Aircraft Carriers II (Closed to posting)

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derf1600

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I was wondering what people's thought were with regard to when Australia might equip the new Canberras with F-35s. One of the first papers I read on the Canberras (Capability of First Resort:Australia's Future Amphibious Requirement by Aldo Borgu at the Insights publication of ASPI) seemed to suggest that the primary requirement for the new LHD was to improve disaster relief operations which their present ships' 1 company capacity were proving under-equipped for. It seems to me that Australia's fiscal interests might be better served by waiting on a purchase until the price on the F-35B's falls as production of US marine fighters reaches higher capacity. It also seems that this question has more to do with Australia's posturing of the role of their new ships more than the economics of the fighters, but I've been known to be wrong.
 

bd popeye

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CV 65 Constellation? The wrong caption for the picture.

What picture? I'm at work and cannot see any photos from imgur..it is blocked. I may check it later or tomorrow at home.

edit.2135 CDST. ok now I see it.. man someone goofed..
 
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Jeff Head

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I was wondering what people's thought were with regard to when Australia might equip the new Canberras with F-35s. .
The Australian government has requested and is receiving a military review of the possibility.

See the Australian Military News Thread. It has been discussed in detail there over the last few weeks.
 

bd popeye

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In January of 1973 when I was aboard JFK we visited Mayport FL for a very short 6 hour stint as we were transiting back to Norfolk VA.

USS Saratoga (CVA-60) was in port having just returned from her one and only WESTPAC deployment(April 1972 - Jan. 1973) to Vietnam. I took these photos with an instamatic camera from the flight deck of the JFK. Saratoga looks weather beaten because of her long Transit from the Western Pacific to Florida.

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FORBIN

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Nice !

Carl Vinson Carrier Stricke Group Heads Out on Deployment

SAN DIEGO (NNS) -- Sailors on Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson (CVN 70) manned the rails Aug. 22 as they headed out to the Pacific Ocean for a planned overseas deployment.

Carl Vinson will be accompanied by the rest of the Carl Vinson Carrier Strike Group as it patrols both 5th and 7th Fleet areas of responsibility.
"The Carl Vinson Carrier Strike Group is a versatile and trained force that is ready to support the missions and needs of regional commanders," said Rear Adm. Christopher Grady, Commander, Carl Vinson Carrier Strike Group.

In preparation for this deployment, Carl Vinson's first since back-to-back deployments in 2011 and 2012, the ship underwent several rigorous repair, training and qualification periods, including Planned Incremental Availability (PIA), Tailored Ship's Training Availability/Final Evaluation Problem (TSTA/FEP), Composite Training Unit Exercise (COMPTUEX) and a Joint Task Force Exercise (JTFEX). Each evolution is designed to prepare and qualify the ship and her crew to support the Navy's mission abroad.

"We have worked hard to ensure that our ship and crew are prepared with all the necessary resources to be successful on this deployment," said Capt. Kent Whalen, Carl Vinson's commanding officer. "Over the past year we have put in a tremendous amount of effort to get to this point, and I am incredibly proud of all that this fantastic crew has accomplished."

Carl Vinson and the more than 5,000 sailors living aboard have been tested and deemed certified for deployment. As she takes in all lines, the Carl Vinson stands ready to defend the nation and further its interests abroad.

The strike group's deployment is scheduled for nine and a half months. The Navy is in a period of aircraft carrier operation that has seen the USS Enterprise decommissioned after 51 years of service to the nation, and the pre-commissioning carrier Gerald R. Ford not yet fully online. Navy leadership is working hard to ensure this is a temporary situation.

Carl Vinson's deployment comes in advance of the Navy's implementation of the Optimized Fleet Response Plan (O-FRP), scheduled for fiscal year 2015. O-FRP is designed to provide Sailors and their families with more predictability for when they will be at sea by standardizing the length of deployments to eight months.

USS Bunker Hill (CG 52), Destroyer Squadron 1 and her ships USS Gridley (DDG 101), USS Sterett (DDG 104), and USS Dewey (DDG 105) will deploy with Carl Vinson as part of the Carl Vinson Carrier Strike Group. Carrier Air Wing 17 will embark Carl Vinson with her aviation squadrons that include the "Fighting Redcocks" of Strike Fighter Squadron (VFA) 22, the "Sunliners" of VFA 81, the "Stingers" of VFA 113, the "Mighty Shrikes" of VFA 94, the "Cougars" of Electronic Attack Squadron 139, the "Sun Kings" of Carrier Airborne Early Warning Squadron 116, the "Red Lions" of Helicopter Sea Combat Squadron 15, the "Battlecats" of Helicopter Sea Maritime Strike Squadron 73, and Fleet Logistic Support Squadron 30. Elements of Explosive Ordnance Disposal Mobile Unit 3 will also embark USS Carl Vinson.

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asif iqbal

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Russian naval shipbuilding currently as of now can not build a LHD/LHA hence the ToT with the French Mistral Class

Building a carrier which is probably 3-4 times the size is a huge and I mean a huge undertaking

It is questionable wether Russia can actually build a fully blown carrier even the UK got lots of help from US and even more when it comes to logistics and operations

In all honesty I have seen these annual Russian advertisements of carriers from Russia for years and years nothing new
 

Air Force Brat

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Russian naval shipbuilding currently as of now can not build a LHD/LHA hence the ToT with the French Mistral Class

Building a carrier which is probably 3-4 times the size is a huge and I mean a huge undertaking

It is questionable wether Russia can actually build a fully blown carrier even the UK got lots of help from US and even more when it comes to logistics and operations

In all honesty I have seen these annual Russian advertisements of carriers from Russia for years and years nothing new

One of the reasons the Russian want the Crimea under "friendly flag???", no doubt????
 

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
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Normaly 10 years between decision and commissioning, definitely build in a shipyard of St-Pétersbourg.

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Interesting a little ski-jump ramp after the track, so aircrafts can take off from two locations.
But no simultaneous takeoff and landings possible if this new starting positions used.

Notes : only US CVN can do simultaneous takeoff and landings, if use only their 2 front catapults ofc. If is not a E-2C on the C 2 :) but as as they are almost always first catapulted no problem normaly.

CDG also can't front catapult exceding on the track, originally it was to be longer for simultaneous takeoff and landings built to Saint-Nazaire but finally built to Brest which had a smaller dry dock, price question also.
 
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