Aircraft Carriers III

US carrier, probably the Stennis, has been denied port in Hong Kong by the Chinese Govt? hope somebody will post a link as more details become available.
who knows
...
The command ship Blue Ridge is in Hong Kong, however, and its port visit will not be affected. ...

"It is entirely possible that it really was just inconvenient for them," the official said.
...
according to
This U.S. Navy carrier was set to visit Hong Kong. Then Beijing pulled the welcome mat.
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bd popeye

The Last Jedi
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John C Stennis made an alternate port call in Singapore.

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SINGAPORE (April 19, 2016) The aircraft carrier USS John C. Stennis (CVN 74) arrives at Changi Naval Base in Singapore for a regularly scheduled port visit. During the visit, John C Stennis personnel will visit and engage with the Republic of Singapore Navy and conduct cultural exchanges with the people of Singapore. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Joshua Fulton/Released)
 

strehl

Junior Member
Registered Member
Google map has a feature which gives you a birds eye view if you zoom out while in street view. I tried that while positioned in Newport News and got this image of CVN 78.
Lao4kWr.jpg
 
alternative carriers designs Shaping the Fleet of the Future
How many submarines does the US Navy need? How many surface warships? How many aircraft carriers? Should they be big, small, medium? What should they do? Do we need different kinds of ships or aircraft? What sorts of formations should they deploy with — or fight with?

First up is the Alternative Carrier study, being undertaken at the request of the Senate Armed Services Committee. Committee chairman Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., a vociferous critic of the cost of large carriers like the new Gerald R. Ford, wants the Navy to consider a number of alternative designs, from 40,000-ton ships to flattops much larger than the Ford’s roughly 100,000 tons. Research group Rand Corp. is conducting the study at the Navy’s direction.Those are some of the issues and questions being pondered this spring and summer as the US Navy works through several interlinked efforts to reach a new understanding of where it’s headed over the next several decades.

Then comes the Fleet Architecture study — an effort being carried out by three groups to look at alternatives for how the fleet is put together.

“The Fleet Architecture study may have more what-ifs, like if you went to a different amphibious ready group model or surface action group, you could do this differently,” explained a Navy official familiar with the studies. The work, the official added, should be “intellectually free to explore different things.”

Ultimately, the Alternative Carrier and Fleet Architecture studies will roll into the Force Structure Assessment (FSA), a periodic effort run by the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations’ (CNO) assessment division, N81. The last full FSA was conducted in 2012 and updated in 2014, resulting in, among other things, the goal of a 308-ship Navy. The current effort was begun over a year ago and should be concluded by late summer or early fall, in time to inform the fiscal 2018 budget and the next 30-year shipbuilding plan.

The FSA is what generates force level numbers such as so many littoral combat ships or cruisers, how many aircraft of a particular type is needed, how many units are needed for security cooperation efforts or combat. It takes into account deployment and training cycles, combatant commander requirements and strategic guidance from national command authorities.

“The FSA looks at the demand on Navy force structure, then projects that demand into the future, then asks how many of which kinds of things do we need to meet that demand,” the Navy official said. “More like looking to see if we have a requirement of 10 something and is that requirement going to persist. Maybe there’s an option to base some of those somethings forward, so that would mean I would need X number, based on various assumptions, Fleet Response Plan cycles. There’s still some art to it, but it’s not as conceptually broad reaching” as the Fleet Architecture effort.

When the studies are complete, the Navy official said, “N81 will lead a synthesis of what we think we learned. What near-term actions we need to pursue, which items roll into experimentation, which are further out. Depending on their nature the recommendations will go into existing processes and programs.”

The Alternative Carrier study was due to Congress on April 1, but CNO Adm. John Richardson rejected the first effort by Rand.

“It was almost complete,” the Navy official said, when it was sent to Naval Reactors (NR) for evaluation.

“NR said the two options for big carriers were technically infeasible and not viable,” explained the Navy official. “They were very uncomfortable with the technical accuracy of the Rand report. CNO pushed back on the report, and Rand agreed that maybe they didn’t have enough physics knowledge. That’s why it’s not done yet.

“The report had four different carrier design options” — 40,000 tons, 60,000 tons, 80,000 tons and 100,000 tons. Rand initially “said they wouldn’t look at the smaller ones because it would involve different CONOPS [concepts of operations], that they wouldn’t be achievable in these timelines.

“Then they came up with plans we thought technically infeasible — we can’t do the little ones, can’t do the big ones, the Ford is the right size. CNO said not good enough.”

Richardson kicked the report back to Rand, directing the group to put in more smaller-ship options and explore those options in different contexts. He met with McCain face-to-face to explain the actions, and McCain concurred.

“Rand still owes us a final report,” the Navy official said May 5, adding that the final report is expected in late May or early June.

The findings of the Alternative Carrier Study will be passed on to the three groups conducting the Fleet Architecture studies — an OPNAV group under N81, the Mitre Group and the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments (CSBA).

The Fleet Architecture work, said Bryan Clark, a naval analyst leading the CSBA team, “is supposed to look at alternative views of what the Navy will need in the future. Mix and match carriers, frigates, destroyers in different ways. We’ll come up with a different view of the demand signal, the steady state and wartime surge requirements. It’ll be based on a different approach to war-fighting requirements.”

N81 and the Mitre Group have been at work for about two months on their studies, the Navy official said, while CSBA was awarded a study contract only on May 4. As a result, the first two studies should be ready by midsummer. CSBA is expected to turn in an interim report at that time and a final report about two months later.

The studies are “intended to heavily inform our thinking,” the Navy official said, but a public release strategy for the three efforts hasn’t been determined.

“You’ll see the broad brushstrokes in everything we do,” the official said. “It’s an ongoing conversation with Congress. It will be part of the conversation with the new administration.”
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Jeff Head

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Royal-Navys-aircraft-carrier-to-be-sold-for-scrap.jpg

Naval Today said:
Great Britain is looking to sell its 2014-decommissioned light aircraft carrier for scrap.

The Ministry of Defence has issued a notice of the potential sale of the HMS Illustrious “for recycling only”.

Illustrious was commissioned into the Royal Navy in December 1977 and has clocked in 32 years of service for the Navy.

Ministry of Defence initially hoped to preserve HMS Illustrious and invited bids from private companies, charities and trusts to secure her future under a condition of sale that HMS Illustrious must remain in the UK.

However, due to the scale of the undertaking, all preservation projects were dropped and the ship is now being sold for scrap.

The departure of Illustrious has left the Royal Navy without an aircraft carrier until the first of two Queen Elizabeth carriers enters service in 2018.

Illustrious has been replaced as the nation’s helicopter carrier by HMS Ocean which underwent a £65m refit.
Very sad.

I had hoped she would become a museum ship for the UK.

Obi Wan, are any of the Invincible class set aside as museum ships?
 
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