Added rednerings of the underwater profile for the Coast Guard variant. Basically, the bow sonar pod is dropped and the bow is reverted to the original knife shaped profile. The idea is that as the ship approaches hull speed, the bow -- being extremely slender, sharp and with minimal flare will cut into the bow wave more than it rides on it.
That is an
incredibly Bad Idea. Not only will all of the flow calculations have to be redone (likely resulting in a different hull shape to maintain the same characteristics), but many of the hull calculations as well (the dynamic forces are going to be different with the new flow). This is on top of the changes that need to be done for the larger hatches (which
will need to be done, because the strength deck
can not be the mission deck).
A further impact of the loss of the bulb is that you'll loose bow bouyancy, which is going to impair sea keeping characteristics - something you don't want in a coast guard ship.
Heck, the Mk 57 PVLS removal isn't going to result in directly usable space
anyway. The PVLS is built on an inner strength frame and an outer frame that is designed to blow away in the event of damage (from outside the ship or a direct missile explosion). You can keep the volume as void spaces certainly, possibly as ballast (as needed with equipment deletions) and maybe even as stores space, but this is again a place where what looks like a minor change can have significant impacts.
Furthermore, the lack of sonar ignores that the USCG is tasked with long ranged national security missions for which a high frequency sonar unit is a requirement. One of the most common missions that the sonar is used for is blackbox recovery - sonar isn't just about finding subs.
As for the gun, there is some indication that the 57mm won't be on the next flight of LCSes, as the USN isn't totally satisfied with it and the 76mm has a bit longer reach. If you've got the space for it, I would strongly consider the Mk 45. The 5"/62 is a very nice gun to have, and with a 30mm backup would be great for any ship that can carry it without a lot of extra cost simply because the gun is already in use on so many USN ships which means the supply lines are open and will continue to be open for decades to come.
Please don't get me wrong, I
do like the idea of the common hull (witness my love of CPCX), but every change you make the to the USN version for the USCG does have an impact that could cause the hull to be less common, and therefore more expensive - and at some point you're better off with a custom USCG hull that shares electronics and subsystem commonalities, with a totally different hull.