Hi. I've been practicing for a while, so I'm not bad at drawing, but I still need some help with details, like artistic errors, obscure but necessary pieces of gear that I've missed, or glaring fundamental design flaws. It's my first time posting here, so please be gentle.
When judging, keep in mind that one of the ideas of this series of vessels that I'm making is to evoke some of the aesthetics of late WWII vessels while remaining relevant, modern platforms. The cruiser is supposed to have a silhouette vaguely reminiscent of a
Fargo or
Oregon City class, and the DE is supposed to look like a
John C. Butler. For these drawings purposes, the aesthetics matter.
The
Stalwart Dawn class are considered light guided missile cruisers by the Miklanian Navy. They are basically equivalent to what the USN would call a DDG. ~10,000 tons, 96 Mk. 41 cells, 48 forward and 48 aft, a 155mm main gun (called 6 inch because we cling stubbornly to customary units but also want to be practical), and some CIWS. Radars are Not!SPY-6 and Not!SPQ-9B. Fleet defense is her main mission, with a focus on AAW.
The missiles, from left to right, are ASROC, Glaive (Not!LRASM), TLAM, A notional hypersonic thing that you shouldn't worry about, Spear-3 (Not!SM-3), Spear-6 (Not!SM-6), Spear-5 (Not!SM-6 minus booster), quad packed vertical launch Small Diameter Bombs, and quad Spear-1s (Not!ESSM Blk. II). The torp is essentially an MU-90.
The
Dochorraithe are inexpensive convoy escorts, designed to fulfill the same role as the DEs of old. I derived her from the Batch II
River class OPVs, stretching and adding weapons to make it a real warship. She has 16 tac length VLS cells forwards of the bridge, a 5"/54 gun, a Mk. 46 RAM launcher, and heavy torpedoes. Western nations don't really do that, but the Ruskies do, so I figured I give it a try, just for giggles. She's got a little itty bitty Not!Sea Giraffe radar. She'll make 26 knots at full power, which is provided by four large LNG piston engines. ASW is her primary mission. She definitely comes closer to the aesthetic goal.
The flag hoists were the call signs of the
Fargo and
Samuel B. Roberts, respectively.