didn't want a married man who was nearly thirty. It was job for daring - one might almost say reckless - bachelors in their early twenties.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. This is very true. Have you ever read Gunboat 658 by Len Reynolds DSC. A very matter of fact description of exactly how brave/reckless they were. Very honoured to have discovered this when he was my headmaster back in late 70s.

      Delete
    2. Many thanks, anon. I had promised myself never to read another book on WWI or WWII. In hopes of making an exception for this book I have added it to my Christmas wish list. (I only hope I don't end up having to make it a present for my wife.)

      Delete
  4. I think all agree that our Navy should have a few dozen patrol boats for varied missions. Keep some at Bahrain, maybe some in Italy and Guam, then some on each coast for whatever. A dozen different configurations can be developed (counter-insurency, ship boarding, anti-ship, anti-air, CSAR, intel, EW. I'd man them with US Marines to give them a naval mission that no one else wants, and include two on MEU deployments. Then as the world turns the configuration and location of the boats can quickly change. In Iraq we learned these are vital for river control, and maybe off the coast of Yemen now.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. "I'd man them with US Marines to give them a naval mission that no one else wants"

      That's an excellent idea!

      Delete
  5. Include a couple of stinger launchers for anti air/missile defense and I think you could basically move forward with the WW2 configurations. Guns aren't great for anti air with the massive radars needed to guide them. Keep it simple. Most modern vessels don't carry any armor to speak of, 20mm and up could almost pass through completely without a fused explosive payload. At that height, you tear up the engine room and ruin the snipes day.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The basic Sidewinder heat seeking missile weighs just 90 lbs with three times the range and warhead of a Stinger. These can be mounted on a simple rotating pedestal and fired by one man in any direction. Here is a short video of loading one.

      https://youtu.be/jUYTLubjOT0?t=19

      Delete
    2. I once wrote about aircraft snipers, and small boats could do this. Sneak into what an enemy considers a safe area at night, maybe up a river. Hide and loiter until a passing aircraft comes within range, then shoot it down, and reload. I see they are 185 lbs missiles in my old article.

      https://www.g2mil.com/aircommandos.htm

      Delete
    3. "The basic Sidewinder heat seeking missile . . ."

      The backblast from something as large as a Sidewinder on something as small as a PT boat might be an issue. Unlike the Sidewinders, Stingers have a small ejection motor that pushes them to a safe distance before the sustainer kicks in.

      Delete
  6. I suspect some of the enthusiastic response was from seeing a navy warship properly, even powerfully, armed for combat.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Long time lurker, first time commenter, and only an amateur history fan, but I was going to post something similar. I think some were very disappointed by the 57mm on the Constitution FFG, especially given the recent footage of the 76mm in action, and projected that.

      But to go back to my original reason for intending to post, any suggestions on historical reading about the original PT boats? As a child a read a fiction book written in the 40s or 50s from my grandmother's house where the protagonist in the Philippines captained a PT boat, dated a nurse, the Japanese were stringing wires between islands to catch the boats, and they sank an escort carrier (!?) Wasn't until years later I tried to find name of the carrier and came up empty...

      Thanks to our host everyone for all the thoughtful analysis.

      Delete
    2. "any suggestions on historical reading about the original PT boats?"

      There is only one book to even consider. Everything you could possibly want to know about the history, development, weapons, tactics, operations, and construction of PT boats is in the book "American PT Boats in World War II" by Victor Chun.

      For a fictional movie, you might consider the John Wayne film "They Were Expendable". It takes liberties but offers some exciting action scenes and some basic understanding of PT boat operations. Plus, it's John Wayne!

      Delete
    3. ComNavOps, I believe the movie was based on a WW2 book, ending with the extraction of Gen. McArthur from the Philippines. As I recall, the PT sailors enjoyed watching the high Army brass on the voyage to Australia laying on the deck and puking like dogs from seasickness.

      Delete
  7. You once described one of my ideas as overbuilding a ship. In retrospect, the criticism was mostly fair.

    I saw a program in which a WWII veteran said if you were a young guy who enjoyed engine sounds, those PT boat diesels were a lot of fun at full throttle.

    The book America's First Clash with Iran: The Tanker War, 1987–88 by Lee Allen Zatarain covers the use of Mk III patrol boats to counter small Iranian boats. When not in use the boats would be placed on skids on the giant barges, or floating sea bases, the US Navy used at the time. Power lines would be run to the boats so if the sea base was attacked, the boats' Bofors 40 mm guns could be used for base defense.

    For a hypothetical Mk VII patrol boat outfitted for the anti-small boat role, the biggest gun could be, as AndyM suggests, a 30 mm chain gun. I'd prefer the OTO-Breda Fast Forty 40 mm gun with a single barrel, unless that is too much for an 80-foot PT boat. The boat also would have two GAU-19/A .50-caliber and two M134 7.62 mm Gatling guns. The idea is when fighting fast boats from a moving PT boat in uneven waters, the window of opportunity to put bullets on the enemy may be brief. That's the reason for rapid fire guns. The crew should be trained against remote-control speedboats as much as possible. The boat should have additional hard points for more weapons, including (but not limited to) the Mk 19 40 mm grenade launcher.

    Although this is a gunboat, it could have a trainable launcher mounting one or two 19-cell 2.75-inch rocket pods. This weapon could quickly saturate a speedboat's area if necessary. If someone up high thinks this boat is too low-tech, it could be made compatible with one of the methods to turn a 2.75-inch rocket into a guided missile. If the precision munitions run out, the ordinary 2.75-inch rockets would still work. If testing finds the rocket launchers to be a bad idea for anti-boat work (or just not compatible with the rest of the boat), install another gun in its place.

    This boat is not set up for the air defense mission, though if it can house the Fast Forty that would provide it with an antiaircraft capability. I've read elsewhere that 30 mm chain guns aren't set up for air defense, but the XM914 AndyM mentions has at least some anti-aircraft capability (apparently against drones). The boat could also carry handheld Stinger launchers for the crew. It is not intended for the land attack mission, though considering the MK VI - Gunboat Diplomacy article it could be pressed into that role (though it would not be as good as your dedicated land attack gunboat).

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. "could be pressed into that role (though it would not be as good as your dedicated land attack gunboat)."

      This is the key sentence in your comment. The various weapon fits you describe are pointless unless they're focused on a single, specific mission/function. For you, you seem to be focused on the anti-small boat role which was not the subject of the post but that's okay. If you want to explore/design an anti-small boat design, ask yourself what the best weapons for that role are? For example, rockets are probably a poor choice - unguided rockets are a horrible choice given accuracy challenges and obtaining and maintaining a guided lock is problematic, I suspect.

      A fire-and-forget Hellfire or some even smaller missile would be a better choice.

      "put bullets on the enemy"

      Bullets are a poor choice for boat sinking. They'll work - eventually - but in combat you want a quick result so you can move onto the next threat. Instead, think explosives. Perhaps the old Mk19 belt fed grenade launcher or whatever the modern equivalent is?

      You're also missing the fundamental concept about single function boats. For PT size boats, they're cheap enough to build in quantity which means you can afford to build specialized versions for each function. In my story, I didn't try to use a single boat type to carry out all the functions of the mission. Instead, I envisioned several different specialized boats. The key concept that makes that work is that they operate as a mutually supporting squadron rather than individually which is how most people 'design' ships. No one considers the squadron and then incorporates the changes that suggests. I suspect you've done that in your comment. You've attempted to design an individual boat that can do everything (and nothing well) instead of designing multiple specialized versions to operate as squadrons.

      What do you think? Is that a fair assessment?

      Delete
    2. "You've attempted to design an individual boat that can do everything (and nothing well) instead of designing multiple specialized versions to operate as squadrons.

      "What do you think? Is that a fair assessment?"

      Not in my view. The boat was envisioned for the anti-small boat mission. You think it isn't a very good concept, and you have your reasons. But the post specifically stated it was for the anti-small boat mission. It was stated it could be used for land attack and might have some anti-aircraft capability, but those were with weapons selected for the primary mission (the only exception being handheld Stinger missiles).

      The radar-guided Hellfire missiles would be better at defeating small boats. I don't know whether the 24-cell vertical launch system (VLS) designed for the littoral combat ships would be suitable for a PT boat or if a trainable launcher would be better.

      Delete
    3. At the time I wrote my first post, I was thinking of keeping the Hellfire missiles aboard the littoral combat ships and Carlton Meyer's diesel-electric corvette concept. Maybe the 24-cell VLS isn't too heavy (or wouldn't make the center of gravity too high) for an 80-foot PT boat. If a PT boat and Hellfires are compatible, that's great. They had heavy torpedoes on the deck in World War Two.

      Delete
    4. "But the post specifically stated it was for the anti-small boat mission."

      ??? Here's the relevant quote from the post:

      "Pivoting our thinking away from the ship-sinking role for the PT-ish boat (we’ll use the term ‘PT boat’ in a generic sense for the rest of the article) and keeping in mind that the most effective use was as barge-busting gunboats and ISR, we could easily imagine a very useful PT boat component in the Navy, today. "

      "You think it isn't a very good concept, and you have your reasons."

      I have nothing against a specialized anti-small boat design. I merely pointed out that if that was the case then a different weapons fit might be more appropriate.

      Delete
    5. Sorry, perhaps I should have used the word "response" instead of "post":

      "For a hypothetical Mk VII patrol boat outfitted for the anti-small boat role..."

      Delete
    6. Phil, thanks for the Tanker War reference. Had not heard of that before and will give it a read.

      Delete
  8. The best multi-role weapon our US Navy needs is to mount the turret of the Swedish (United Defense) 40mm LV-90 along with its small radar for anti-air, anti-drone, anti-missile, anti-boat. This is perfect for anti-whatever, much better than the current 30mm with no radar found on ampbibs and other ships. Here is video:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KgCm1bYiPJI

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you. That's probably more practical than a Fast Forty for a PT boat.

      Delete
    2. That's a potentially effective choice assuming it could be successfully marinized. You'll recall the German attempt to marinize the MONARC which was the turret from a 155 mm self-propelled gun. The attempt failed.

      The US attempt to mount the 30 mm gun on the LCS problematic, to say the least. I don't know whether the various problems have been successfully addressed yet or not.

      Delete
    3. "Fast Forty"

      As a point of interest, the WWII 40mm Bofors single mount on a PT boat weighed somewhere around 3000 lb (hard to find an exact number because it depends on the exact model). In comparison, the Fast Forty appears to have a weight of around 12,000 lb which is potentially problematic in a PT type boat.

      Delete
    4. ComNavOps, coming late to the dogfight, A ship of the same size as the PT boat, improved engines, possible replacement of the torpedo tubes with (short ranged, i.e. in visual range missiles), up gunning with newer same weight weaponry, a couple of tiny drones to look over something suspicious at close range. The mounting of Sidewinders (or even carrying Stingers) is good. Build one and find out what is needed to improve it.

      Delete
    5. Towards the end of World War II PT boat crews realized they didn' need the heavy torpedo tubes. They just lashed them along the sides and dropped them in the water.

      Delete
    6. "They just lashed them along the sides and dropped them in the water."

      Here's a link to a photo of a later war PT boat torpedo mechanism: PT Torpedo

      The alternate launch mechanism consisted of cradles that were used to secure the torpedoes and then roll them over the side upon launch.

      Delete
  9. Good idea in general. However, I wonder if it might be better, rather than operating these in the US Navy (at least in some areas), to transfer the up-gunned Mark 6 boats (either at low or no cost) to friendly nations who are on the frontlines in these trouble zones. Plus some training, if they want it. For example, in the South China Sea, transfer boats to the Philippines and perhaps Vietnam. Not sure about Malaysia - they seem like they may be getting a bit chummy with China.

    May also make sense to also transfer a smaller number of up-gunned Sentinel class cutters, which have longer ranges and better sea-keeping. For somewhat different missions.

    My impression (albeit a bit vague) is that sometimes some of the reluctance to use force in some of these areas is related to the reluctance of our regional allies to support it, fearing blowback on them. Giving them the choice to do it themselves (or not) may help with that?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. "fearing blowback on them."

      I think there's a definite fear of that and much of that is due to the inconsistency of US resolve. Occasionally we'll stand up ... for a moment ... but then we quickly revert to our normal passive appeasement mode leaving the other country to deal with the fallout.

      Conversely, if we would consistently stand up - forcefully when needed - then there would be no blowback because we'd be there to 'intercept' it.

      Good thought!

      Delete
  10. Eventually drones will prove to everyone that even now, guns aren’t obsolete and you never have enough of them in war

    ReplyDelete
  11. CNO, make a new post regarding of this plane https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/super-tomcat-21-new-f-14-tomcat-fighter-never-flew-207851?page=0%2C1

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Already did. See, "Super Tomcat"

      Feel free to peruse the archives. Lots of good stuff there!

      Delete
  12. I think part of the subconscious reason for the expansion of size and power from your readers and from the Navy is the same; People start thinking about what THEY would want to command or what THEY would want on their OWN ship. This results in overkill thinking. I am as guilty of it as anyone. Few of us want the minimum when we are subliminally thinking about our own ass being on the line.
    (This doesn't explain the LCS but does explain the Constellation class's growing debacle.)
    We love stories of genuine hero ships like the USS Samuel B Roberts taking on a task force off Samar but we forget it was sunk in process because that wasn't what it was designed for.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. "People start thinking about what THEY would want to command or what THEY would want on their OWN ship."

      That's fine except that the logical result is that every ship is a battleship with a supercarrier flight deck. I might forgive readers (not my readers, they should know better!) for wanting to load up a ship design but supposed professional naval officers MUST know better. Our WWII fathers understood all this and laid out proper fleet structure and ship design for us. All we have to do is follow the lessons they've given us ... but for some reason we refuse.

      Delete

Comments will be moderated for posts older than 7 days in order to reduce spam.