Cap doffed.
A good combination as these are already in service with PN. MRTP-42 would not add anything other then being bigger.
57m-76mm guns could be included into armament, and remote controlled Stinger. As opposed to 40mm max on stretched MRTP-33.
http://www.trdefence.com/yonca-onuk-to-open-shipyard-in-azerbaijan-interview/
Type-22 is more relevant for point defence. Though it can be upgrade with Genesis. The only limitation is the speed as compared to FAC - 55.
No corvette or frigate (> 1000 tons) will do over 30kn. F22P with compact VLS and moden IR homing / AR homing missile would be an improvement. A port and a starboard set of 4 cells with 4 Sea Ceptor each just in front of the bridge?
Umkhonto would take up more space.
Why do we require a heli deck on an FAC when we can use Drone Copters? They can land on a smaller area.
A heli-deck plus refuel capability would allow using a heli-born boarding team, SAR, MedEvac, OtH AShM targeting using radar, ASW etc., even if the heli itself is landbased. Steel is cheap. Additional landingpads wouldn't hurt.
This could be a very good option if the helideck is reduced it could be upgraded with Umkhonto VLS. Or increase the size by 10-20 meters for adding SAM options.
I don't think you would need to reduce the landing area or increase shiplength: just use the area directly behind the AShM's and forward of the helipad markings. NB: €534.8m (about S$880m) to design and build four of these patrol vessels (PVs) and the provision of associated logistic support for the Royal Navy of Oman (RNO)....
What do you think of Hamina class?
Small, modern design and materials, well rounded set of weapons and sensors, very good for coastal work (shallow draft). But ... relatively short-legged (500 nmi range as compared to 800 nmi at 33kn for MRTP-33)
Sir,
Torpedoes? seem unrealistic.
Not currently so with Turkish navy (see e.g. Kilic class) but does occur (see e.g. Singapore's Victory and Fearless classes FAC, although now removed from Vicotory's. See also some Israeli Saar 4's in the past). FAC have big diesels for high speed, both of which are not condusive to sonar operation. Because of ship noise, towed sonars are used, which can be placed deeper in the water and way from the hull. However, there are limitations on their use in shallow water. Alternatively, variable depth sonars are used. A problem with TAS and VDS is that the winches required to deploy/recover are large (see Israeli Saar 4s) and expensive.
Likewise compare Soviet Tarantul class (FAC) and Pauk class (ASW), using same basic hull.
Now I disagree with
@Penguin on the Skjold as an option for Pakistan (not that he was making an actual sales pitch, just a template). Norway does not like to sell military equipment to Pakistan and doesn't exactly have a history of supplying them with even basic arms and the Skjold Class boats were designed and optimized for operations near the Norwegian coastline, or even in inland waterways.
They are capable of traversing open ocean waters, but that's not really how they are intended to be used. They are designed to support the larger Norwegian fleet of frigates and minecontrol vessels to clear near-shore waters in conjunction with land-based MPAs and fighter aircraft and coastal artillery units and special forces.
The PN has a similar mission, but is structured in a way that'd not be optimized to support the Skjold class corvettes, which is good because Pakistan probably isn't interested in them anyway.
Realistically, they are indeed not an option for PN, for the reason you give: Norway wouldn't sell them. You also have a point in relating to the specific operating environments. Just Google Earth their respective coastlines to see the difference: lots of inlets and islands (places to hide / features to blend into) versus nice clean, sharp coastline (nowhere to hide). Different weather conditions too.
But Skjold at speed is simply ... hot.
Visby Class is a Corvette not FAC.
At 640 tons, it is quite in the FAC displacement range. It's SAM and some ASW weapons (not sonar or torpedoes) got cancelled. So in many ways, it is closer to a FAC than a corvette.
Singapore's 595 t Victory class are also referred to as corvettes, but are basically a 62m Lurrsen FAC, not much different from Israeli Saar 4.5 Hetz
See
https://defence.pk/threads/what-is-the-difference-between-frigate-and-destroyer.33514/#post-474928
http://www.amiinter.com/pagex.php?pg=vesseltypes