In a period of rapid technological development it isn't unusual for a ship to become obsolete even before it hits the water (be it from developments in country or abroad). That was the case for ships in the ironclad and later pre-dreadnought age; this does not mean that they cannot (and did not) give decades of valuable service in the frontlines and second lines, nor in other roles when they were pushed out of them, but they were ultimately worse off compared to what came after them.Oof, not being able to refit the ship we just rolled out? On the other hand, doing it now means that we don't have to do it later. The only issue is we don't know what we're going to need to put out. If it was a cargo carrier, or a simple survey ship, or something similar and specialized I'd say go all in. But if we need a warship, that's like putting out a brand new run of oil carriers right before you spin up the first nuclear reactor.
Not pushing the envelope when we have the chance to means that whilst we'd have a homogenous fleet we'd be left worse off when other nations push it for themselves.
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