It's also worth noting that a few of those vintage WW-II ships did remain in service for twenty to thirty years after the fact and quite a few of them were sold off to third world countries with their outmoted weapon systems.
It's also worth noting that a few of those vintage WW-II ships did remain in service for twenty to thirty years after the fact and quite a few of them were sold off to third world countries with their outmoted weapon systems.
For instance, the USS Phoenix: commissioned in 1938, survived Pearl Harbor, sold to Argentina after World War II and renamed General Belgrano, and finally sunk by the British submarine HMS Conquerer during the 1982 Falklands War.
I love the idea of a Qualor II (Hathaway)-style surplus yard as it opens up all sorts of fan fiction possibilities.
That's so weird that you mention the Phoenix; I was just reading about it yesterday and contemplating the practice of selling-off obsolete warships. It would be very surreal to be fired upon by a ship that formerly belonged to your ally, or even one of your own.
That's so weird that you mention the Phoenix; I was just reading about it yesterday and contemplating the practice of selling-off obsolete warships. It would be very surreal to be fired upon by a ship that formerly belonged to your ally, or even one of your own.
You really would love reading up on the Falklands if that gives you a happy!
Apart from anything else BOTH sides used the Type 42 Destroyer!
Indeed, beyond the materials that we know for sure have to be mined, why not simply feed raw molecules into a replicator for "production" of whatever you want if there isn't some limit?
Come to think of it, perhaps power requirements would be an even more important reason why this wouldn't be done.
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