September 07, 2015
Designed as part of an informal challenge by the U.K. Ministry of Defense (MOD) and Royal Navy, the concept ship — dubbed the Dreadnought 2050 (the original HMS Dreadnought was a Royal Naval battleship commissioned in 1906, “which represented such an advance that all other major warships were rendered obsolete” according to a press release — is a trimaran made of ultra-strong acrylic see-thru composites and powered by a fusion reactor or highly efficient turbines rendering it an extremely silent and quite deadly stealth vessel.
The Dreadnought 2050 would be submersible “to present a lower profile which would make the ship more stealthy and even harder to detect.” Instead of a mast the vessel would sport a tethered quad-copter. “This tether would be made of carbon nanotubes and cryogenically cooled in order to transmit significant power to the quad-copter for multi-spectral sensors and act as a high-power (i.e. laser) weapon to knock down enemy missiles or aircraft,” the press release states.
The ship’s crew would consist of around 50 to a 100 sailors, rather than the 200 strong crew found on today’s warships, with the vessel’s nerve center, the Operations Room, staffed by five rather than 25 people.
“Above the floodable dock would be a large, extendable flight deck and hangar for multiple remotely piloted air systems (RPAS/UAVs), many equipped with weapons, which could target the enemy without putting the crew in harm’s way,” it continues.
The Dreadnought 2050 would also be equipped with “missile tubes for defensive hypersonic (i.e. Mach 5 plus) missiles, directed energy weapons to stop small enemy craft loaded with explosives; and in the armas (the outrigger hulls) would be torpedo tubes to fire super-cavitating torpedoes capable of 300+ knots.”
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