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RE: OT: Russian carrier Admiral Kusnetsov - 2/9/2012 10:31:55 AM   
LoBaron


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quote:

ORIGINAL: henry1611

quote:

ORIGINAL: castor troy


100m and a ski jump is enough to start a fully loaded Flanker without a catapult?





Here is a picture of the ski jump.




I don't claim to know the mechanics but the linked video (at the :39 mark) shows a Su-33 taking off using the ski jump. It is admittedly not fully loaded, but you can see at :49 and again at about 2:48 that the jump is not fitted with a catapult.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7wxyYNoA_b8

As an aside, I like how the Russians use a real truck as their crash cart (at 2:45).




What also should not be underestimated is that the Flanker had one of the best thrust to weight
ratios at the end of the cold war, as well as the MiG-29K, the naval version of the Fulcrum.

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Post #: 91
RE: OT: Russian carrier Admiral Kusnetsov - 2/9/2012 1:34:20 PM   
JohnDillworth


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In related news the sister ship is also at sea, For China
http://freebeacon.com/china-tests-first-aircraft-carrier/

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Today I come bearing an olive branch in one hand, and the freedom fighter's gun in the other. Do not let the olive branch fall from my hand. I repeat, do not let the olive branch fall from my hand. - Yasser Arafat Speech to UN General Assembly

(in reply to LoBaron)
Post #: 92
RE: OT: Russian carrier Admiral Kusnetsov - 2/9/2012 8:59:26 PM   
AW1Steve


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From: Mordor Illlinois
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quote:

ORIGINAL: LoBaron


quote:

ORIGINAL: henry1611

quote:

ORIGINAL: castor troy


100m and a ski jump is enough to start a fully loaded Flanker without a catapult?





Here is a picture of the ski jump.




I don't claim to know the mechanics but the linked video (at the :39 mark) shows a Su-33 taking off using the ski jump. It is admittedly not fully loaded, but you can see at :49 and again at about 2:48 that the jump is not fitted with a catapult.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7wxyYNoA_b8

As an aside, I like how the Russians use a real truck as their crash cart (at 2:45).




What also should not be underestimated is that the Flanker had one of the best thrust to weight
ratios at the end of the cold war, as well as the MiG-29K, the naval version of the Fulcrum.



Anybody notice what kind of a helo is doing "plane guard" duty? Here's a hint. It's not a Hormone or Helix. It rather looks like a Sikorsky product.

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Post #: 93
RE: OT: Russian carrier Admiral Kusnetsov - 2/11/2012 1:30:48 AM   
Mobeer


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FROM ITAR-TASS news agency, 29 Sept 2011:
"26 shipboard fighter planes Su-33 and MiG-29 K"
"24 ASW helicopters -- eighteen Ka-27 and Ka-29, two Ka-27PS, and four Ka-31"

(in reply to John 3rd)
Post #: 94
RE: OT: Russian carrier Admiral Kusnetsov - 2/11/2012 8:05:42 AM   
LoBaron


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Mobeer

FROM ITAR-TASS news agency, 29 Sept 2011:
"26 shipboard fighter planes Su-33 and MiG-29 K"
"24 ASW helicopters -- eighteen Ka-27 and Ka-29, two Ka-27PS, and four Ka-31"



Well, it ain´t a Kamow, they build that stuff with double-rotors.


I first thought "Sea Hawk", but the tail rotor looks too low somehow.

Ah, skip that, is it a Seahawk?

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Post #: 95
RE: OT: Russian carrier Admiral Kusnetsov - 2/11/2012 9:42:41 AM   
Mobeer


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Oops - previous message on the air wing was meant to be a reply to John 3rd on "How many planes and helicopters is that CV rated at?"



As far as identifying the helicopter, does this caption help:

The Russian Aircraft Carrier Adm. Kuznetsov became the meeting place for the First Deputy Commander of the Russian Navy and the Commander of the U.S. Navy's Sixth Fleet as it steamed in the Mediterranean Sea on Jan. 7, 1996. Russian Adm. Igor Kasatonov invited Vice Adm. Donald L. Pilling, U.S. Navy, aboard the Russian carrier to discuss potential professional contacts between the two navies during the Adm. Kuznetsov deployment in the Mediterranean. The American delegation was hosted to a tour of the ship, a display of embarked aircraft and a traditional Russian meal. The Russian carrier is in the Mediterranean to show the flag and help commemorate the Russian Navy's 300th anniversary. U.S. Navy photograph.

(in reply to LoBaron)
Post #: 96
RE: OT: Russian carrier Admiral Kusnetsov - 2/11/2012 10:11:50 AM   
LoBaron


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Ahhh...sneaky!

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Post #: 97
RE: OT: Russian carrier Admiral Kusnetsov - 2/11/2012 1:38:47 PM   
whippleofd

 

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quote:

And of course during "Praying Mantis" more than 1/2 of the Iranian Navy was wiped out by the Enterprise Strike group, some detached DD's and a couple of sticks of wayward Seals. That was a weekend project.


Shipmate:

I was x-decked to CG-28 two days before for work on their 8K evap. and I recommend you get your "facts" straight. You can start here:

- It wasn't "1/2 the Iranian Navy".
- They weren't "wiped out".
- There were more than just "detached DD's".
- "Sticks of wayward SEAL's"? Seriously AW1?

"A weekend project."? Your flippant characterization illustrates you've never heard, "Missile inbound, port side. All hands brace for shock" for real. If you are going to use your service as a source of credibility I recommend you stick to what you actually know rather than what you think you know.

Have a very fine Navy day,
MMCS



_____________________________

MMCS(SW/AW) 1981-2001
1981 RTC, SD
81-82 NPS, Orlando
82-85 NPTU, Idaho Falls
85-90 USS Truxtun (CGN-35)
90-93 USS George Washington (CVN-73)
93-96 NFAS Orlando
96-01 Navsea-08/Naval Reactors

(in reply to AW1Steve)
Post #: 98
RE: OT: Russian carrier Admiral Kusnetsov - 2/11/2012 2:14:15 PM   
AW1Steve


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Whipple

quote:

And of course during "Praying Mantis" more than 1/2 of the Iranian Navy was wiped out by the Enterprise Strike group, some detached DD's and a couple of sticks of wayward Seals. That was a weekend project.


Shipmate:

I was x-decked to CG-28 two days before for work on their 8K evap. and I recommend you get your "facts" straight. You can start here:

- It wasn't "1/2 the Iranian Navy".
- They weren't "wiped out".
- There were more than just "detached DD's".
- "Sticks of wayward SEAL's"? Seriously AW1?

"A weekend project."? Your flippant characterization illustrates you've never heard, "Missile inbound, port side. All hands brace for shock" for real. If you are going to use your service as a source of credibility I recommend you stick to what you actually know rather than what you think you know.

Have a very fine Navy day,
MMCS




If I've stepped on your feelings, I'm sorry. You are right , I wasn't there. I rely on histories and battle reports. So please, correct my oversights and let us know what really happened. I know that I'd be greatful.



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Post #: 99
RE: OT: Russian carrier Admiral Kusnetsov - 2/11/2012 7:11:52 PM   
sandman455


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Screw that - the MMCS should know its not with the effort on these twisted threads.

And he's an SOB for spoiling the rest of my lunch with that horrible phrase

"Missile inbound . . . all hands brace for shock."

Hearing that over the 1MC was upsetting enough during wargames and drills. Don't care to fathom what it would be like for real. Keep your horrors to yourself, senior.

Hope you have a nightmare of "man overboard +52 min" at 3am tonight.
/salute

_____________________________

Gary S (USN 1320, 1985-1993)
AOCS 1985, VT10 1985-86, VT86 1986, VS41 1986-87
VS32 1987-90 (NSO/NWTO, deployed w/CV-66, CVN-71)
VS27 1990-91 (NATOPS/Safety)
SFWSLANT 1991-93 (AGM-84 All platforms, S-3 A/B systems)

(in reply to AW1Steve)
Post #: 100
RE: OT: Russian carrier Admiral Kusnetsov - 2/11/2012 8:17:10 PM   
whippleofd

 

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Joined: 12/23/2005
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quote:

If I've stepped on your feelings, I'm sorry. You are right , I wasn't there. I rely on histories and battle reports. So please, correct my oversights and let us know what really happened. I know that I'd be greatful.


AW1:

This was a professional critique not a personal one. Therefore there were no feelings involved, only "facts" that needed addressing. They were addressed because if the "facts" of history are repeated often and loud enough they become accepted. I submit for your consideration Fuchida and the battle of Midway.

Again, have a very fine Navy day
MMCS




_____________________________

MMCS(SW/AW) 1981-2001
1981 RTC, SD
81-82 NPS, Orlando
82-85 NPTU, Idaho Falls
85-90 USS Truxtun (CGN-35)
90-93 USS George Washington (CVN-73)
93-96 NFAS Orlando
96-01 Navsea-08/Naval Reactors

(in reply to AW1Steve)
Post #: 101
RE: OT: Russian carrier Admiral Kusnetsov - 2/11/2012 8:28:07 PM   
whippleofd

 

Posts: 617
Joined: 12/23/2005
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quote:

Keep your horrors to yourself, senior


I have every intention of doing so. For those who haven't experienced it, no explanation will suffice. For those who have, none is needed.



_____________________________

MMCS(SW/AW) 1981-2001
1981 RTC, SD
81-82 NPS, Orlando
82-85 NPTU, Idaho Falls
85-90 USS Truxtun (CGN-35)
90-93 USS George Washington (CVN-73)
93-96 NFAS Orlando
96-01 Navsea-08/Naval Reactors

(in reply to sandman455)
Post #: 102
RE: OT: Russian carrier Admiral Kusnetsov - 2/11/2012 8:35:36 PM   
Durbik


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From: Krakow, Poland
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sorry I didn't bother to read all of the thread, but did someone mention that it's turbines are crap and faulty?

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obey the fist!

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Post #: 103
RE: OT: Russian carrier Admiral Kusnetsov - 2/11/2012 9:14:44 PM   
AW1Steve


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http://www.navyleague.org/sea_power/sep_03_45.php

http://www.navybook.com/nohigherhonor/pic-prayingmantis.shtml

http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/ops/praying_mantis.htm

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Praying_Mantis

http://www.usni.org/magazines/proceedings/1989-05/operation-praying-mantis-surface-view

Here are a few accounts, some very reputable such as USNI , some not so much such as Wikipedia. Where did I misrepresent the facts? If I did , again I apologize. Again, All I can go on are reports, articles , and books I've read , and a few of the people I had the chance to talk to. I'd like very much to hear the corrected story.

< Message edited by AW1Steve -- 2/11/2012 9:16:00 PM >


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Post #: 104
RE: OT: Russian carrier Admiral Kusnetsov - 2/11/2012 9:21:27 PM   
AW1Steve


Posts: 14507
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From: Mordor Illlinois
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quote:

ORIGINAL: Whipple

quote:

If I've stepped on your feelings, I'm sorry. You are right , I wasn't there. I rely on histories and battle reports. So please, correct my oversights and let us know what really happened. I know that I'd be greatful.


AW1:

This was a professional critique not a personal one. Therefore there were no feelings involved, only "facts" that needed addressing. They were addressed because if the "facts" of history are repeated often and loud enough they become accepted. I submit for your consideration Fuchida and the battle of Midway.

Again, have a very fine Navy day
MMCS






What aspects to Fuchida and Midway are you referring to? One thing I've learned from doing oral histories and interviews is that you can have four different people witness the same incident and give four different views. None of them necessarily wrong , just from a different perspective , with different amount of imformation. I once interviewed a surviovor of the Gambier bay who spent the action (and sinking) in axillary steering. His perspective was considerably different from a 20mm gunner , and both different than a TBM gunner. They might have been describing different wars, let alone the same battle.

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Post #: 105
RE: OT: Russian carrier Admiral Kusnetsov - 2/11/2012 10:19:02 PM   
vettim89


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Fololwed the USNI link. Possibly one of the funniest things I have ever read: The contact turned out to be a Soviet Sovremennyy-classDDG. The skipper, when asked his intention, replied with a heavy accent, "I vant to take peectures for heestory."

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Post #: 106
RE: OT: Russian carrier Admiral Kusnetsov - 2/11/2012 10:38:49 PM   
khyberbill


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quote:

I have heard the subs in operation today have the ability to sneak undetected w/in torp range of any CVBG and place torps into the screws of any capitol ship. So I figure the CV will go the path of the BB. I expect this to happen w/ in the next 3/4 years.


The US has had that capability for a long time with their nuc subs. Diesel boats present a problem as well, however, they may not be able to move fast enough to get that close in many cases. We "escorted" a CV to Mayport once and kept a steady pace of 20 knots with lots of course changes.

In 1972 the sub I was on was involved in an exercise to sharpen ASW skills for CV task forces. We got close enough to take pictures of the CV; so close a sailor on the carrier threw a grenade that exploded near our hull just outside AMR2 LL and scared the living daylights out of the feed station watch (me). Most on the sub hardly heard it except the sonar gang. In this particular exercise we were accused of cheating (try telling the enemy not to cheat-basically sneaking out of the exercise area and then back in) and had to surface and take on a full Captain to monitor us. We werent cheating, did not need to cheat. The TF we were attacking had the CV, many DD's and two attack subs of the same class as us (Sturgeon). They never got close to us on any of our attack runs.


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Post #: 107
RE: OT: Russian carrier Admiral Kusnetsov - 2/14/2012 3:27:10 AM   
whippleofd

 

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AW1:

quote:

Here are a few accounts, some very reputable such as USNI , some not so much such as Wikipedia. Where did I misrepresent the facts? If I did , again I apologize. Again, All I can go on are reports, articles , and books I've read , and a few of the people I had the chance to talk to. I'd like very much to hear the corrected story.


Only one ship was sunk. One bog was sunk. This hardly constitutes "more than 1/2 of the Iranian Navy".

Of all the surface targets engaged only the Joshan and one bog were sunk. The rest were mission kills and later returned to service. This hardly constitutes "wiped out".

A CG, DD, DDG, FF, FFG and LPD were involved. Only some of them were detached form the Enterprise BG.

From here: http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/wayward
way·ward - adjective
1. turned or turning away from what is right or proper; willful; disobedient: a wayward son; wayward behavior.
2. swayed or prompted by caprice; capricious: a wayward impulse; to be wayward in one's affections.
3. turning or changing irregularly; irregular: a wayward breeze.

Number 2 or 3 could be applied here and I don't believe either are correct for the description you've offered of the SEAL's involvement.

quote:

What aspects to Fuchida and Midway are you referring to?


Please read Shattered Sword chapter 24 and look up his name in the index.

In the immortal words of Forest gump: "That's all I've got to say about that."

HAVFND,
MMCS

_____________________________

MMCS(SW/AW) 1981-2001
1981 RTC, SD
81-82 NPS, Orlando
82-85 NPTU, Idaho Falls
85-90 USS Truxtun (CGN-35)
90-93 USS George Washington (CVN-73)
93-96 NFAS Orlando
96-01 Navsea-08/Naval Reactors

(in reply to AW1Steve)
Post #: 108
RE: OT: Russian carrier Admiral Kusnetsov - 2/14/2012 3:46:55 AM   
bradfordkay

 

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Since we are going OT with the Midway/Fuchida reference, I am going to come across as "heretical" in saying: Does it really matter if the Japanese strike package was being re-armed on the flight deck or the hangar deck? The crux of the matter is that there were munitions on deck which contributed to the conflagration.

_____________________________

fair winds,
Brad

(in reply to whippleofd)
Post #: 109
RE: OT: Russian carrier Admiral Kusnetsov - 2/14/2012 4:58:06 AM   
vettim89


Posts: 3615
Joined: 7/14/2007
From: Toledo, Ohio
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: khyberbill

quote:

I have heard the subs in operation today have the ability to sneak undetected w/in torp range of any CVBG and place torps into the screws of any capitol ship. So I figure the CV will go the path of the BB. I expect this to happen w/ in the next 3/4 years.


The US has had that capability for a long time with their nuc subs. Diesel boats present a problem as well, however, they may not be able to move fast enough to get that close in many cases. We "escorted" a CV to Mayport once and kept a steady pace of 20 knots with lots of course changes.

In 1972 the sub I was on was involved in an exercise to sharpen ASW skills for CV task forces. We got close enough to take pictures of the CV; so close a sailor on the carrier threw a grenade that exploded near our hull just outside AMR2 LL and scared the living daylights out of the feed station watch (me). Most on the sub hardly heard it except the sonar gang. In this particular exercise we were accused of cheating (try telling the enemy not to cheat-basically sneaking out of the exercise area and then back in) and had to surface and take on a full Captain to monitor us. We werent cheating, did not need to cheat. The TF we were attacking had the CV, many DD's and two attack subs of the same class as us (Sturgeon). They never got close to us on any of our attack runs.



Interesting tale there Khyberbill. Always nice to hear it straight from the horses mouth so to say.

I fear the situation in the Gulf is devolving into 1988. For those that say the Iranian Navy is not to be feared, remember that the score for Operation Ernest Will and related operations was two USN FFG nearly sunk (Roberts = mine, Stark = Exocet) and the darkest day in USN history when Vincennes shot down a civilian air liner. Yes, I know the Exocet was Iraqui, but it is related. Too many ships in too small of a space. What is the possible tactical advantage of the US CVBG operating in the Gulf at this point in time? They could accomplish their mission nearly as well from the northern Arabian Sea. The most dangerous weapon the Iranians have are their D/E submarines. Why go where they have the advantage? I have to wonder if the USN leadership is a little worried that diplomacy/politics are putting them somewhere they don't belong.

The best solution to the USN's quandary with the Iranian subs may lie outside of its own OOB. Perhaps our friends in the RN might lend a hand. I hear they are experts at ASW warfare. Or is that just an urban myth also?


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(in reply to khyberbill)
Post #: 110
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