Above is a very informative May 7, 2018 Youtube on the possibility of basing F-35Bs on Japan's Izumo class "helicopter destroyers".
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Anonymous’s commentof September 21, 2018 drew my intention to ongoingJapanese Government consideration of retrofitting Japan’s two Izumo class helicopter destroyers to each operate several STOVL or rolling F-35Bs. Retrofitting may involve ski-jump bows, extra heat treatment of the flight decks to absorb vertical jet engine heat and perhaps angled decks to protect parked aircraft against short distance roll-landing F-35B impacts.
Such retrofitting would add extra weight to the Izumos. Also these modified Izumos may serve as prototypes for even larger 30-40,000 tonne Japanese carrier “destroyers”. Larger carriers may be logical even if the F-35B “flights” (only about 6 airfcraft) are not added. Larger carriers can take increased numbers of helicopters, vertical takeoff V-22 Ospreys (that Japan is buying) and more Japanese troops to be air lifted.
Any new larger class of Japanese carrier “destroyer” would be capable of carrying a wing of 20+
F-35Bs that would be much more effective for round the clock combat air patrols, “buddy refueling" by some F-35Bs and for numbers suffient for in depth airstrikes.
Japanese decision-making on this issue would owe much to ongoing international developments including:
- China's 2017 launching of its Type 001A ski-jump carrier
- China’s expected 2020 launch of a Type 002 CATOBARcarrier
- North Korea’s land and sea based nuclear capabilities
- Future full time operation of F-35Bs on friendly naval carriers including US Wasp class
- China’s expected 2020 launch of a Type 002 CATOBARcarrier
- North Korea’s land and sea based nuclear capabilities
- Future full time operation of F-35Bs on friendly naval carriers including US Wasp class
LHDs and UK Queen Elizabeth class carriers and
- Possible future use of friendly F-35Bs on Australia’s two ski-jump Canberra class LHDs and
South Korea's Dokdo class LPHs.
Pete