Aircraft Carriers III

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
Just a quick question here.
What is normally the rank of the commanding officer of an aircraft carrier in the different navies? Also, is he/she automaticly in charge of the complete strike groupe, or is there a more senior officer?
Finally, are the detials of the air missions (except those for carrier defense) routed through, and managed by, the carrier captain, or do they go directly to the air-wing boss from higher echolons?
For the US the CO of the carrier itself is a Captain. But the CO of the Carrier Strike Group is an admiral.
 

Janiz

Senior Member
USS George Washington leaving Yokosuka after 7 years of service. JS Izumo is there to say good bye. On the decks: 'Sayonara' on George Washington and 'THX GWA' on Izumo.

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bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
FORBIN I've used that site many years as an unofficial source of USN CV movement. There are some mistakes..but nothing is perfect...Thanks for posting!

In case you guys did not know that site is Japan based.
 

navyreco

Senior Member
Now this is something you don't see every day...

A flat top (well sort of) LHD designed to beach and unload MBTs through a bow door like a good old LST


IDEF 2015: ADIK Shipyard unveiled a new LHD/LST concept
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During the IDEF 2015 defense exhibition (held recently in Istanbul, Turkey) Turkish shipyard ADIK (Anadolu Shipyard) unveiled a fairly unique Landing Helicopter Dock (LHD) concept: The design has a flat top to accomodate several helicopters as well as a well deck like any LHD, but it is also uniquely fitted with a large door at its bow (similar to Russia's Ivan Gren class). This LHD design would therefore be able to perform beaching operations like a Landing Ship Tank (LST).
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bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
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YOKOSUKA, Japan (AP) — China's aircraft carrier ambitions demonstrate the continuing importance of the mammoth ships in the western Pacific, a senior U.S. Navy officer said Monday, as America's Japan-based carrier began a long journey home.

A symbol of American power in the Pacific, the USS George Washington left the U.S. naval base in Yokosuka, south of Tokyo, its home port for the past seven years. It will be replaced by the USS Ronald Reagan, a newer version of the same ship.

"Everybody asks whether the aircraft carriers are obsolete," Navy Rear Admiral John Alexander said at a dockside news conference before the ship departed. "I would say when other countries are building an aircraft carrier, they're doing it for a reason, and the fact is you can actually have a bigger influence in the region."

The George Washington will conduct exercises in the region before heading home, Alexander said, but he wouldn't specify whether any would be in the contested waters of the South China Sea.

Sailors in dress whites lined the 1,092-foot- (333-meter-) long flight deck, and huge American and Japanese flags hung in the massive, open bays below. Families of crew members, some tearing up, waved American flags and held up handmade posters on shore.

The George Washington will rendezvous with the Ronald Reagan in San Diego, where about 2,000 of the crew from each ship will in essence trade places.

Commissioned in 1992, the George Washington will continue to Virginia, where it will undergo a multiyear overhaul and refueling of its two nuclear reactors.

The Ronald Reagan, commissioned in 2003, is due to arrive "later in the fall" to be the new flagship of the Yokosuka-based carrier group. Alexander said.
 

asif iqbal

Lieutenant General
Another flat top is coming soon

Turkey has signed the agreement

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Interesting thing is Turkey is keen to show F35B in its models right from the word start, they could be planning on using it for F35B
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
Six US Marine Corps F-35B aircraft are aboard the USS Wasp, LHD-1, for operational testing for the next two weeks. Six aircraft is a full squadron of US Marine strike fighters for these LHD vessels and this testing will represent full operational testing with flight operations, maintenance, logistics, repairs, etc.

And these are production, operational aircraft, not prototypes or pure test aircraft.

Here are some of the initial pictures.


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Four F-35B Lighting II Joint Strike Fighters sit secured to the deck after their arrival aboard the USS Wasp (LHD-1), May 18, 2015. Six aircraft are participating in full operational te4sting aboard the Wasp from May 18-June 1st.

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Two F-35B Lightning II Joint Strike Fighters complete vertical landings aboard the USS Wasp (LHD-1) during the opening day of the first session of operational testing, May 18, 2015. Six aircraft are participating in full operational te4sting aboard the Wasp from May 18-June 1st.

2015-0519-F35B-Wasp-03.jpg

An F-35B Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter idles on the flight deck of the USS Wasp (LHD-1) in preparation for take-off, May 18, 2015. The short take-off, vertical landing capabilities of the F-35B are crucial to the mission of the Marine Corps and necessary for operation aboard a Navy amphibious ship

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Marines and sailors aboard the USS Wasp (LHD-1) secure and refuel an F-35B Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter after its arrival for the first session of operational testing, May 18, 2015. Data and information gathered from OT-1 will lay the groundwork for F-35B deployments aboard Navy amphibious ships and the announcement of the Marine Corps' initial operating capacity of the F-35B in July.

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An F-35B Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter after a vertical landing aboard the USS Wasp (LHD-1) during the opening day of the first session of operational testing, May 18, 2015
 
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