The CVX Carrier: South Korea’s Entry into the Elite "Aircraft Carrier Club"

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  • Опубликовано: 25 апр 2023
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Комментарии • 784

  • @megaprojects9649
    @megaprojects9649  Год назад +33

    Play War Thunder for FREE on PC, PS®5 and Xbox Series X|S: playwt.link/megaprojects2023 Follow the link to download the game and get a massive free bonus pack including vehicles, boosters and more!

    • @simonteesdale9752
      @simonteesdale9752 Год назад +6

      Neat! Does the link also give access to leaked military secrets, or do I need Minecraft for that?

    • @BradLancaster86
      @BradLancaster86 Год назад

      I hope the long drive people contact you to do there adds for the BB

    • @jackfeist1193
      @jackfeist1193 Год назад

      Don't do it guys. It's not worth it

    • @matthowland3550
      @matthowland3550 Год назад

      @@jackfeist1193 darn, I was excited to try it

    • @TheDuckofDoom.
      @TheDuckofDoom. Год назад

      You have a bad habit of frequently trailing off into mumbling. It makes listening very difficult either on a modest volume or with fluctuating background noise.(Real world problems most sound editors seem to have forgotten about.)

  • @Operator8282
    @Operator8282 Год назад +302

    I am so glad that yo/your script writer did acknowledge the fact IF you want One aircraft carrier, you need Three, so even if two are in the body and fender shop, one is still kicking around.

    • @bryanst.martin7134
      @bryanst.martin7134 Год назад

      Survival mentality: One is none, two is one, and three is a good start. 11 is a catastrophe for an opponent. Average American doesn't hate anyone outside their country. Inside they are lead like mules to a carrot. Can't convince them to grow their own.

    • @R.J._Lewis
      @R.J._Lewis Год назад +23

      I see what you mean, but if you're using that kind of logic, how many carriers does Russia need? The Admiral Kuznetsov spends like three months at sea and then anywhere from 3-5 years between deployments broken, undergoing upgrades, or just on fire. Three surely won't be enough at that rate!

    • @Operator8282
      @Operator8282 Год назад +31

      @@R.J._Lewis If Russia wants enough carriers to be what they still think they are, then they need at least 15. That way they can have around one out on either coast any given year. Seriously, though, they really can't afford a Blue Water navy right now. But yes, given that they need to have around 8 with real world maintainance cycles, not their current abilities. 2 baltic/north sea, 2 black sea, and 4 pacific, to do what they want.

    • @kieranwalsh2058
      @kieranwalsh2058 Год назад +11

      Same applies for SSBNs too. Always gotta have one at sea for deterrence

    • @Operator8282
      @Operator8282 Год назад +5

      @@kieranwalsh2058 Those they have, but not as many as in the late 90's-early 00's. Only have a few of the old big ones going, but more than enough, I imagine. Also have a new boomer out, I believe, Boreiy class, I think?

  • @dc-4ever201
    @dc-4ever201 Год назад +40

    10:31 that is not a Queen Elizabeth Class carrier, that is a U.S. Wasp class amphibious assault ship.

  • @johannjohann6523
    @johannjohann6523 Год назад +43

    This makes alot of sense for S. Korea as they are already the number 1 builder of tankers and other large ship via Hyundai. Consequently they have some of the largest dock works in the world, and have the means to build a strong Navy with Aircraft Carriers.

    • @dianapennepacker6854
      @dianapennepacker6854 4 месяца назад +3

      Their destroyers are the best overall in the world. They can pump them out too.
      Honestly outside of size? South Korea has equipment that rivals or even surpasses the US.
      Their most modern tank is slept on. Their SPG is the best. The lady boys, world class👌. Wait that is Tailand.
      JP
      Anyway SK has the best ship building capacity pound to pound, and is not know for cheaping out like China.
      SK needs to come over, and teach USN how to build ships again to be honest.
      Their Stealth fighter though... I don't think it has internal weapon bays last time I heard. Sort of curious as to why. Surely they wouldn't make a 4.5 gen stealth craft.

  • @my72dart
    @my72dart Год назад +76

    That image of the "Queen Elizabeth Carrier" was actually USS Essex (LHD-2). Edited to remove 2nd.

    • @my72dart
      @my72dart Год назад

      @Caleb Johnson Good catch, you are correct. I guess I had always assumed it was the 2nd without ever looking it up.

    • @Thats_Mr_Random_Person_to_you
      @Thats_Mr_Random_Person_to_you Год назад +5

      Yh, pretty glaringly bad stock footage slip.
      Considering he was talking about how they partnered with Babcock and took a lot of inspiration from the QE class to not realise the stock footage didn't then show a ship that looked like the South Korean renders is a bit of a blunder.....

    • @jasonmcritchie2152
      @jasonmcritchie2152 Год назад +1

      It’s deliberate mistake to up comments.

  • @andersthomsen3409
    @andersthomsen3409 Год назад +329

    Heh... Clarrier Club...

    • @ericluffy7970
      @ericluffy7970 Год назад +8

      And my work here is done.

    • @lillyanneserrelio2187
      @lillyanneserrelio2187 Год назад +7

      5:45 really ur work is done with a comment about brown water?

    • @Aramis419
      @Aramis419 Год назад +4

      Ya beat me to it!

    • @tyler2827
      @tyler2827 Год назад +7

      He’s only human.

    • @TheHornet44
      @TheHornet44 Год назад +4

      @@tyler2827with a team, but nonetheless it’s still funny

  • @deanfirnatine7814
    @deanfirnatine7814 Год назад +214

    South Korea's helicopter carriers ARE capable of carrying fixed wing aircraft (F-35B vertical landing aircraft), they just need the upgrades like the two Japanese helicopter carriers got, that is a thermal (heat) protection deck coating, upgraded lighting and landing lines painted, upgrades that would literally only take weeks if you worked OT.

    • @doubledekercouch-gameswhat9677
      @doubledekercouch-gameswhat9677 Год назад +7

      There should probably be a different designation for ships which can only use vtols and ones which can use catobar/stobar methods

    • @FallenPhoenix86
      @FallenPhoenix86 Год назад +7

      ​@@doubledekercouch-gameswhat9677
      Not needed, taking the QE class and the CdG as examples, the method of launching/recovering doesn't change the fact that both are deploying fixed wing aircraft.

    • @IohannesCR
      @IohannesCR Год назад +1

      Weren’t there proposals to do so? Also claims the Dokdos are too small to support F-35Bs

    • @curtiswaters7415
      @curtiswaters7415 Год назад +13

      You forgot about refueling, rearming, and maintenance. Sure a helicopter carrier could CARRY an F35B, but it could not operate it without huge modifications unless designed for the purpose of operating them.

    • @megafauna8374
      @megafauna8374 Год назад +15

      To convert a LHD to a fixed wing carrier requires more than spraying a thermal coat on the deck. You also need upgraded (enlarged?) elevators, hanger bays, fuel and munitions stores and crew accommodation etc. It's a big job.

  • @joegordon5117
    @joegordon5117 Год назад +133

    The growing interest in various nations having a carrier is somewhat reminiscent of the desire to have a dreadnought-type battleship in the early 20th century. Larger nations had several, even smaller nations wanted at least one or two, partly for military reasons, but part of it was also the prestige of being in that club.

    • @DakkaDakka12
      @DakkaDakka12 Год назад +14

      Carrier is a base of operations, it can support ground forces with logistics, very accurate fire support, and it is a safe place to evacuate wounded to.
      A battleship/dreadnought can only provide fire support.
      Also a carrier can cause more damage to an enemy fleet than a battleship bc aircraft can cause more damage than cannon shells fired from a battleship, and a carrier can launch more aircraft than a battleship has cannons.

    • @RidinDirtyRollinBurnouts
      @RidinDirtyRollinBurnouts Год назад +14

      This is early 20th century geopolitics all over again. Weapons races and growing concerns about shifting alliances. Here's hoping those attitudes that led to WW1 don't reoccur this time.

    • @TheThundertaker
      @TheThundertaker Год назад +15

      ​@@RidinDirtyRollinBurnouts we thought we had learned a lesson from WWI about how arms races cause wars. Hitler showed us that ignoring another enemy rearming is an even worse idea. WWII might never have happened had Britain and France been better prepared and it certainly would have been over a lot quicker.

    • @triggertroy8266
      @triggertroy8266 Год назад +6

      ​​​@@TheThundertakerand just like WW2 Britain and many other countries around the world will be poorly prepared to counter aggression from China as most missiles and Long range artillery and ATGM's are being sent to Ukraine even the USA have said they are very low on a lot of smart missiles, artillery etc all the while China and Iran are continuously producing weapons but not using them.

    • @TheThundertaker
      @TheThundertaker Год назад +12

      @@triggertroy8266 yes, but the production lines are being geared up to be able to produce vast quantities of armaments, this gearing up is what really takes a lot of time, and now that we have had an excuse to gear it up, we should not be gearing down again.

  • @ignitionfrn2223
    @ignitionfrn2223 Год назад +113

    1:35 - Chapter 1 - Into blue waters
    4:00 - Mid roll ads
    5:40 - Back to the video
    8:05 - Chapter 2 - Design & development
    13:55 - Chapter 3 - The newest update

  • @Hoopaball
    @Hoopaball Год назад +17

    Korea has massive shipbuilding capacity and regional buyers.

    • @namyun2743
      @namyun2743 6 месяцев назад +1

      But no experience with carriers nor a working carrier doctrine. It feels like they're playing the "me too" game. But motivated more by the Japanese than the Chinese. Power projection for SK is out of the question. The Yellow Sea is too small to hide a carrier and the Japanese controls the sea between them to the east, and the Chinese to the west.

  • @jorgerodrigogomezflores5711
    @jorgerodrigogomezflores5711 Год назад +65

    Considering how long China is taking developing their first fully domestic aircraft carrier design, and the amount of huge container ships made by Korea, I’d say that if they go all they way with this, other nations might consider ordering the Korean carrier for their own navies.

    • @onapersonalnote7045
      @onapersonalnote7045 Год назад +6

      Incoming Polish carrier

    • @munshine101st
      @munshine101st Год назад +8

      Totally correct, and agree but by the year 2050. Korean population will have declined to the point where there would be a shortage of personnel. Unless, they train civilians.

    • @diollinebranderson6553
      @diollinebranderson6553 Год назад +2

      ​@@onapersonalnote7045 polish land vehicle carrier

    • @chrisnewsome2589
      @chrisnewsome2589 Год назад +8

      The RoK is working on being a key arsenal of democracy

    • @kaneo1
      @kaneo1 Год назад +3

      Carrier drone squadron incoming.

  • @georgegonzalez2476
    @georgegonzalez2476 Год назад +48

    A carrier is more like an iceberg. 90% is dependent on the crew and training and supporting ships. You can weld together some steel and it will look like a carrier but the most important elements are not steel.

    • @HemanthKumarJadhav
      @HemanthKumarJadhav Год назад +7

      Some steel?!! They are literally as big as a small city!

    • @JM-yh4yf
      @JM-yh4yf Год назад

      Crew an iceberg?

    • @deimosvoralius2988
      @deimosvoralius2988 Год назад +7

      Someone remembers the failures of the russian tugboat support ship

    • @Waverlyduli
      @Waverlyduli Год назад +2

      I take it you're not referring to the crew of the Chinese Casino Class Carriers. 9:57

    • @rockets4kids
      @rockets4kids Год назад +1

      Project Habakkuk

  • @matdrat
    @matdrat Год назад +12

    Also, S Korea has the some of the largest drydocks in the world.

    • @JohnLee-db9zt
      @JohnLee-db9zt 4 месяца назад +2

      Actually the largest dry dock.

  • @grapeshot
    @grapeshot Год назад +43

    I remember taking part in military war games in South Korea called Team Spirit.

    • @dougaldouglas8842
      @dougaldouglas8842 Год назад +1

      Nice one :)

    • @rexmann1984
      @rexmann1984 Год назад +1

      Camp devil dog. 2002

    • @not0l145
      @not0l145 Год назад +1

      My sleep deprived brain made that sound like teen spirit

    • @BruceMusto
      @BruceMusto Год назад +2

      been there done that myself in the 80's

    • @stanlogan7504
      @stanlogan7504 Год назад +1

      1977 and 1979 Team Spirit 8th Army

  • @darbarbs5628
    @darbarbs5628 Год назад +32

    You should make one on the creation of the first aircraft carrier

    • @melissasmith5109
      @melissasmith5109 Год назад +2

      The first purpose designed and built carrier HMS Hermes

    • @mho...
      @mho... Год назад

      i feel like thats part of another carrier video already 🤔 like nimitz or something?! to give historical background!
      but sure, i wouldnt mind a deep dive either🙃

    • @pussyslayer2295
      @pussyslayer2295 Год назад

      @@melissasmith5109 first commissioned tho was th ijn hōshō

  • @lucyfer7748
    @lucyfer7748 Год назад +50

    Interesting video.
    That said, Simon, over the different channels, I noted two constants:
    1. the background music is actually too loud and distracting, can it be toned down?
    2. every channel seems to have another volume setting, so the quieter channels require raising volume to understand you, and the louder channels are screaming afterwards. Can you equalize the volume over the channels?

    • @robertbernard6410
      @robertbernard6410 Год назад +2

      I agree with lucy fer

    • @Joze1090
      @Joze1090 Год назад +5

      He probably has different teams editing different channels. I'm just glad they listened when we all complained about the damn wavy affect over images. It was awful 😅

  • @BrandonSmith-yz5ul
    @BrandonSmith-yz5ul Год назад +4

    Minute 10:26, topic is queen Elizabeth aircraft carrier but the carrier shown in video is not a queen elizabeth carrier. They have two islands, that carrier only has one. I believe the carrier shown in video is the USS Essex, (LHD-2).

  • @julianmhall
    @julianmhall Год назад +32

    Important point regarding naval strength. The Royal Navy a few years ago claimed a strength of (IIRC) a hundred or so. However a closer examination showed the vast majority were patrol boats, and actual combat ships able to defend themselves numbered about half a dozen. It would be interesting to see of the world's navies how many /actual/ ships they had.

    • @srdxxx
      @srdxxx Год назад +6

      The RN is small, but not quite that small. They have six destroyers that do air defense, and about ten or so frigates for mainly anti-submarine defense, all of which carry _some_ anti-ship missiles.

    • @julianmhall
      @julianmhall Год назад

      @@srdxxx As I said that was a few years zgo

    • @stackhat8624
      @stackhat8624 Год назад +6

      Nonsense.
      4 SSBN. 6 SSN. 2 carriers, 2 amphibious ships, 6 destroyers, 11 frigates.
      Thats 31, genius.

    • @julianmhall
      @julianmhall Год назад +2

      @@stackhat8624 which bit of 'years ago' would you like me to explain to you?

    • @Ezekiel903
      @Ezekiel903 10 месяцев назад +1

      if you watch the World ranking, they still us only the numbers, i mean N. Korea is under the 10 strongest Navy?!?!? only bcs they have a lot of ships, numbers alone means nothing! you need to watch the Industrial power, for producing or repairing ships, Money, technology, education of the Sailor and so much more. We see it now in the Russo-Ukraine war, according to the numbers alone Ukraine should long have capitulated. btw, Chinese carrier was only 2 times at sea, since than he is in the dock, on satellite images we could see huge cracks on the deck and now they have placed the deck under a cover so we cant see what happens!

  • @robertmeyer6501
    @robertmeyer6501 Год назад +3

    at 10:30 thats not the queen Elizabeth class, that is the USS Essex, LHD 2, a Wasp Class Amphibious assault ship

  • @felurfalas4427
    @felurfalas4427 Год назад +67

    Having a bunch of smaller air craft carriers is probably the future of navy. Cant wait for a megaprojects episode on the inevitable flying drone carrier. lol

    • @zaco-km3su
      @zaco-km3su Год назад +4

      You mean can't? There's no such thing as a "flying drone carrier" and there won't be. It will be an aircraft carrier.

    • @felurfalas4427
      @felurfalas4427 Год назад +5

      @@zaco-km3su 1. Too lazy to apostrophe. Counted on autocorrect, but it failed me
      2. Obviously, I did not implied there was. The term is not correct, but I used it to differentiate from conventional aircraft carriers. The correct term is airborne aircraft carriers, and mark my words there will be because it is already being worked on.

    • @StephenJohnson-jb7xe
      @StephenJohnson-jb7xe Год назад +4

      I can picture a fast and relatively stealthy vessel capable of launching a swarm of small drones being pretty effective.

    • @grumblesa10
      @grumblesa10 Год назад +1

      Any carrier can use them, and have flown off Nimitz-class carriers for years now.

    • @felurfalas4427
      @felurfalas4427 Год назад +2

      @@StephenJohnson-jb7xe Right? If anyone has played AC7, is a good indication of the future. Once we have a breakthrough in battery tech to power larger drones, they are going to have real pilots train AI, which will then fly the drones autonomously. Airborne refueling means the carriers can remain deployed for long periods, and with data link, you can deploy, coordinate, and recapture the drones from multiple launch vectors. The tech is all there already. Just waiting for the batteries.

  • @dogbackwards7658
    @dogbackwards7658 Год назад +20

    You know you're a fun and nice nation when all your neighbours buy weapons specifically to keep you in check

  • @ericmason349
    @ericmason349 Год назад +7

    I am generally a proponent for aircraft carriers but for South Korea it makes sense. It put some of it's airpower that could be out of reach of North Korea. This could give the South a retaliatory strike as long as they were not in port at the time. I would hope that South Korea would have some ASW and picket ships to support this carrier. True, they would need 2 or 3 of these. Rotating one in port in maintenance, one for training and one at sea.

    • @daggaswiss
      @daggaswiss Год назад +3

      The South Koreans don't really consider the North specifically as a threat. Being able to project power, in alliance with the US, makes them a harder target for China. It's not so much about actually engaging in battle, but about becoming a force not worth the trouble. If China denies support to North Korea for an action, they're less likely to act.

    • @srdxxx
      @srdxxx Год назад

      I'm just checking...you are saying you are in favor of aircraft carriers and for SKorea especially they make sense?

  • @jameswyre6480
    @jameswyre6480 Год назад +13

    Well done show on a ‘tough to cover’ topic with more than a few variables still unknown. The South Korean economy does premium business in exports. Having their own clout on the spot in and around their crucial shipping lanes against the aggressively expanding Chinese navy makes a ton of sense.

  • @jsinope2786
    @jsinope2786 Год назад +8

    Hey Simon and gang. What about doing a video on the PBR ( patrol Boat River) developed for the Vietnam war. Built by a pleasure craft maker with Jaccuzzi jets and not one is left today.

  • @CdrMcNeil
    @CdrMcNeil Год назад +8

    10:25 Uhh… that’s the ESSEX, LHD-2, a US WASP-class. I had the privilege of being aboard QE when she visited Yokosuka, Japan on her Asia-Pacific deployment and can attest there are more than a few differences between the two.

    • @thepotato2761
      @thepotato2761 Год назад

      Thank you

    • @robertridley-fj8zz
      @robertridley-fj8zz Год назад

      Sorry didn't see you beat me to the punch there.

    • @CdrMcNeil
      @CdrMcNeil Год назад

      @@robertridley-fj8zz no worries. Will say the crew of the QE that I met were cool af. Trading coins and ball caps with them was quite something, and the carrier itself was pretty impressive.

    • @robertridley-fj8zz
      @robertridley-fj8zz Год назад +1

      @@CdrMcNeil I myself am British but have lived in the US for 20 years. Betw 2014 and 2019 I visited San Diego three times and on each occasion saw USS Essex birthed in her home port. A most impressive ship.

  • @Just_A_Random_Desk
    @Just_A_Random_Desk Год назад +4

    10:32 that's not a Queen Elizabeth class.

    • @jim2lane
      @jim2lane Год назад +3

      Beat me to it. That is the USN's Wasp class amphibious assault ship the USS Essex LHD-2

  • @robertridley-fj8zz
    @robertridley-fj8zz Год назад +2

    That ship at 10:27, titled as HMS Queen Elizabeth, isn't. I think it's actually the USS Essex (LHD-2)

  • @MrFredscrap
    @MrFredscrap Год назад +2

    @10:33.... thats not a video of the Queen Elizabeth CV....

  • @aroncanapa5796
    @aroncanapa5796 Год назад +6

    it seriously blows my mind humans figured out how to make such giant machines float

    • @micahphilson
      @micahphilson Год назад +2

      The floating's not actually that hard. They're incredibly heavy, but also massive. Because they're so wide and long, they displace so much water that they could actually hold a great deal more weight with no trouble.

  • @ytn00b3
    @ytn00b3 11 месяцев назад +8

    It's not just because of China and North Korea that South Korea wants its own aircraft carrier, South Korea surrounded by the seas - thus maintaining and securing open waters is their aim to secure the trade routes, maritime trade and marine/ocean resource and once off the S.Korea's shores it's very difficult to protect their interests thus S.Korea wants to operate aircraft carrier - perhaps two carriers.

  • @kyledabearsfan
    @kyledabearsfan 4 месяца назад +1

    When Russia says they have a new toy, nobody can believe it. When South Korea says it, i kinda believe them. Theyve had a really good arms industry in the last couple decades between tank/mobile artillery. I cant wait to see what they make.

  • @capnstewy55
    @capnstewy55 Год назад +68

    Having a carrier would be important against just North Korea, too. Forcing them to have air defenses along their entire coast alone would be enough.

    • @generalrendar7290
      @generalrendar7290 Год назад +12

      Or also having a mobile airbase that's difficult to target. Carriers are more about projection of influence than defense.

    • @matsv201
      @matsv201 Год назад +1

      North Korea is tiny, you can just fly around it

    • @hochibamabinladenhusainefe8191
      @hochibamabinladenhusainefe8191 Год назад

      ​@@matsv201 ok but who around NK would allow SK to use their air space for war.

    • @mattfleming86
      @mattfleming86 Год назад +5

      ​@@hochibamabinladenhusainefe8191 They are literally a peninsula........

    • @matsv201
      @matsv201 Год назад +1

      @@hochibamabinladenhusainefe8191 I don't think they are much worried about NK air resources. Its there artilery that is kind of dangerous

  • @williebauld1007
    @williebauld1007 11 месяцев назад +1

    They have the shipyards and know how to do it, SHI, DSME and HHI

  • @sergiodario58able
    @sergiodario58able Год назад +2

    It will be a co-developnent with Fincantieri of Italy. A few months back they already got together to draw a preliminary design.

  • @Corum.z.Dunajca
    @Corum.z.Dunajca 9 месяцев назад +3

    It's obvious that you need at least 2 carriers. 1 always at sea, if you have 3 then you're in comfort zone.

  • @davidodonovan1699
    @davidodonovan1699 Год назад

    Great video. Legends guys. Well done.

  • @jim2lane
    @jim2lane Год назад +11

    South Korea could save a ton of money and buy USS America class LHA's and use them as the US Marines intend to as Lightning Carriers with F-35B's. Both the ships and planes are off the shelf, so no development time required

    • @michaellim4165
      @michaellim4165 Год назад +3

      No. The purpose of a carrier is its wings. THe F-35B is terrible in weapons payloads and capabilities. Stealth is now a dead-end technology as adversaries take into account stealth in their radars and IR seekers. The next frontier is electronic warfare, namely radar jamming, and distraction. Not only is the F-35B terrible as a fighter, but it also costs too much to maintain and operate. But more importantly, the ability to service, maintain and replace parts all rests on permission from the US and Lockheed before any South Korean engineers and crew can do ANY service on it. Parts can take anywhere from weeks, months, and sometimes years before they are shipped to the country. This puts significant and sometimes critical wartime capabilities at risk. Therefore, even though the development costs and time will be a whole lot more, in the long run, a self-developed naval airwing like the KF-21 navy version is a much cheaper and more effective means of an aircraft carrier to go with.

    • @jim2lane
      @jim2lane Год назад

      @@michaellim4165 the F-35B is so terrible, I guess that's why nearly every one of our allies is standardizing on it

    • @arielalexandroarnaldo2238
      @arielalexandroarnaldo2238 Год назад

      @@michaellim4165 If South Korea develops the Boramae into a carrier fighter, it would be like adopting for mass-production the US Navy's proposed F-22 carrier version or HAL of India copying the Rafale instead of buying the F-18I Super Hornet

  • @kylehuber9397
    @kylehuber9397 Год назад +1

    Great video!
    Brown, green, blue water
    I learned a lot.
    Future request. Spacex super heavy booster with the launch pad and crane lift

  • @FLJBeliever1776
    @FLJBeliever1776 Год назад +4

    If South Korea wants more leverage in the Defense of Free Nations everywhere, more support from me and more power to them.
    Enemies are infinite in number, but friends are in short supply.

  • @kerentolbert5448
    @kerentolbert5448 2 месяца назад +1

    The US should invest in and become partners in R&D for Japanese and Korean aircraft carriers.
    As it was with WW1 and 2 the antagonists built up their militaries at a rapid pace before hostilities began. There were new developments in weapons that appeared to garner one party a advantage in the killing field. Though the aircraft carrier has been around for nearly one hundred years its potency has not diminished as a weapon of power projection, a floating air field.

  • @whateves5369
    @whateves5369 3 месяца назад

    Poo bear riding in the car always gets me

  • @iNT3RUT10N
    @iNT3RUT10N Год назад +12

    I think the AUKUS agreement would be an interesting megaproject. While the submarine design is still a few years away, the amount of other projects it's going to need is huge

  • @Waywind420
    @Waywind420 Год назад +5

    I could see this carrier being ideal for Brazil, Korea and Italy
    It's not as small as it seems, 20+ fighter jets + automated drones and helicopters a fair amount of force projection.
    It's the size of the Vikrant carrier or the Charles De Gaullle carrier🤷

    • @namyun2743
      @namyun2743 6 месяцев назад +1

      20 fighter jets is poor force projection. That's more a coastal defense air station. Can it raid? Sure, Can it duke it out with a country with more than a single defensive air station? Maybe not...
      On the size of carriers, by making it just 200 feet longer and 50 feet wider, with a little redesign of the layout, they can more than double the number of fighters it can handle...if they had that many to put there.

    • @Waywind420
      @Waywind420 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@namyun2743 Yeah you make good points.
      I still think the CVX is an interesting niche option.
      Like you said it's mostly going to be ideal for small scale conflicts or as a supplementary force for coalition fleets.
      Can raid, can protect shipping lanes, can contest the French, Russians and Indians anywhere globally, can transport aircraft to fixed locations, can deal with humanitarian issues, respond to natural disasters, support special forces activities etc.
      At the very least it would be useful for gaining naval expertise and as a technology demonstrator for a larger more capable ship in 30 years.

    • @namyun2743
      @namyun2743 6 месяцев назад

      @@Waywind420 Yes, that is perhaps the most important thing the South Koreans can gain from building the CVX; the experience in operating a carrier. However that is assuming their economy holds up and they are willing to afford this. Their GDP and defense spending is right around where 2, maybe 3 carriers begins to be viable.

  • @matthewwebster3143
    @matthewwebster3143 Год назад

    AirCLOFT CARRIER CLUB...SIMON?!?! you do so well not getting tongue tied haha, it was just funny, cheers!

  • @getnohappy
    @getnohappy Год назад +8

    Call me petty, but I wish nations engaging in 21st arms races spent more on their CGI

  • @t5ruxlee210
    @t5ruxlee210 5 месяцев назад

    A combined "Supertanker - Supercarrier" ! Why must I do all the thinking around here ! !

  • @deltavee2
    @deltavee2 Год назад +3

    Yes, three would be much better in spite of the fact that the Southern Korean Peninsula is, like the UK, a giant carrier in and of itself but I'm sure they have that part thoroughly sussed out given that their mortal enemy is literally on the other side of a line in the dirt.

  • @Johnnycdrums
    @Johnnycdrums Год назад +3

    Doubt it not, the ROK military is no joke.

  • @Shoelessjoe78
    @Shoelessjoe78 Год назад +1

    Tell me more about the Mongolian Navy 🍿

  • @aptech1119
    @aptech1119 Год назад +2

    F35B has STOVL capability. Short take off vertical landing Not vertical take off and landing

  • @jonthrelkeld2910
    @jonthrelkeld2910 Год назад +24

    The carrier's profile looks quite similar to Britain's Queen Elizabeth class. Which make sense since the UK seems to be quite involved with it.

    • @TalesOfWar
      @TalesOfWar Год назад +3

      The French played a pretty big role in the QE class carriers too, not that the government like to mention it lol.

    • @Statueshop297
      @Statueshop297 Год назад +1

      Please explain the french involvement?
      Is it more than ThalesUK involvement?

    • @aowen2471
      @aowen2471 Год назад

      @@Statueshop297 The original plan was for UK to have two carriers and France to have one. There was some minor design options for VTOL with a straight and Fixed Wing with an angled deck. For a while the UK even considered changing from F35B to F35C with an angled deck with France going with the Rafale.
      Some falling out over workshare, probably France wanted 50% but only purchasing 33% of the output but maybe other issues also, saw the two countries go their separate ways.

    • @robertpatrick3350
      @robertpatrick3350 Год назад

      @@TalesOfWar there’s a massive difference from concept to detailed design and construction.

    • @jonthrelkeld2910
      @jonthrelkeld2910 Год назад

      @@Statueshop297 Don't about any French involvement.

  • @bigirishpapa25
    @bigirishpapa25 Год назад

    bro! your beard is epic. Dig the content, keep up the good work.

  • @look-out-4-1-another
    @look-out-4-1-another Год назад +30

    I really hope South Korea procures some carriers. Long live South Korea & South Korean - American friendship. 🇰🇷 🇺🇸

    • @Emilechen
      @Emilechen Год назад

      the main adversary of South Korea is North Korea, carrier is not really the main priority of SK,

    • @alexjeon2180
      @alexjeon2180 Год назад +1

      @@Emilechen You are COMPLETELY wrong. I think a carrier is important for such a small battle zone like the Korean peninsula because it is 100% guaranteed that North Korea will strike South Korean airfields, hampering their ability to launch fighters at the start of an invasion. If you have a mobile platform, like an aircraft carrier, you will have surviving air assets to deny North Korean air strikes or mass airborne troop drops since North Korea would not be able to gain air superiority. Additionally, ground attack aircraft can harass a land invasion, slowing North Korea's advance and giving time for mobilization.

    • @ianchen8582
      @ianchen8582 Год назад

      @@alexjeon2180 and what’s stopping North Korea from hitting that carrier as well? Are they going to base it in Guam or Hawaii?

    • @alexjeon2180
      @alexjeon2180 Год назад +2

      @@ianchen8582 Air bases are stationary (i.e. they don't move). Aircraft carriers are mobile and harder to target and hit. North Korea doesn't have the capability to target and hit a moving ship at 30 knots hundreds of miles away with any accuracy from land-based missile sites. North Korea's navy is a joke with ships that are 50 years old and can't sail too far from the coast.

  • @echomande4395
    @echomande4395 Год назад +9

    Why is USS Essex (LHD-2) shown when you talk about the Queen Elizabeth class and Babcock (UK firm)?
    The japanese baby carriers have recently had their bows redone and are receiving modifications to carry F-35Bs.
    You should look into the new turkish amphibious assault ship Anadolu, which is being finished as a drone/UAV carrier for VTOL and CTOL drones and UAV/UCAVs.

  • @filipesilveira8319
    @filipesilveira8319 Год назад +1

    The Snail never lets my soul rest. I must grind moreeeee

  • @shannonmcstormy5021
    @shannonmcstormy5021 Год назад +6

    Just imagine what the human race could do if we weren't obsessed with fighting each other......

    • @emitindustries8304
      @emitindustries8304 Год назад +1

      Humans have been fighting each other since day one. It's what we do. Nothing has changed, except the weapons.

  • @TheFlutecart
    @TheFlutecart Год назад +3

    The Essex Class design was modified from WW2 until the last one retired in 1991 still flying A-4, A-6, T-2. Easily handle F-35B, maybe the C. Just build a new one with all the cool new stuff on it like better propulsion and electronic tech. One heck of a proven ship design. The new Japanese carrier resembles it a lot. They chose what works.

    • @namyun2743
      @namyun2743 6 месяцев назад

      Let's be honest, Lexington served as an aviation training carrier for the last 20 years of her service. We REALLY wrung the last drop of life out of her. To build a new nuclear-powered CATOBAR carrier that can handle even 30 aircraft might shave $2B, maybe 3B of their $13B price tag. If you make it conventionally powered, you could save another $1B to $2B, but you'll pay for that in increased operational costs well before her first decade of service. The new Japanese and SK carrier don't look anything like the Essex carriers after their 1950's refits. They don't have catapults and arresting wires either. Both those countries did the math and figured out they couldn't afford CATOBAR, much less nuclear catobar carriers on their navy budgets.

    • @TheFlutecart
      @TheFlutecart 6 месяцев назад

      @@namyun2743 Re-fit is easy on an Essex. Angled deck and all. I served two years on Lady Lex, the last two. What a badass crew. She's a museum on Corpus Christy by now. Iconic and not gone yet.

    • @namyun2743
      @namyun2743 6 месяцев назад

      @@TheFlutecart Then get the people, funding and facilities to do it yourself. This isn't 1958. Just like it doesn't make sense to attempt to refit our battleships, it makes even less sense to try to refit any of our 80 year old museum carriers like Lexington, Intrepid, Midway or Yorktown.

  • @ioanbota9397
    @ioanbota9397 Год назад

    Realy I like this video so much

  • @benparker2522
    @benparker2522 Год назад +1

    now I want a megaprojects video about the Mongolian navy

  • @OPMDK
    @OPMDK Год назад +2

    The strategic argument for a South Korean carrier reminds me of the SLBM component of a nuclear triad, even if the north were to penetrate deep into the south’s land and/or devastate their bases on land, they would always have sea based forces to fall back on.

  • @ChristuckervoiceLEE
    @ChristuckervoiceLEE Год назад

    My friend works at Babcock here in Scotland!❤

  • @yurttgjk
    @yurttgjk Год назад

    i think future aircraft carrier is more like helicopter-carrier with drones submarines (drones) and some vtol jets or one with very short take-off and landing capabilities

  • @hankhillsnrrwurethra
    @hankhillsnrrwurethra Год назад

    Those white slides really blast when watching in the dark, aya

  • @rnish2958
    @rnish2958 Год назад +2

    Hope S Korea doesn't go the carrier route. It's a lot of money for a vanity project. If they really want to go toe to toe with China; I suggest something like a Virginia class submarine. This will require a massive technology transfer from the US or the UK. Essentially a deal Australia just got.

  • @Jasruler
    @Jasruler 10 месяцев назад

    This video’s script was extremely well written. The background geopolitics were very well presented.

  • @alantremonti1381
    @alantremonti1381 Год назад +2

    Love the ad, Simon, with a big billowing iron cross flag waving triumphantly behind the tanks... ... ... .. .. .. . . . .

  • @Saffi____
    @Saffi____ Год назад +2

    Im a bit sad he didn't mention the other design by HHI, which is also being considered.

  • @julianmhall
    @julianmhall Год назад

    Carrier technology has predictably followed aircraft development. Early aircraft didn't fly fast enough to need long runways to take off or land. Later they needed arrester hooks and wires for faster aircraft landing and catapults to launch them. Then ski ramps to assist the STO part of V/STOL. Technically a VTOL aircraft /should/ be able to land and take off vertically negating the need for arrestor hooks, and wires on the carrier, but of course if the vertical ability is stuffed for any reason it's essential as a backup system.

  • @gideonhorwitz9434
    @gideonhorwitz9434 Год назад +5

    I recently came back from a 2 week trip to South Korea the scale of the U.S involvement is absolutely nuts.
    I was lucky to be visiting my bro who was already stationed there so we lived with him on on of the largest bases.
    I had the impression that with at least 100,000 service men in a country of 51.74 million the visual U.S presence would be subtle or limited but no South Korea models it’s military culture closely to the U.S and it was everywhere we went. Wandering on the streets of Seoul- Pyongtek it was a frequent sight to see at least one U.S servicemen per 10 ROKA solders wandering around.
    Living on a active military base being around sensitive hardware and active facilities there’s few details I can divulge in good conscious but let’s just say the military presence is extensive and active every day as it is technically a war zone.

    • @ericsohn5084
      @ericsohn5084 Год назад +1

      You are basing off of a single US base that is the biggest US base in Pacific. ROK Army alone has 500K active personnel with 1-2mil Reserves. Korea is capable of its own defense without the 20K US force. US force is a symbol of US-ROK alliance and also an insurance; it's for mutual benefits to contain NK and China.

    • @jimreilly917
      @jimreilly917 7 месяцев назад

      It is..land the DMZ actually flares hot sometimes. Not as often as 80s or before, but still with shots fired on occasion.

  • @cammei97
    @cammei97 Год назад

    At 10:24 that's not a queen Elizabeth class carrier, its a US amphibious assault ship

  • @droid1008
    @droid1008 Год назад +2

    The ultimate vehicle combat experience?
    nah
    the ultimate classified documents leaking experience

  • @captain-generalothinus3640
    @captain-generalothinus3640 10 месяцев назад

    Simon: "Faced with the specter of a rise in global hegemon, *_China_* ...
    North Korea: "Are we a joke to y'all?"

  • @bangdoll4500
    @bangdoll4500 Год назад +1

    In fact, what South Korea wants is not an aircraft carrier, but a nuclear submarine. The U.S. never allows NPT, and the U.S. recommends an aircraft carrier instead of a nuclear submarine (knowhow technology transfer = Bobcock)
    Because, the United States needs as many battleships as possible for the new cold war with China, so it has proposed aircraft carriers to South Korea and Japan, in case of emergency, to form a large fleet that even the fleet of its allies.
    The aircraft carrier fleet without nuclear submarines cannot sail in blue water, South Korea and Japan have no nuclear submarines, and the United States never allows nuclear submarines to the two countries, and as a result, the future Korean and Japanese aircraft fleets are lame.

  • @matthewhuszarik4173
    @matthewhuszarik4173 9 месяцев назад

    There are 100,000 ton super carriers that the US builds and 40,000-50,000 ton light carriers every one else builds. The US has those as well in their LHA and LHD.

  • @gary3801
    @gary3801 Год назад +2

    God made people, Colt made them all equal.

  • @visheshsarbhai8379
    @visheshsarbhai8379 Год назад

    11:54 thats wrong , ins vikrant is india's 4th aircraft carrier , its 1st indigious built not its 1st ever carrier

  • @ImmuneToTrollHate
    @ImmuneToTrollHate Год назад +2

    Don't under estimate South Korea as an economic and military power house
    They have done very well in the technology sector and have branched out into becoming a military equipment supplier
    I don't think they really need a carrier to deal with North Korea, but with China building 3 to try and stand toe to toe with the United States it makes sense for South Korea to put a thumb on that scale
    If for no other reason than to keep the peace in the region

  • @dyingearth
    @dyingearth Год назад +3

    WarThunder, where classified documents goes to get recognized to settle arguments.

  • @boomergames8094
    @boomergames8094 Год назад +1

    You also posted one for a Russian carrier. South Korea actually has the time, money, factories, and technology to make it work.

  • @SuperFriendBFG
    @SuperFriendBFG Год назад +1

    War Thunder is great fun. Can be a bit tough at times. The customization is great, however the ability to put bushes on your tank works a bit too well as camouflage. It's not so fun when it is close to impossible to spot a tank that is shooting you. Bushes can also make it difficult to aim for a tank's weak points, which can be crucial for some tanks when faced with heavier armour.
    For all its flaws War Thunder is a pretty stand alone game. It allows for aerial, naval and vehicular combat in one neatly wrapped package.

  • @sladval
    @sladval Год назад

    Has Simon done a video on how military secrets end up on war thunder/Minecraft?

  • @darthwarspite8544
    @darthwarspite8544 Год назад

    10:30 That is not a Queen Elizabeth class carrier that is a U.S. Navy LHD.

  • @ydid687
    @ydid687 Год назад

    damn i love this seattle fish market channel

  • @crunks420
    @crunks420 Год назад

    Bonkers

  • @khathecleric
    @khathecleric Год назад

    They need more variants, not less. The base variant staple would still be several tens of doll. As long as Ragavan is above 20 bucks, we don't have enough supply and variants.

  • @rlicon1970
    @rlicon1970 Год назад

    I'm glad I can fast forward through commercials.

  • @ycplum7062
    @ycplum7062 Год назад

    Against NK, there is no need for a fleet carrier because NK does not have a fleet that can operate beyond its coast.. A couple of helicopter carriers is all they need for anti-sub missions, a potential threat from NK.
    However, a carrier would be helpful in securing sea lanes should the US become more isolationist and stop protecting the international sea lanes. For this mission, a light carrier with helicopters and a small flight of fighters is all SK needs. The fighters are mainly for fleet defense with limited force projection. Helicopters can provide anti-sub and anti-piracy capabilities.

  • @fritzkrakaz
    @fritzkrakaz Год назад

    ROKN is seriously looking into KF21N (Navy version of KF21) as aircraft. As KF21N is not a vertical takeoff aircraft and require a catapult, the size of the carrier is expected to increase up to 70.000t. This will be a very long-term program as they are still discussing if the carrier will be nuclear powered or conventional+hybrid. Also without nuclear submarines to clear the path, carriers are very much likely to be the sitting target for enemy subs. It seems the nuclear subs are a priority and not the carriers. Even if ROKN decides to proceed with carriers, they would need minimum 3 carriers for obvious reasons.

  • @th3lev1athan22
    @th3lev1athan22 Год назад

    They have ocean going destroyers and I saw one in San Diego

  • @SPR-Ninja
    @SPR-Ninja Год назад +1

    10:28
    Come on man, youre better than that. 🤦🏼‍♂️

  • @snowmochi1373
    @snowmochi1373 11 месяцев назад +1

    3:05 except South Korea always spend more than 2% of their gdp for military. 2% is what NATO members are required to do but consistently fails. So in a way, although South Korea did rely on US, it didn’t rely as much as most European countries all while rebuilding their economy from ruins. Remarkable

  • @jordanmay3287
    @jordanmay3287 Год назад

    I didn’t know the Queen Elizabeth class looked exactly like the Wasp class, neat

  • @jeffdege4786
    @jeffdege4786 Год назад

    At 0:30 we pan over an angled deck carrier with a centerline elevator. What ship is that? It doesnt have a USN hull number, and i cant think of any carrier built in the last 50 years with that configuration.

  • @ysonline
    @ysonline Год назад

    Strange I've not been getting reminders for this channel even though I have the bell checked.

  • @madsteve9
    @madsteve9 Год назад +1

    The big thing for South Korea, Japan, UK and Italy, is the lack of a really good carrier borne, AEW / AWACS platform.
    The Bell-Boeing V-22 Osprey, is the obvious choice for all 4 nations, (6, if Spain ever get their economy spun round so they can buy Lockheed Martin F-35B Lightnings, to operate off the Juan Carlos I. As well as, Australia, if they decide to convert the HMAS Adelaide & Canberra, or build a dedicated Carrier).
    The Aviazione Navale & Royal Navy Fleet Air Arm, operate the Leonardo AW101 Merlin's in the AEW role, but Helicopters are limited to an altitude of 15,000 feet. (The Higher you go the more, you can see).
    While the Grumman E-2C Hawkeye, operated by US Navy & French Aéronavale, has a limit of 34,700 feet.
    The Osprey's official limit is 25,000 feet. But that is for the commando assault version.

    • @smalltime0
      @smalltime0 Год назад

      Conversion of the Adelaide and Canberra would be such an expensive and time consuming exercise, that it would probably be easier just to buy a dedicated aircraft carrier. The decks on them aren't built to the standard of STOVL and lack the proper heat protection that entails. The ski ramp is just there because the Spanish design it is based off is a STOVL aircraft carrier and is needed for structural integrity of the design.
      They are marine assault and helicopter carriers. Australian naval doctrine ATM is support and recon, with a side of submarine warfare. Plus Australia has a proud history of being terrible with aircraft carriers - see HMAS Melbourne and its jinx.

    • @massimobernardo-
      @massimobernardo- Год назад

      would it be possible to convert an AW609?

  • @davec5153
    @davec5153 Год назад

    I can see them getting the cat&trap queen elizabeth class that Britain was going to build.

  • @PaulJohn01
    @PaulJohn01 Год назад +7

    Personally i think S. Korea would be better off putting more reources into building a large submarine fleet or mine layers or sweepers or a combination. 1 single aircraft carrier is not going to make a big difference and wouldn't be operational year round.
    Whereas a dozen subs would be more operationally useful.

    • @QuantumAscension1
      @QuantumAscension1 Год назад +5

      South Korea already has submarines, though. And sure, more couldn't hurt, but their capabilities are limited to a certain set of roles. An aircraft carrier opens up options South Korea otherwise wouldn't have.

    • @albert9772
      @albert9772 Год назад +4

      It's more because S.Korea relies about 40~60% of its economy in imports/exports. If there ever was a naval blockade on its trade routes, then it'll suffer incredible damage regardless of how many mines it has on its waters.

    • @PaulJohn01
      @PaulJohn01 Год назад

      @@albert9772 Indeed ! + are not most cities and ports in S. Korea within artillery range of the North ?
      So safely locating a carrier when it does need a port becomes even more of a problem.

    • @QuantumAscension1
      @QuantumAscension1 Год назад +4

      @@PaulJohn01 the Port of Busan is South Korea's largest port, it's well outside of North Korea's artillery, and being at the southern end of the peninsula it provides more egress options when leaving port. It would make far more sense to park an aircraft carrier there than in Seoul.

    • @PaulJohn01
      @PaulJohn01 Год назад

      @@QuantumAscension1 Agreed as to making more sense and being out of artillery range but what about the numerous missiles even N. Korea has ?
      N. Korea already mined Korean waters and i believe caused the sinking of a Korean ship before.
      Korea doesn't have that many options for protecting such a visible, powerful and expensive asset.

  • @enterprisegaming6980
    @enterprisegaming6980 Год назад +1

    @10:29 that is not a Queen Elizabeth class aircraft carrier...

  • @22steve5150
    @22steve5150 Год назад

    LOL, you showed the US Wasp class while describing the Queen Elizabeth class.

  • @richardhowells5804
    @richardhowells5804 Год назад +3

    Hey Simon, you may want to flip War Thunder the birdie. It's owned by a Russian Oligarch.