Life cycle cost approach for evaluation of alternative submarine programs

<p>Submarine designs have traditionally been evolutionary, with each new design being more capable than the last. Issues like speed, depth, and combat/weapons systems have dominated the design process because of concerns with the increasing capability of Soviet submarines. Only cursory attenti...

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Main Author: Gunter, Robert Lee
Other Authors: Systems Engineering
Format: Dissertation
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/41165
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02162010-020216/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-411652020-09-11T05:30:43Z Life cycle cost approach for evaluation of alternative submarine programs Gunter, Robert Lee Systems Engineering Blanchard, Benjamin S. Jr. Fabrycky, Wolter J. Tibbitts, Barrick F. Submarines (Ships) LD5655.V851 1992.G867 <p>Submarine designs have traditionally been evolutionary, with each new design being more capable than the last. Issues like speed, depth, and combat/weapons systems have dominated the design process because of concerns with the increasing capability of Soviet submarines. Only cursory attention has been paid to affordability. As a result, the SEAWOLF submarine is estimated to cost approximately twice as much as an improved-LOS ANGELES Class submarine (its predecessor).</p> <p> The combination of a reduced Defense Department budget and increased unit costs is projected to result in an Attack Submarine force level of less than 40 ships over time as opposed to current force levels of 90-100 ships. The Navy has on occasion stated that 60 submarines is the minimum needed to meet its mission requirements, which have changed with the decrease in the Soviet threat. Accordingly, the current Navy focus is to explore ways to reduce unit submarine costs to less than half of SEA WOLF.</p> <p> This project will examine the submarine from a Life Cycle Cost perspective starting with the definition of need, mission definition and requirements, trade-off analysis and cost allocation all resulting in a conceptual submarine design that meets the cost target of 50 percent for acquisition and 75 percent for operations and maintenance relative to the SEA WOLF submarine program.</p> Master of Science 2014-03-14T21:29:49Z 2014-03-14T21:29:49Z 1992-04-05 2010-02-16 2010-02-16 2010-02-16 Master's project etd-02162010-020216 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/41165 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02162010-020216/ LD5655.V851_1992.G867.pdf BTD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Submarines (Ships)
LD5655.V851 1992.G867
spellingShingle Submarines (Ships)
LD5655.V851 1992.G867
Gunter, Robert Lee
Life cycle cost approach for evaluation of alternative submarine programs
description <p>Submarine designs have traditionally been evolutionary, with each new design being more capable than the last. Issues like speed, depth, and combat/weapons systems have dominated the design process because of concerns with the increasing capability of Soviet submarines. Only cursory attention has been paid to affordability. As a result, the SEAWOLF submarine is estimated to cost approximately twice as much as an improved-LOS ANGELES Class submarine (its predecessor).</p> <p> The combination of a reduced Defense Department budget and increased unit costs is projected to result in an Attack Submarine force level of less than 40 ships over time as opposed to current force levels of 90-100 ships. The Navy has on occasion stated that 60 submarines is the minimum needed to meet its mission requirements, which have changed with the decrease in the Soviet threat. Accordingly, the current Navy focus is to explore ways to reduce unit submarine costs to less than half of SEA WOLF.</p> <p> This project will examine the submarine from a Life Cycle Cost perspective starting with the definition of need, mission definition and requirements, trade-off analysis and cost allocation all resulting in a conceptual submarine design that meets the cost target of 50 percent for acquisition and 75 percent for operations and maintenance relative to the SEA WOLF submarine program.</p> === Master of Science
author2 Systems Engineering
author_facet Systems Engineering
Gunter, Robert Lee
author Gunter, Robert Lee
author_sort Gunter, Robert Lee
title Life cycle cost approach for evaluation of alternative submarine programs
title_short Life cycle cost approach for evaluation of alternative submarine programs
title_full Life cycle cost approach for evaluation of alternative submarine programs
title_fullStr Life cycle cost approach for evaluation of alternative submarine programs
title_full_unstemmed Life cycle cost approach for evaluation of alternative submarine programs
title_sort life cycle cost approach for evaluation of alternative submarine programs
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/41165
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-02162010-020216/
work_keys_str_mv AT gunterrobertlee lifecyclecostapproachforevaluationofalternativesubmarineprograms
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