Aircraft Carriers III

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
I wonder if they are going to do a shock test like the one planned for the Ford ?
For me no, US CVN are special with especialy a flight deck very strong in special steel several others things also and of course the mass account 100000 t ! more a ship is big more he is difficult to sunk logic then US CVN are extremely difficult to sunk it is a true fortress.
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
Another great video (3:22 long) of second round of Developmental Testing for the F-35C at sea aboard the USS Eisenhower. Landings, Take-offs, touch and gos, deck handling, etc. They look very nice at sea! The "Charlie" has a lot of wing. More fuel, more ordinance, better handling. Nice.


Hehehe...and the beat goes on!
 
CVN-71 news:
Carrier TR departs 5th Fleet after ISIS strikes
The carrier Theodore Roosevelt and its escorts are San Diego-bound after about six months of launching war strikes on the Islamic State group, opening up the much debated carrier gap in Central Command while the next flattop hastily readies to depart Norfolk.

The TR had a big impact in the Central Command missions against the Islamic State group, known as Operation Inherent Resolve, the carrier's skipper said in a Facebook post.

“While operating in 5th Fleet, we flew 1,812 missions in support of Operation Inherent Resolve — that is 10,618 flight hours,” Capt. Craig Clapperton wrote. “Those missions delivered 1,100 precision guided weapons against ISIL targets in Syria and Iraq totaling more than 1,000,000 pounds of munitions.”

The TR Carrier Strike Group group steamed out of Norfolk in March on an eight-month deployment and home-port shift to the West Coast; the ship has so far traveled 26,840 miles. There is still much work ahead for the Big Stick, as the TR is nicknamed.

“I’m sure you are all equally ready for your loved ones to return,” Clapperton said. “I know all of us onboard the Big Stick are looking forward to our return home, but, before we get there, we still have quite a bit of work to do; that will help the time go by quickly.”

The work includes an exercise in the Indian Ocean, Malabar, with the Indian navy, which will include the Japanese navy, a development that some have taken to show Japan is serious about taking a more active role in regional security in the face of a more assertive China.

The U.S. Navy flies about 20 percent of the coalition sorties in support of OIR, and Air Force officials claim another 67 percent. For the Navy, that amounts to about 14 to 18 sorties a day, said Navy spokesman Lt. Cmdr. Tim Hawkins.

The majority of the flights come off the carrier and will have to be back-filled by Air Force and coalition land-based aircraft until the carrier Harry S. Truman arrives in 5th Fleet.

The Truman is working up to deploy and is scheduled to leave before Thanksgiving, Navy officials estimate. That leaves CENTCOM without the options an aircraft carrier can provide for as long as three months. Lawmakers have criticized the gap, but Navy leaders stress that the time is needed to get the fleet's maintenance and deployment cycles synced up.

Straining under the weight of excess demand and maintenance backlogs, the Navy has been forced to extend deployments repeatedly. A new force-generation plan, the Optimized Fleet Response Plan, has been devised to bring predictability back to the fleet, easing the burden on sailors and families, and allowing the shipyards to better plan hiring and managing the workload of maintaining the ships.

Getting maintenance back on track, along with a parallel effort to bring down deployment lengths to seven months — spearheaded by Chief of Naval Operations Adm. John Richardson, taking the mantel from his predecessor Adm. Jon Greenert — depends on the success of OFRP, officials have said.

"Ultimately, this is a pay-me-now or pay-me-later discussion," said Rear Adm. Jeffrey Harley, the deputy head of the Navy's operations, plans and strategy office. "If we are not given time to reset the force through OFRP, and are forced to source beyond sustainable levels, we will remain challenged in all of these areas."

In a September interview, Richardson said he would continue to work toward 7-month deployments.

“This is not easy work that we are doing,” he said. “I agree with Adm. Greenert that seven months is, I think, a sustainable goal. I think it is achievable. I am committed to getting down to this seven-month deployment.”
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Janiz

Senior Member
USS Ronald Reagan with JS Izumo and Akizuki class destroyer. I suppose those photos were taken after JMSDF Naval Review where the US aircraft carrier made a surprising appearance in the distance and later Japanese Prime Minister Abe took off from JS Kurama to visit the American vessel becoming the first Japanese PM in history aboard US Navy carrier. I suppose that Reagan is leaving it's homeport to take part in exercises with ROK Navy and in the celebration of the 70th Anniversary of creating ROK Navy which will take place this week in Busan.

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bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
USS Ronald Reagan with JS Izumo and Akizuki class destroyer. I suppose those photos were taken after JMSDF Naval Review where the US aircraft carrier made a surprising appearance in the distance and later Japanese Prime Minister Abe took off from JS Kurama to visit the American vessel becoming the first Japanese PM in history aboard US Navy carrier. I suppose that Reagan is leaving it's homeport to take part in exercises with ROK Navy and in the celebration of the 70th Anniversary of creating ROK Navy which will take place this week in Busan.

There are no surprising appearances. All these multi-national exercises are planned in advanced. True that sometimes there are surprises. But in my opinion not this time. This is a show of force by Japan and the US as a show of strength to China...simple as that.
 
very interesting article from yesterday
Carrier Truman preps to face powerful adversaries
The Harry S. Truman Carrier Strike Group pulled out some old playbooks to race through their shortened deployment work-ups, with missions set to range from Islamic State group militants to the Russian and Chinese navies.

The HST team will deploy later this year to take point in 5th Fleet, where the Theodore Roosevelt CSG has hammered ISIS targets in recent months, as did the Carl Vinson and George H.W. Bush before her. But Truman’s latest Composite Training Unit Exercise, one of the strike group's big exercises before it's certified ready to deploy, focused on adversaries that more closely resembled those of the Cold War.

“Everyone says ‘it's not your grandfather's Navy,’ but in essence it is nowadays,” said Capt. Richard Brawley, commodore of Destroyer Squadron 28. “We are going back to learning to operate with near-peer competitors, and the supremacy we had can't be taken for granted.”

There is no doubt war-torn Syria is on everyone's radar. Russian marines have established their presence in the embattled nation, and have been joined by Chinese and Iranian marines. Russian warships from the Black Sea have also relocated to the eastern Mediterranean to protect fighter jets conducting airstrikes.

Truman found out just last year that it would deploy this fall, nearly half a year ahead of schedule. The flattop took the place of Dwight D. Eisenhower, which required 23 months in the yard after back-to-back deployments. Carrier Theodore Roosevelt left 5th Fleet in mid-October, leaving that region without a carrier until the Truman CSG gets there.

“It was not the COMPTUEX I went through seven or eight years ago,” said Capt. Ryan Scholl, Truman’s skipper. “We are making it more challenging because there are real pieces of steel out there, real opposing forces, and then we have synthetic injects that are pushing our abilities as war fighters.” He described steep learning curves, advanced tactics, and the need for teamwork. In addition to the synthetic, the strike group faced real threats as it danced around Hurricane Joaquin through much of the exercise.

Training regimens in recent years have centered on disaggregated ops facing regional threats. Integration has not been as critical, as technological advances allowed crews to dominate in those warfare areas. But Carrier Strike Group 4, which scripts these training exercises threw them a curve ball: U.S. ships no longer have a clear-cut edge.

“It showed that we were very resource-limited, which means now we really have to be one team, one fight,” Brawley said. “This forced a lot more integration because of [a] threat [that] was much more difficult."

'Not been easy'
Scholl cited teamwork between the carrier, Carrier Air Wing 7 and DESRON 28 as a deciding factor. Teamwork would seem to be a given, but the CVW-7 and DESRON 28 have long been assigned to the carrier Ike and had no relationship with the Truman's crew and staff. No more.The commodore said the work-ups were the best training he has seen in 24 years of service. He likened it to Cold War training in which the fleet pushed readiness to the ragged edge. The strike group soon realized nothing could be taken for granted. Each ship was strict in what radars were emitted and what communication paths were used to avoid detection. This same approach was taken in a weeklong fleet synthetic training event held in mid-October, in which joint partners and an additional carrier strike group joined the Truman CSG in operations against an advanced adversary.

“Success individually is not going to mean success overall for the battle group,” Scholl said.

Brawley echoed the sentiment. There was rarely a clear-cut solution for scenarios they faced because Navy doctrine is still trying to deal with many of these issues, he said. Allowing each component to bring its strengths to bear ultimately made the difference.

For Truman, getting to a place where it could flex its muscle was a battle in itself. The expedited deployment and condensed availability required a hectic work-up schedule.

Getting sailors in schools was a particular challenge. Most are scheduled one year out and some last six months, which made it tough to get everyone in. “It has not been easy, but we've managed to get pretty close to where we need to be," said Lt. Cmdr. Randy Harmon, Truman’s training officer. Roughly 93 percent of the crew was able to attend job-related courses by early October, and more will squeeze through before the ship departs for deployment later this year.

“A few extra months would have been great, but we have managed to get it done,” Harmon said. “But I would recommend that nobody else have to do it this way.”

Amid the rush for individual qualifications, the crew had to jump through hoops to gain its certification. Most exercises and events were trimmed to the fewest days possible, which left no room for error. The 30-day gap between Command Assessment of Readiness and Training II and the in-port portion of the Tailored Ship’s Training Availability was eliminated, and both were completed in advance of flight deck certification. While a typical carrier has 154 training days between flight deck certification and final evaluation, Truman had fewer than 40. Essentially, the flattop's crew did one year's worth of training in five months, and did so without one waiver.

“We are fully certified, and I can guarantee that the crew and this warship are ready to operate and execute our nation's tasks as so assigned whenever and wherever they want us to go,” Scholl said.
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bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
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WATERS SOUTH OF JAPAN (NNS) -- An electrical fire was reported inside an E-2C Hawkeye from the "Liberty Bells" of Airborne Early Warning Squadron (VAW) 115 in hangar bay one of Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan (CVN 76), 1:27 p.m. (local), Oct.18.

The ship's damage control flying squad responded and extinguished the fire.

There are no reported personnel casualties or injuries.

The cause of the fire is under investigation.

VAW-115 has been assigned to CVW-5 since 1970 and is the only original squadron still assigned to CVW-5 when CVW-5 moved to Japan with USS Midway in 1973.

VAW-115 has five E-2C Hawkeyes and will more than likely be the first Hawkey squadron to transition to the E-2D.

If the aircraft that was damaged by fire is damaged beyond the ability of the maintenance crew to be repaired I'm sure the aircraft will be replaced in short order. The aircraft would come from another fleet VAW squadron.
 
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