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US Navy Starts Work on Next Class of Carriers [Brian's Military Ping List]
National Defense Magazine ^ | May 2003 | Harold Kennedy

Posted on 05/11/2003 6:24:45 AM PDT by VaBthang4

CVN 21 said to offer biggest changes in decades, seeking a ‘leap ahead’ in technology

by Harold Kennedy

The U.S. Navy is moving ahead with plans for its much-debated, next-generation aircraft carrier, now called CVN 21. The service has requested $1.5 billion in its fiscal year 2004 budget for research, development and engineering and advanced procurement for the ship.

CVN 21 is scheduled to begin construction in 2007 and to be delivered in 2014, according to Rear Adm. Dennis M. Dwyer, the Navy’s program executive officer for aircraft carriers.

The budget for the entire project “now stands at $11.7 billion,” Dwyer told a press briefing in Washington, D.C.

Of that amount, he said, $5 billion is “a one-time, non-recurring cost” of the design for the entire class of ships. “The actual construction cost of the first ship of the class is $6.7 billion in fiscal ‘07 dollars,” he said. Some estimates had put the cost as high as $10 billion, which Dwyer dismissed as “a good myth we’d like to debunk.”

CVN 21 will reflect the first major changes in carrier design since work began on the USS Nimitz, almost half a century ago, Dwyer told reporters. The Nimitz, CVN 68, was deployed in 1975, but work on her began much earlier, he said.

“Actually, the early design for the Nimitz was done in the late 1950s,” Dwyer said. “If you take the time period between Nimitiz and CVN-21, it’s the same time period between [the USS] Langley—the first carrier—and Nimitz.” The Langley, CV 1, was commissioned in 1922.

“You can see the challenge,” Dwyer said. “If anybody’s got to go design a new carrier, I’m glad I’m the one.”

The redesign is necessary, the admiral explained, for two major reasons. “One of them is sheer weight,” he said. “We need to get newer, lighter systems that reduce the weight that’s on the ships.” The other factor is the need for increased electrical power, he said.

A lighter, more powerful ship will save “a tremendous amount of money in total ownership costs over the life of the ship,” Dwyer said. “You can make up that R&D expense pretty quickly.”

The Navy originally had planned to introduce design enhancements gradually to its class of carriers, building first a CVNX 1 and later an improved CVNX 2.

But Defense Department officials decided that planned improvements for CVNX 1 were not dramatic enough to justify the expense. Instead, they chose to meet the president’s stated goal to “skip a generation” of technology. They combined the CVNX 1 and 2 steps “into a single, transformational ship design that accommodates continuous evolution through the life of the class,” Hansford T. Johnson, acting Navy secretary, told the Senate Armed Services Committee.

The result, CVN 21, is providing an opportunity to reexamine “the way that we build and design ships and to set the baseline for the rest of the family of ships” that are in the works, including the littoral combat ship, DD(X) destroyer and Virginia-class submarine, Dwyer said. Plans for CVN 21 include dozens of new technologies.

A redesigned nuclear reactor, for example, supplies 25 percent more power for propulsion, with half the maintenance costs and half of the sailors to operate it.

More Electrical Power

“You can use the steam from the nuclear reactor to do other things,” Dwyer said. “One of the other things is to make electricity. This will provide CVN 21 with three times the electrical power that’s currently on the Nimitz.”

An electromagnetic aircraft launching system will replace the steam-powered system used on current ships. Steam requires a lot of maintenance, especially in a corrosive, maritime environment, Dwyer said. “If we made everything electric, we could save a lot of ownership costs and take the workload off the sailors.”

Two contractors, Northrop Grumman Corporation, of Los Angeles, and General Atomics, of San Diego, are building full-scale models of the system, called EMALS, and “sometime in the summer, we’re going to have a shoot-off—or a fly-off”—Dwyer said.

The Naval Air Systems Command, headquartered at Patuxent River Naval Air Station, is working on an advanced arresting gear, using an improved system of trapping aircraft as they land, Dwyer said. The new system “is an electrical, hydraulic combination,” he explained. It is designed to handle emerging platforms, such as the F/A-18E/F and the Joint Strike Fighter, which are heavier and able to return to the ship with more unexpended munitions than their predecessors.

CVN 21 will employ an integrated warfare system, Dwyer explained. Diverse electronic systems, such as sensors, command and control, and self defense, will be combined into a single, open-architecture, scalable weapons system, based on commercial, off-the-shelf technologies.

“We’d like everything to plug and play,” said Dwyer. “Right now, the way we build aircraft carriers is to buy all the electronic equipment up front, then take seven years to build a ship and deliver it with obsolete electronics. It’s kind of crazy now that you think about it.

“We don’t want to do that any more,” he said. “What we’d like to do is put the electronic equipment in separately from the actual shipbuilding process.”

Navy officials originally had planned to install the integrated warfare system in CVN 77, but it was cut for budgetary reasons. They still intend to add it to the ship during the post-construction phase, Dwyer said.

The Navy is working with the prime contractor, Northrop Grumman’s Newport News subsidary, in Newport News, Va., to design and install a so-called smart deck, equipped with flexible fiber-optic cable, which is easier to move and repair than hard copper wiring.

The island—the tower on the flight deck, where ship operations are controlled—is being redesigned. Command and decision centers are being moved from the island, to the smart deck, down lower in the ship. The ship’s bridge and the flight-operations center will remain in the island.

The island also is being moved to make better use of the flight deck, Dwyer said. “The people who actually handle aircraft said, ‘The island’s in the wrong place. It makes the aircraft all jam up. Why don’t you move it?’”

As a result, he explained, the island is being shifted 80 to 100 feet aft. Elevators, avionics and electronic support systems also are being moved. The whole idea, he said, is to create a racetrack-like pattern on the flight deck, with “pit stop” parking, so that aircraft could move more efficiently.

These changes will enable CVN 21 to raise its number of sorties—operational flights by individual aircraft—from about 140 to 160 a day, with the ability to sure up to 220 a day, if necessary.

To enhance survivability, the fuel tanks and magazines, where the bombs, missiles and other munitions are stored, are getting more armor, and the hull is being reinforced for greater protection against mines and torpedoes.

“The carrier is the most survivable ship the Navy has right now,” Dwyer said. “CVN 21 will be the most survivable carrier.”

Smaller Crew

These changes will enable the size of the ship’s crew—which does not include some 2,500 personnel in the air wing—to be reduced from about 3,000 to 2,500 and possibly as low as 2,100, Dwyer said.

“That comes from two principal areas,” Dwyer explained. In the reactor department, simplifications are being made, he said, and in the air department, “where we have all those sailors lugging bombs around. They won’t be needed any more.”

CVN 21 will have to accommodate unmanned combat air vehicles, Dwyer said. “We’ve got to step up to UCAVs. Not an unmanned airborne vehicle, but an unmanned combat vehicle, which looks like a jet plane, a little shorter, with bombs on it. How are we going to do this? Take off and land an unmanned jet fighter? That’s a big step.”

The decision to go ahead with CVN 21 was well received among the 18,000 workers employed at Newport News’ 550-acre shipyard on the James River. “It’s critically important to us,” said Matt Mulherin, vice president for Newport News’ CVN 21 program. “Half of our business is carrier construction.”

Combining CVN 1 and 2, however, “certainly accelerated our timeline,” Mulherin told National Defense. “I have a lot more gray hairs than I did before.”

Newport News is the nation’s only designer, builder and refueler of nuclear-powered aircraft carriers. Currently, it is building the last two of the Nimitz-class of carriers.

The USS Ronald Reagan, CVN 76, is nearly complete. It was scheduled to be commissioned in May, but that event has been postponed until mid-summer, according to Newport News spokesperson Jerri Dicksecki.

Reasons cited for the slippage: Ship-construction delays slowed equipment installation, hundreds of circuit breakers had quality-control problems, and unusually wet winter weather hampered the ability to do major jobs, such as applying non-skid paint to the flight deck.

Despite this delay, plans still call for the ship to be deployed in 2005, Dicksecki said.

The Reagan incorporates dozens of new technologies into its design, Dicksecki noted. These include a bulbous bow, which provides more buoyancy to the forward end of the ship and additional lift to the flight deck. An integrated control and advanced network, or ICAN, will link controls for machinery, navigation, voice communications and other systems. Air conditioning, medical facilities and quarters for female crew members will be upgraded.

The next carrier, CVN 77, is about 23 percent finished, Dwyer said. In December, CVN 77 was named for former President George H.W. Bush, who won the Distinguished Flying Cross as a naval aviator during World War II.

The USS George H.W. Bush is scheduled to join the fleet in 2008, replacing the 42-year-old, non-nuclear-powered USS Kitty hawk, CV 63. The Bush is viewed as a transition carrier, serving as a bridge between the Nimitz class and CVN 21. She will feature:

nMajor changes in aircraft fuel storage and distribution systems.

nA “flexible island” design that will accommodate phased array radars, when they are ready for installation.

nA commercial, off-the-shelf oxygen and nitrogen generation system.

nA new, COTS-based flight-deck crane.

nA vacuum collection, holding and transfer system for shipboard sewage and waste water.

Currently, the Navy has 12 aircraft carriers in service. They are the largest warships in the world. The Nimitz is 1,092 feet long—almost as long as the Empire State Building is tall—and it soars 20 stories above the waterline.

Carriers, home to almost 6,000 men and women, are like small cities. They offer such urban amenities as daily newspapers, radio and television stations, libraries, convenience markets, barber shops, beauty parlors, laundries and even post offices with their own zip codes.

The firepower of just one carrier is equal to that of an entire air force of some countries. The Nimitz, for example, hosts 85 combat aircraft. Its armament also includes Sea Sparrow missiles and the 20 mm Phalanx close-in weapons system.

Also, carriers rarely travel alone. Each is usually accompanied by a heavily armed battle group of two cruisers, four destroyers, two attack submarines, eight helicopters and a fast combat support ship, assigned in large part to protect the flattop.

In recent years, some officials—such as retired Vice Adm. Arthur Cebrowski, now director of the Defense Department’s office of force transformation—have argued that the Navy should shift its emphasis away from carriers and other large ships toward smaller vessels designed to operate close to shore.

Carrier advocates responded that the flattops have proven their ability several times recently to move quickly across oceans, at speeds in excess of 30 knots, to assert U.S. military power into conflicts such as Bosnia, Kosovo, Afghanistan and now Iraq. Five carriers and their battle groups participating in the war against Iraq.

Unlike Air Force aircraft and Army ground forces, carriers and their air wings need no land bases in places such as Saudi Arabia and Turkey, Dwyer said. In fact, he noted, a carrier can substitute for an Army installation. In the early days of the Afghanistan campaign, the navy stripped the Kitty Hawk of its air wing and made it a base for special operations troops.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: carriers; cvn21; cvn77; military; navy; newportnews; nnsy; patuxentrivernas; usnavy; ussgeorgehwbush; usskittyhawk
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1 posted on 05/11/2003 6:24:45 AM PDT by VaBthang4
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To: MP5SD; Gunrunner2; MudPuppy; tomcat; Gritty; opbuzz; spetznaz; PsyOp; XBob; CIBvet; Boot Hill; ...

2 posted on 05/11/2003 6:25:30 AM PDT by VaBthang4 (Could someone show me one [1] Loserdopian elected to the federal government?)
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To: VaBthang4
If you move the island further aft won't there be more turbulence in the landing zone? The Enterprise's huge billboard antenna on the island created turbulence problems in the past.
3 posted on 05/11/2003 6:39:46 AM PDT by Gary Boldwater
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To: VaBthang4
Unlike Air Force aircraft and Army ground forces, carriers and their air wings need no land bases in places such as Saudi Arabia and Turkey, Dwyer said. In fact, he noted, a carrier can substitute for an Army installation. In the early days of the Afghanistan campaign, the navy stripped the Kitty Hawk of its air wing and made it a base for special operations troops.

Rapid reaction doctrine is alive and well.

4 posted on 05/11/2003 6:46:48 AM PDT by verity
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To: VaBthang4
In keeping with the current trend of naming carriers after living Presidents, be ready for the USS Jimmie Carter -- the "Peace Ship". After all, Jimmie was a Navy officer, a nuclear officer. And after two Republican names, the liberals will howl for "fairness".

5 posted on 05/11/2003 6:56:38 AM PDT by AngrySpud
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To: VaBthang4
Take a gander:

Joint Mobile Offshore Base


6 posted on 05/11/2003 7:01:36 AM PDT by jdege
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To: AngrySpud
The liberals have already done it, the USS Jimmy Carter is being built right now. It is the third in the Seawolf class of nuclear submarines. At least it's not a carrier.
7 posted on 05/11/2003 7:05:46 AM PDT by ao98
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To: AngrySpud
What will the USS Bill Clinton be, an aircraft carrier, a destroyer, a submarine, or a garbage scow?
8 posted on 05/11/2003 7:21:52 AM PDT by SteamShovel
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To: VaBthang4
Hmm, #77 is going to be Geo. H. W. Bush.
How about Lincoln or Theodore Roosevelt for the CVNX?
Hell, capitalize on the new nature of the ship and name it the Enterprise!
9 posted on 05/11/2003 7:22:03 AM PDT by Saturnalia
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To: VaBthang4
CVN 76 named for Reagan, for winning the Cold War without firing a shot...
CVN 77 named for George H Bush for liberating Kuwait...
After the Iraqi liberation and the big hullabaloo about George W Bush landing on a carrier, it isn't too unlikely that he will have a future (super-)carrier named after him.

Hmmm, it seems like they've skipped a President in there somewhere. Now who could that be and why would they choose to not honor him? Hmmmm. Could it be that randomly bombing numerous other nations without any decisive results or plan doesn't warrant such an honor?

And looking backwards, there's a previous President who stood idly by as over 100 Americans were held hostage for 444 days who also isn't going to have a carrier named after him. Imagine that!

Carriers named for Presidents:
1945 - FDR
1968 - JFK
1977 - Eisenhower
1986 - Teddy Roosevelt
1989 - Lincoln
1992 - George Washington
1998 - Truman
2003? - Reagan
2007? - GHWBush

(Interesting... only six of the 77 carriers hulls were ever sunk by enemy action! The Langley, Lexington, Princeton, Hornet, Wasp, and Yorktown, all from 1942 to 1951.)

10 posted on 05/11/2003 7:23:22 AM PDT by Teacher317
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To: Saturnalia
Teddy Roosevelt is CVN 71, Lincoln is CVN 72, and Enterprise is CVN 65... all still active.
11 posted on 05/11/2003 7:25:18 AM PDT by Teacher317
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To: Saturnalia
A correction to my post, the Enterprise is still active.
Columbia or Constellation?
12 posted on 05/11/2003 7:25:45 AM PDT by Saturnalia
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To: Teacher317
Hmmm, it seems like they've skipped a President in there somewhere.

With the naming of CVN-77 for Bush senior the floodgate has been opened so wait'll the next Democrat elected to the Oval Office. There will be a carrier named after Clinton, mark my word.

13 posted on 05/11/2003 7:27:19 AM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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To: ao98
LOL, let all of the boats named after liberal socialists forever be submarine, so we don't have to look at them too often.

(Appropriate, actually, since they work so hard to submarine the Constitution by working in the darkest, murkiest, and coldest depths of politics.)

14 posted on 05/11/2003 7:27:33 AM PDT by Teacher317
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To: Saturnalia
Constellation is CVN 64 and still active...

I like Columbia, though... or maybe Challenger.

15 posted on 05/11/2003 7:29:23 AM PDT by Teacher317
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To: Teacher317
Damn the Navy for stealing my ideas!
I'll sue! Possibly even jane them too!
16 posted on 05/11/2003 7:29:40 AM PDT by Saturnalia
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To: Teacher317
Get really creative, build one with a command island that is comprised of two barely separated parts, and call it the Twin Towers.
17 posted on 05/11/2003 7:31:38 AM PDT by Teacher317
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To: Non-Sequitur
It will HAVE to be a phallically-shaped suubmarine! It just HAS to!

(Insert paint scheme jokes here)

18 posted on 05/11/2003 7:33:51 AM PDT by Teacher317
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To: VaBthang4
All the deserving presidents have been done and we're starting on the undeserving ones, so how about USS America or USS United States? Recycle some of the good ones from the recent past and make another USS Independence or USS Saratoga or USS Yorktown or USS Midway. Go with the names of famous fighting ships like they used to and name it USS Wasp or USS Hornet or USS Ranger. Give it a name to be proud of.
19 posted on 05/11/2003 7:34:58 AM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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To: Saturnalia
A correction to my post, the Enterprise is still active. Columbia or Constellation?

All of the WWII fleet carrier names should be represented: Saratoga, Lexington, Wasp, etc. Note that Britain's Royal Navy has maintained Ark Royal as an active vessel name,

20 posted on 05/11/2003 7:36:09 AM PDT by Cloud William
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