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But then we have to Canadianize the hell out of it. See also: AOPS, JSS, RCD...Yah but its a good reference design.

But then we have to Canadianize the hell out of it. See also: AOPS, JSS, RCD...Yah but its a good reference design.
We are not quite yet at the 'perfect is the enemy of the good enough' point....or are we?
Reference design more like "oh cool I like what they did here" as opposed to take the design and modify it. I'm pretty sure there is a different terminology but it escapes me at the moment.But then we have to Canadianize the hell out of it. See also: AOPS, JSS, RCD...
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I've heard 'particularized design' for minor changes, but we tend to make massive and significant changes, as well as minor ones. Slapping a giant radar on top of the mast for example, and changing an ASW platform to AAW come to mind.Reference design more like "oh cool I like what they did here" as opposed to take the design and modify it. I'm pretty sure there is a different terminology but it escapes me at the moment.
RAS post change was partially because we got different RAS posts, which didn't need the connecting structure for stability anymore. And the loading rail change was based on the German recommendation to do that as they found it very irritating that you could only use it when the ship was port(?) side to and would have to flip ship when stbd side to (might have my port/stbd backwords but you get the idea). That crane change I'm unsure of why... I can think of 5 reasonable and 5 unreasonable ways that might have happened.Bunch of weird ones in JSS, like taking out a connecting structure between the two RAS posts for 'visibility', designing out the deck crane that enabled the containerized hospital setup, and extending the loading rail to both sides (vice just one) all had major structural implications.
Topshee seems to want to keep the design talent we've generated in Canada sharp, so that seems to be something they are willing to put up with atleast to some degree.It’s a tall order to design, consult, line up suppliers and set up logistics chains, send a package out to potential builders, review the feedback, award a contract, cut steel, assemble, fit out and sea trial, send back to the builder for corrections, sea trial again and accept into the Navy in 5 years…
This sort of thing fundamentally isn't going to happen without a huge pivot away from the National Shipbuilding Strategy, it undermines the very purpose of the strategy. Davie has weaselled one of the Polar icebreakers into being primarily constructed in Finland and later sent to Canada for finishing, but they’ve done a lot of work to hide this fact from parliament and much of the public. They wanted to get into the NSS so bad, but their shipyard seems entirely unable to actually build much of anything right now.For the SK's to build some hulls and spend them over to us means, I assume, sending them somewhere in BC as I can't see us putting them on some ship transport and have them sailed through the Panama Canal and then up to Davie or into the great lakes to Ontario Shipyards because that would be the only other options.
Potentially, but it does seem that the interested and most likely successful parties already have their own reference designs to use.Yah but its a good reference design.
I understand and I agree with you.This sort of thing fundamentally isn't going to happen without a huge pivot away from the National Shipbuilding Strategy, it undermines the very purpose of the strategy. Davie has weaselled one of the Polar icebreakers into being primarily constructed in Finland and later sent to Canada for finishing, but they’ve done a lot of work to hide this fact from parliament and much of the public. They wanted to get into the NSS so bad, but their shipyard seems entirely unable to actually build much of anything right now.
I’m not sure where you are getting this information or hunch from, but I don’t recall Topshee ever talking about actually reusing equipment from the Halifax class. He’s frequently discussed wanting the CDC to have the capability of the Halifax class in a smaller package, but not actually using the equipment. As people have discussed either here or in other threads on the forum, it seems debatable if the process of refurbishing old equipment is worth the likely minimal cost saving versus buying new equipment and not worrying about issues.From what I can gather, Topshee is looking to basically 'take off' the entire weapons systems on the CPF and merely 'drop them' onto the CDC's. I get the feelingly that he's looking to reuse as high of a % of whatever is on the CPF's and to buy 'net-new' as little as possible. The hulls and the engines will be new, the rest will be recycled as much as possible. A hurdle to over come is the fact that the hulls will need to be Polar Class 6 and they will need to be built to naval standards, not commercial. Only 1 yard in Canada today has the ability to build a hull to a Polar Class standard and NO yard has yet to build anything to a naval standard (though I guess Seaspan might qualify as the JSS1 is in the water now - assuming that it was built to a naval standard and not a commercial one).