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Title:
AIRCRAFT CARRIER
Document Type and Number:
WIPO Patent Application WO/1990/009311
Kind Code:
A1
Abstract:
A vessel able to deploy V/STOL aircraft, with: a hull (1), a main deck (2) with forward (3) and aft (5) exposed sections and an intermediate section (4) comprising a tenth to half the main deck; on the forward, intermediate and perhaps aft sections a take-off runway (7) with ski jump (8); a hangar (9) straddling the intermediate section and its runway portion and having walls (12, 13) supporting an upper deck (6) with functional items (16, 17, 22-26); pad/s (14, 15) on the forward and/or aft sections; an aft section area where aircraft park when others launch through the hangar; and perhaps items with other functions (18-21, 27, 28).

Inventors:
MALCOLM ANTHONY (TH)
Application Number:
PCT/AU1990/000053
Publication Date:
August 23, 1990
Filing Date:
February 13, 1990
Export Citation:
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Assignee:
MALCOLM ANTHONY (TH)
International Classes:
B63G11/00; (IPC1-7): B63G11/00
Foreign References:
US4325317A1982-04-20
US3785316A1974-01-15
US3000343A1961-09-19
US2405115A1946-08-06
US2381583A1945-08-07
US2349930A1944-05-30
Attorney, Agent or Firm:
Grant, Paul A. (P.O. Box 60 Fisher, ACT 2611, AU)
Download PDF:
Claims:
The claims defining the invention are as follows:
1. Claim 1. A vessel from which STOVL and VTOL aircraft can operate, comprising: ' a hull, propulsive system and such other items as are required to propel, navigate and stabilise the vessel; a continuous main deck extending along most or all of the length of the vessel in the fore and aft direction and divided into: a forward exposed section, an intermediate section comprising about one tenth to one half the area of and one tenth to six tenths the length of the main deck, and an aft exposed section; an upper deck on which a bridge, funnels, electronic equipment, masts, weapons and/or the like are located; a takeoff runway aligned approximately in the sterntobow direction located on the main deck on at least said forward and intermediate deck sections, said runway having a ski jump; a hangar of tunnel like construction open at both forward and aft ends straddling said intermediate deck section and the portion of runway upon it and having side walls extending in the fore and aft direction supporting a roof covering that section and portion, said roof being said upper deck and the walls having items leading to it; one or more pads, at least one located on said forward or aft deck section and at least partly on a runway portion if one is there; one or more parking areas, at least one located on said aft deck section and at least partly on a pad and/or runway portion if any are there.
2. Claim.
3. A vessel according to claim 1 wherein the said takeoff runway is located on all three said deck sections and the aft end of the said runway is located on the said aft deck section. Claim.
4. A vessel according to claim 2 wherein the said main deck and the said takeoff runway extend fully to the vessel's stern. Claim.
5. A vessel according to any preceding claim wherein pads are located on both said forward and aft deck sections. SUBSTITUTE SHEET Claim.
6. A vessel according to any preceding claim wherein the said ski jump is an upwardlyprotruding immovable structure located near, upon or constituting part of the vessel's bow.
7. Claim.
8. A vessel according to claim 1 , 2 , 3 or 4 wherein rhe, said ski jump protrudes forward from the bow, it being connected to the bow by means of a hinged rear edge and being movable' downwards on the axis of that hinged edge in a manner allowing pe "sk^ jump's forward edge to be brought to rest on a dock or beach aijd Vehicles to use it to travel between the main deck and the dock' of Beach. Claim.
9. A vessel according to any preceding claim wherein doors are fitted to one or both said open ends " of said hangar and/or wherein aircraft anchoring, servicing, arming, maintenance^ and/or like equipment is located and/or fitted in the said' H&ng r, said equipment being protected, removable and/or retractable into the walls, ceiling and/or floor if endangering aircraft launching.
10. Claim.
11. A vessel according to any preceding claim wherein one or more additional takeoff runways are located on the main deck, said additional runway/s being as long as or shorter tharf and located beside or partly upon the said takeoff runway, and/or wl erein one or more arch like, gantry like or additional tunnel like* structures straddle the said takeoff and/or an additional takeoff runway. Claim.
12. A vessel according to any preceding claim wherein part of the upper deck has an additional pad and/or parking area upon it. Claim.
13. A vessel according to any preceding claim wherefiϊ the side walls of the said hangar are open or can be opened in order 'Uo allow jet exhaust gas dissipation and/or allow accommodated aircraft to be moved away from the runway by allowing their extremities to protrude through the walls and/or by their moving through them to additional parking area/s located upon external sectio'n/s of or' Upon fixed or retractable beamwiseprotruding extension/s of the main deck.
14. Claim.
15. A vessel according to any preceding claim whereiιir one or more additional hangars for the accommodation, 'arming and/or maintenance of at least one of the aircraft tVpes d'eplpyed on SUBSTITUTE SHEET the vessel are located belowdecks, the means of aircraft transfer thereto being a lift, well and li fting device, ramp and/or the like. Claim.
16. A vessel according to any preceding claim fitted with at least one of the following arrangements: a retractable breakwater protecting a runway, pad, parking area or hangar; upright barriers on the main deck protecting equipment from damage in the event of aircraft accidents; a dra down device or a device for launching and/or recovering hovering aircraft; aircraft anchoring equipment; equipment for suspending or moving aircraft so they do not obstruct launchings and/or landings; a pad or parking area on a protruding deck extension; a groove, guiderail or railanddolly arrangement for guiding and/or anchoring aircraft; any arrangement commonly used on ships to assist STOVL or VTOL operations or similar to one above. Claim.
17. A vessel according to claim 12 wherein a groove inlaid in the runway and a device that forms part of an aircraft's wheel assembly constitutes the said arrangement, the said groove being narrow between the lips but wide at the base and the said device being retractable upwards and extendable downwards and having at its extending end an expanded head section with or without wheels, the said head and said base being such that the head can fit within the base and move along the groove but cannot escape the groove due to the narrowness of the gap between the said lips, the aircraft wheels above the groove and the device's head locked within the groove in combination anchoring the aircraft to the runway and guiding it during launching, ondeck movement and/or parking.
18. Claim.
19. A vessel according to any preceding claim the hull and propulsive system of which is that of a twinhulled, multihulled or foilborne vessel, a selfpropelled raft, platform or pontoon, an aircushion, surface effect or wing inground effect craft, or any other unconventional waterborne or amphibious ship, vessel or craft. Claim.
20. A vessel according to any preceding claim wherein there is at least one item of construction or equipment related to the STOVL or VTOL capability of the vessel which is purposely of a form that and/or there is at least one item unrelated to the STOVL and VTOL capabilities such that the vessel is provided with at least one capability other than its STOVL and VTOL capabilities, in relation to which said STOVL and VTOL capabilities the said other capability or the sum of said other capabilities is of a lesser, equal or greater importance or is of such prime importance that the STOVL and/or VTOL capability can be treated as a reserve capability only. Claim.
21. A vessel according to claim 15 wherein at least one of the following is a said item providing the said other capability: a medium or heavy gun or missile or torpedo launcher located on the main deck beside or abaft a runway or on said upper deck or another deck of the vessel or embedded within the main deck and provided with a cover allowing aircraft to move above it; a gantry, crane or boom beside, abaft, above or straddling a runway; a troop, vehicle or like deck; a tank deck with bow or stern doors; a docking well; a hold or liquids tank; a facility for replenishing other ships. Claim.
22. A vessel according to claim 16 wherein the said item is the said missile launcher embedded in the main deck, this being a vertical launch system and this being embedded on a part of the main deck on which is a runway, pad and/or parking area, the system's upper surface being level with the deck and so constructed as to protect the system during aircraft operations upon it. Claim.
23. A vessel according to claim 15, 16 or 17 wherein the size and general description of the vessel in combination with the said other capability or sum of other capabilities of the vessel are such that the vessel, when STOVL aircraft are not deployed on it, constitutes one of the following or a hybrid form of at least one of the following: a cruiser, a destroyer, an amphibious assault ship, a naval support ship, a civilian ship with a reserve naval role. SUBSTITUTE SHEET.
Description:
AIRCRAFT CARRIER

The technical field to which this invention relates is -that of aircraft-carrying ships. I is invention allows V/STOL aircraft operating in tiieir most capable horizontal- launching^ mode to be, 5 deployed at sea more widely and economically than at present by allowing their deployment on cruisers, destroyers, assault ships and support ships that currently cannot deploy them i , 4 ϊ iflt greater numbers on aircraft carriers the size of the current smaller carriers, on small carriers smaller than any current earners', and 0 on more versatile carriers with unconventional hull types, This is possible because the invention is a vessel with a novel combination of aircra -related features, a combination that is cheap, fits compactly on a single deck, requires mini mum use of machinery, requires development of no novel constructiop or flight operation l c j techniques, and lhat permits easy adaptation into a fgrm allowing r." i the vessel to be fitted as one of the above vessel types.

TERMINOLOGY

The following terms hereinafter have the following meanings. ft

"vessel" is a waterborne or amphibious ship, vessel or craft.

20 "hull and propulsive system" is the hull or equivalen (t an d th ■e m ψeans of propulsion of a vessel.

"CTOL aircraft" are fixed-wing aircralt like the McDonnell Douglas F/Λ-18 which launch and land horizontally in the conventional manner on a long runway or on a medium- length runway if assisted 25 by catapults and arresters.

"STOL aircraft" arc fixed-wing aircraft that launch and land unassisted horizontally on a short runway. "V/STOL aircraft" are fixed-wing aircraft like the British Aerospace Harrier that can launch and land unassisted both horizontally on a 30 short runway and vertically.

"ST0VL aircraft" are V/STOL aircraft when their manner ,ρf operation is to usually launch horizontally and to land vertically.,, "V/STOL-as-VTOL aircraft" are V/STOL aircraft when tijeir only manner

SUBSTITUTE SHEET

of operation is to launch and land vertically. "VTOL aircraft" are V/STOL-as-VTOL aircraft or aircraft such as helicopters which can only launch and land vertically, "aircraft" are CTOL, STOL, STOVL or VTOL aircraft. "take-off runway" is a runway on a vessel aligned approximately in the fore and aft direction and having unobstructed air space forward of its forward end so that CTOL, STOL and/or STOVL aircraft can launch from it. "catapult" is the device usually called that embedded in a take-off runway and used on vessels to assist CTOL aircraft launching, "ski jump" is the ramp usually called that located at the forward end of a take-off runway and inclined upward in the forward direction and used on vessels to assist STOVL aircraft launching, " landing runway" is a runway on a vessel aligned approximately in the fore and aft direction and having unobstructed air space above and abaft it so that CTOL and/or STOL aircraft can land upon it; in this specification, even if a such a runway is also a take-off runway, a landing runway will still be described as existing, "arresters" are the wires and nets usually called that located on a landing runway and used on vessels to assist CTOL aircraft landing, "runway" is a take-off runway or a landing runway, "pad" is a take-off or landing pad on a vessel, this being a level area of open deck and having unobstructed air space around it so that VTOL aircraft can launch and/or land upon it; in this specification, even if such a pad is no more than a section of a runway suitable for the launching and/or landing of VTOL aircraft, a pad will still be described as existing, "draw-down device" is the device usually called that located on a pad and used on vessels to assist VTOL aircraft landing.

"parking area" is a level area of open deck on a vessel where aircraft can be temporarily parked prior to launching or when their removal from a hangar is required; in this specification,

SUBSTITUTE SHEET

even if such an area is no more than a suitable part of a runway or pad, a parking area will still be described as existing, "hangar" is the structure usually called that on a vessel, this allowing the accommodation of aircraft; in this specification, even if such a structure is no more than a sheltered area, deck, tunnel or passage into which aircraft can move and in which they can park and be sheltered, it will be described as a hangar, " lift" is a lift for transporting aircraft between decks, the term here not referring to lifts not for transporting aircraft. "CTOL" vessel is a vessel with a take-off runway, a landing runway, a catapult, arresters and a pad. "STOL" vessel is a vessel with a take-off runway, a landing runway, and a pad. "STOVL" vessel is a vessel with a take-off runway and a pad. "VTOL" vessel is a vessel which can only deploy VTOL aircraft, "carrier" is a vessel a prime role of which is operating aircraft, "other-role" vessel is a vessel that is not a carrier.

BACKGROUND TO THE INVENTION

Known CTOL and STOL carriers share a common configuration: a hangar enclosed within a hull, a large flight deck on the hangar roof, take-off runway/s, landing runway/s and pad/s on that flight deck, lifts connecting the hangar and flight decks, and a superstructure off to one side of the flight deck. CTOL carriers such as the

USS Nimitz have catapults, arresters and, usually, several runways, some angled. STOL carriers such as HMS Invincible usually have a single through runway serving as take-off runway, landing runway and pad; they usually also have a ski jump because in practice they only operate STOVL and VTOL aircraft. Some 1930s carriers also had an additional take-off runway located on the hangar deck before the hangar, the rear portion of this runway being enclosed under the forward part of the main flight deck. A modern version of this type up-dated with catapults, ski jumps, arresters, etc for use by newer aircraft and an "assembly line" system within a large hangar for

SUBSTITUTE SHEET

fast landing, servicing and relaunching of large numbers of aircraft has been disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,325,317. Apart from the above vessels, another carrier is known, this being a STOVL vessel without a landing runway: a large container ship on which containers stacked before the superstructure form a flight deck with a take-off runway, a pad and a ski jump. A STOVL vessel is an adequate carrier because even STOL vessels in practice only deploy STOVL and VTOL aircraft. VTOL carriers are also known: some such as the French Jeanne d'Arc configured with a large hangar aft, a large pad atop it, and lifts connecting those decks; a carrier for V/STOL-as-VTOL aircraft with no pad but using a device developed by British Aerospace to release and recover hovering V/STOL-as-VTOL aircraft has also been proposed. Most VTOL vessels are not carriers but are other- role ships, usually small, configured in one of two ways: with a hangar on the main deck abaft the superstructure and a pad abaft the hangar; with only an aft pad. In contrast, CTOL, STOL and STOVL vessels are all large and, effectively, all carriers; this because all built or proposed have at least one of the following: a fore and aft flight deck with a superstructure beside it and therefore a wide beam; a heavy flight deck on the hangar roof and therefore a hangar of a construction sturdy enough to support it and a large hull to offset the resulting top-heaviness; a hangar enclosed in the hull and therefore a hull of wide beam; a hangar- deck with a take-off runway, that deck therefore being high above the waves; an in- line take-off runway and hangar or in- line take-off runway and superstructure and therefore a long hull; complex and/or heavy machinery like catapults, arresters and, especially, lifts. Being large and expensive, these ships have to justify their purchase by having one or more of the following that make them even larger and/or more expensive: permanent air groups as large as the ships can carry and which, because the ships are large, are quite large; full and comprehensive servicing and maintenance facilities; large fuel and weapons storage capacity; an all-weather capability and therefore a high-profile but still stable and thus

SUBSTITUTE SHEET

5 large hull. This overall expense means a number of other-role ships are not built. Carriers justify their expense and this forgoing of other ships with their air groups' potency; their expense, the forgoing of other ships and this potency in turn means carriers are both unriskable and a prime target to an enemy and therefore " they are either or both: armed and/or armoured and therefore even larger and more costly; provided permanently with heavily-armed escorts - making them more attractive as targets as elimination ="of a carrier leaves its escorts without air cover. Carriers befrϊg unriskable, such weapons, whether fitted to carriers or to escorts, ύre largely restricted to defense as carriers must stay as far as possible from an enemy; their air groups effectively being the sole offensive weapon. All this in effect means carriers are single-role vessels: even if as heavily armed as a cruiser, they will not undertake tasks a more expendable cruiser can undertake. A balanced carrier navy, unless it is certain it will only go to war accompanied by allies, will have at least two of these expensive ships, their expensive air groups, their escorts, and other ships for independent operations. Such a navy with CTOL carriers can overwhelm any non-carrier navy and most land -based air forces. STOL or STOVL carrier navies are superior to navies not so equipped. These are the advantages of carriers; the disadvantage is expense, an expense that cannot be reduced because vessels with a runway above a hangar or a runway before a hangar, as noted, must be large. STOL and STOVL carriers have another disadvantage: because they are small, their air groups are too small to ensure protection against land-based' CTOL airpraft Few nations can afford the balanced two-carrier navies described so most rely on fighting ship navies comprising destroyers, frigates, light frigates, corvettes and/or fast attaek craft and' any requisite support and assault ships. Unlike a carrier navy, such navies have no minimum size or expense. The larger ones comprise destroyers, frigates, assault and support ships, these i- day generally being (helicopter-deploying) VTOL vessels with a hangar and pad on the

SUBSTITUTE SHEET

main deck as described above. The combination can be fitted to them because it is compact and unintrusive: the pad is small; the size of the air group determines the hangar's size and air groups being small, so is the hangar; the hangar supports no flight deck on its roof so the hangar is of light construction; the hangar roof, the decks below, most of the main deck and most of the air space around the ship are not intruded upon by aircraft facilities or operations so the equipment for the ships' other roles is easily fitted. Among these ships' advantages are: there is no minimum size for their air groups, indeed air groups can even be not deployed as ships with the hangar and pad are hardly more costly than ones without them; the VTOL capability need not be an all-weather or full-maintenance one so savings in vessel size and equipment are possible; fleets of VTOL destroyers and frigates can be dispersed or concentrated at will, when dispersed each vessel has its own air group, when concentrated the force has no prime target at its core and its VTOL capability is not eliminated till the last ship is sunk; no ship is unriskable and so they can be deployed forward where all their weapons can be used. The deficiency of such navies is their lack of fixed-wing aircraft. V/STOL-as-VTOL aircraft can be deployed on larger VTOL ships but the aircraft's limited range means they are not sufficiently superior to ship- launched missiles to persuade many navies to purchase them.

OBJECTIVES OF THE INVENTION The objective of the present invention is to provide to both carrier navies and fighting ship navies the abovementioned advantages of the other kind of navy while remedying the deficiencies of each, and do this by: increasing the utility of carriers by increasing the number of STOVL aircraft deployable on carriers as large as present small STOL carriers; reducing the size and cost of STOVL carriers to make them affordable by small navies and/or to allow their purchase in numbers that render a carrier's loss less catastrophic; allowing carriers with versatile unconventional hulls to be constructed; and, most importantly, providing a STOVL capability to the other-role

SUBSTITUTE SHEET

ships of both navies. These lead to more specific objectives: to adapt a STOL carrier so it can accommodate more aircraft; to develop a combination of take-off runway, pad and hangar light enough to fit on small or unconventional hulls; to provide other- role ships with a take-off runway, hangar and pad combination of an unintrusiveness similar to their VTOL capabilities;' to do the above while keeping development costs low and, where applicable, avoiding use of costly machinery or unproven technology and using existing vessel designs.

OUTLINE OF THE INVENTION The vessel of present invention achieves these objectives by being a vessel with a compact STOVL combination of take-off runway, hangar and pad and a vessel adaptable into the above forms; it comprising: a hull and propulsive system; a main deck divided into an exposed forward section, an intermediate section comprising about a tenth to a half the main deck, and an aft exposed section; an upper deck on which superstructure items are located; a take-off runway extending along most or all the main deck and with a ski jump; a hangar which straddles the intermediate deck section and its runway portion, this hangar being open at both ends and its roof being the upper deck and its walls containing items like uptakes to the funnels; pads located on the forward and/or aft deck sections and on any runway portions there; and parking areas located on the aft deck section and perhaps elsewhere and on any pads or runway portions there. Adapting this vessel into an other-role ship is possible because such ships' main decks are half to three fourths exposed and have missile launchers, guns, cranes, gantries or the like and a- helicopter hangar and pad on the exposed sections, on this vessel those deck items are placed beside, abaft, above or straddling the runway while the hangar and pad are incorporated; the superstructure occupies the other fourth to half of such ships' decks, on this vessel it is raised, funnel uptakes leading to it being located in the hangar walls; the deck of this vessel is roughly the size of such ships' present decks and its hangar and superstructure not top-heavy because they are of light

SUBSTITUTE SHEET

construction and, because the air group to be housed in the hangar is small, no larger than such ships' present superstructures. As this vessel's other roles justify its purchase, the STOVL capability may not be a permanent-deployment, major-maintenance or all-weather capability, the high freeboard, broad deck and heavy equipment these require only being provided to an extent justified by the vessel's and air group's size, cost and role. The hangar being provided with only minimal fittings, STOVL aircraft are able to launch through it when accommodated aircraft are relocated to the aft parking area. This vessel can also be adapted into the mentioned carriers with very small or unconventional hulls, they differing from the vessel just described by having no other-role equipment. This vessel can be adapted as the mentioned carrier of current STOL carrier size by superimposing its light main-deck hangar onto the flight deck of a present STOL carrier and shifting that carrier's superstructure to this vessel's hangar roof. Since this vessel is intended for adaptation into a diverse range of vessels and especially since every naval ship built is customised with special features to meet a particular navy's needs, a number of alternatives are possible: a runway extending right to the stern or just to the hangar's rear; pads before the hangar, abaft it or both; a fixed ski jump or one that can be used as a landing ship vehicle ramp; the fitting or not of hangar doors (an emergency -only capability may not justify their expense) ; additional runways; additional pads or parking areas on deck extensions or, if a hangar is long, on the hangar roof; on a large ship, additional hangars below; rails or grooves to stabilise or guide launching aircraft This invention advances the art by cheaply allowing other- role ships to be STOVL vessels, by cheaply increasing hangar space for aircraft on small STOL carriers (and making them STOVL carriers) and by making unconventional -hull or small carriers feasible. It differs from current art in its use of the runway-through-hangar arrangement for the purpose of reducing the intrusiveness and size needed for a STOVL capability: this by

SUBSTITUTE SHEET

9 eliminating the runway before or upon a hangar, combining take-off runway and hangar, and reducing hangar size, weight and machinery.

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Figure 1 is a view from a high point to the left and rear of a vessel embodying the invention and showing, like all the following, the vessel only above the waterline, and, like all the following except figure 6, hangar doors open. Figures 2 to 5 are views from behind, in front, the left and above respectively of the above vessel and drawn, ' like all the following, to a scale 0.85 of figure 1.

Figure 6 is a view from the left of a vertical section along the fore and aft centreline of the above vessel without fittings. Figures 7 and 8 are views from above and from a higfe point to the left and rear respectively of the above vessel without hangar and fittings.

Figure 9 is a view from behind of a vertical section a-tpnig a line across the rear end of the hangar of the above vessel without fittings. Figures 10 to 15 are views from a high point to the left and rear of further vessels embodying the invention.

DESCRIPTION OF EXAMPLES Several particular embodiments of the invention representing some but by no means all of its possible forms will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings. The vessel embodying the invention in figures 1 to 9 is adapted as a light Gruiser of overall length 175 metres, overall width 24 metres, waterline length 160 metres, waterline width 18 metres. It has a conventional hull 1 and propulsive system; a main deck 2 divided info a forward exposed section 3, an intermediate covered section 4, and " an aft exposed section 5; and an upper deck 6. The features providing the vessel's STOVL capability are: a stern-to-bow take-off π-fήway of 175 metres X 18.5 metres, the centreline marking of which can be seen 7; a ski jump 8 forming part of the bow; a hangar 9 of

SUBSTITUTE SHEET

interior dimensions 45 metres X 18.5 metres straddling and covering the said intermediate deck section, with opening doors 10, 11 , and walls 12, 13 supporting a roof which is the upper deck 6; before and abaft the hangar are pads, the markings of which 14, 15 can be seen; while much of the said aft deck section 5 constitutes a parking area. The vessel is of a size to deploy three to four STOVL aircraft and three to five helicopters. The aircraft's manner of operation is as follows. They are accommodated in hangar 9. When helicopters are to launch or when STOVL aircraft are to launch vertically with a light load, they move to and launch from pads 14 , 15. When a somewhat heavier load is required, STOVL aircraft accelerate forward from within hangar 9, along the runway portion on the said forward deck section 3 and take to the air from ski jump 8. When a maximum load is required, aircraft accommodated in the hangar move to the parking area on the said aft deck section 5 and park there with their tails overhanging the sides or stern of the vessel, the area being adequate for this and crowding not being a problem as the air group is small (aircraft can also temporarily take the air) . STOVL aircraft then accelerate forward along the runway 7 from the said aft deck section 5, into the hangar 9 and along the said intermediate deck section 4 within it, thence along the said forward deck section 3 and take to the air from ski jump 8. Collision with walls 12, 13 is not a major danger as the runway is wide (much wider than HMS Invincible's runway ) ; if a collision occurs, the aircraft are not moving at high speed while in the hangar and the impact will be glancing so normal strengthening of the walls allows them to withstand it. If sea or weather conditions make a collision possible, the aircraft only launch vertically. (Danger from accidents is in any case more than offset by the safety from enemy attack the aircraft provide.) All deployed aircraft land vertically on pads 14, 15. This embodiment has several notable features. Retractable anchoring, servicing and maintenance equipment is fitted in the hangar but cumbersome or

SUBSTITUTE SHEET

obstructive items are absent. Ventilation of jet fumes is provided by the hangar's openness. Uptakes to funnels 16, 17 pass through the hangar walls 12, 13. The vessel is fitted as a cruiser and vertical missile launchers 18, 19 are embedded in the forward deck section 3, heavy guns 20, 21 are fitted on aft deck section 5, a bridge 22 and a full range of electronic systems 23, 24 and point-defence weapons 25, 26 are located on upper deck 6, boats 27 and torpedo tubes 28 are located on a deck below. Figures 10 to 15 illustrate how further aircraft-related or other features can be fitted to other forms of the vessel of present invention. Only significant items are noted and aircraft operate as^ on the above vessel. Figure 10 illustrates a destroyer of dimensions overall 174 metres X 22 metres, waterline 160 metres X 17 metres with an aimable missile launcher 29 at the aft end of the main deck. Figure 11 illustrates a similar destroyer with a completely unobstructed main deck and an embedded vertical* launcher 30. Figure 12 illustrates a cruiser of 174m x 24m, 159m X 20m with torpedo launchers 31, aimable launchers 32, 33 beside t e runway s and a small helicopter parking area 34 on the hangar root to which helicopters can be lifted by means of cranes 35, 36 which can also service the launchers 32, 33. Figure 13 illustrates a hybrid cruiser/ carrier of 175m X 24m, 159m X 20m with embedded vertical launcher 37 and a belowdecks additional hangar to which aircraft are transported by lifts, one of which is in the hangar and one 38 on the said aft deck section. Figure 14 illustrates a cruiser for air-defence of 179m X 23m, 163m X 20m with vertical launcher 39, a retracting breakwater 40 before the hangar, and fixed -array radars 41 , 42. Figure 15 shows a 180m x 26m, 165m X 26m assault ship with a small additional pad and parking area 43 on the hangar roof to which aircraft can be moved by their taking to the air or by means of cranes 44, 45 and a vehicle deck belowdecks which forms an additional hangar and to which access is by ramp, the vessel also having a large docking well 46 aft for landing craft.

SUBSTITUTE SHEET