Posted on 10/06/2021 6:20:38 AM PDT by Enlightened1
The US Navy sold two old aircraft carriers for a cent each to a ship-breaking firm.
The USS Kitty Hawk and USS John F. Kennedy had been decommissioned for years.
They are due to be broken up by a firm in Texas, who can make money from the scrap metal.
The US Navy sold two aircraft carriers to a ship-breaking company for 1 cent each after decades of service.
The cut-price fee reflects the fact the company will profit from selling the ship metal for scrap, officials said.
Naval Sea Systems Command, a US Navy sub-organization, said it had agreed to sell USS Kitty Hawk and USS John F. Kennedy to International Shipbreaking Limited (ISL), which is based in Brownsville, Texas, USA Today reported.
Towing and ship-breaking is a costly process and the Navy has previously paid ISL large sums of money to recycle its ships, the Brownsville Herald reported.
"The contract values reflect that the contracted company will benefit from the subsequent sale of scrap steel, iron, and non-ferrous metal ores," said Alan Baribeau, a spokesman for the Naval Sea Systems Command in a statement cited by USA Today.
Both ships were launched in the 1960s and were capable of carrying dozens of aircraft. The Kitty Hawk was deployed in the Vietnam War and the John F. Kennedy featured in the Gulf War.
USS Kitty Hawk was decommissioned in 2017 and USS John F. Kennedy in 2009. Both have spent their time since being maintained in naval yards.
The ships are due be towed to Brownsville, Texas, for scrapping in the coming months, an ISL spokesperson told the Brownsville Herald.
Read the original article on Business Insider
(Excerpt) Read more at yahoo.com ...
They did sell it at fair price.
The company assumed the cost of properly disposing of tons of nuclear waste, asbestos, and toxic goo that comes with the metal.
As a surface warfare officer on a DDG destroyer, I had the unusual privilege of sinking my father’s DD destroyer. My father was a navy pilot but began his career as a FTG fire control enlisted man. We towed his boat out to sea and used it for target practice, and finally sunk it with a single torpedo. I got to preside over the event as SWO. I had one of my junior officers film the event on Super 8 from the gun director. My father cried a bit when he watched the film later.
These should be the fates of all naval vessels. Again, scrapping them is the ultimate indignity for an honorable warrior...
Made me look. From Wiki:
“Ship dimensions
Panamax container ship
USS Missouri, one of the Iowa-class battleships, makes a very tight fit as she passes through the Miraflores Locks of the Panama Canal in October 1945.
Panamax is determined principally by the dimensions of the canal’s original lock chambers, each of which is 110 ft (33.53 m) wide, 1,050 ft (320.04 m) long, and 41.2 ft (12.56 m) deep. The usable length of each lock chamber is 1,000 ft (304.8 m). The available water depth in the lock chambers varies, but the shallowest depth is at the south sill of the Pedro Miguel Locks and is 41.2 ft (12.56 m) at a Miraflores Lake level of 54 ft 6 in (16.61 m). The clearance under the Bridge of the Americas at Balboa is the limiting factor on a vessel’s overall height for both Panamax and Neopanamax ships; the exact figure depends on the water level.
The maximum dimensions allowed for a ship transiting the canal using the original locks and the new locks (New Panamax) are:[1]
Length
Overall (including protrusions): 950 ft (289.56 m). Exceptions:
Container ship and passenger ship: 965 ft (294.13 m)
Tug-barge combination, rigidly connected: 900 ft (274.32 m) overall
Other non-self-propelled vessels-tug combination: 850 ft (259.08 m) overall;
New Panamax increases allowable length to 366 m (1,201 ft).[2]
Width (beam)
Width over outer surface of the shell plating: 106 ft (32.31 m). General exception: 107 ft (32.61 m), when draft is less than 37 ft (11.3 m) in tropical fresh water.
New Panamax originally allowed a width of 49 m (161 ft).[2] Expanded to 51.25 m (168.14 ft) during June 2018.[3]
Draft
The maximum allowable draft is 39.5 ft (12.04 m) in Tropical Fresh Water (TFW). The name and definition of TFW is created by ACP using the freshwater Lake Gatún as a reference, since this is the determination of the maximum draft. The salinity and temperature of water affect its density, and hence how deep a ship will float in the water. Tropical Fresh Water (TFW) is fresh water of Lake Gatún, with density 0.9954 g/cm3, at 29.1 °C (84 °F).[4] The physical limit is set by the lower (seaside) entrance of the Pedro Miguel locks. When the water level in Lake Gatún is low during an exceptionally dry season the maximum permitted draft may be reduced. Such a restriction is published three weeks in advance, so ship loading plans can take appropriate measures.
New Panamax increases allowable draft to 15.2 m (49.9 ft),[2] however due to low rainfall, the canal authority limited draft to 43 feet when the new locks opened in June 2016, increasing it to 44 feet (13.41 meters), in August “based on the current level of Gatun Lake and the weather forecast for the following weeks.”[5]
Height
Vessel height is limited to 190 ft (57.91 m) measured from the waterline to the vessel’s highest point; the limit also pertains to New Panamax in order to pass under the Bridge of the Americas at Balboa harbor.[6] Exception: 205 ft (62.5 m) when passage at low water (MLWS) at Balboa is possible.[citation needed]
Cargo capacity
A Panamax cargo ship would typically have a DWT of 65,000–80,000 tonnes, but its maximum cargo would be about 52,500 tonnes during a transit due to draft limitations in the canal.[7] New Panamax ships can carry 120,000 DWT.[8] Panamax container ships can carry 5,000 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEU); with 13,000 TEU for New Panamax vessels.
Records
The longest ship ever to transit the original locks was San Juan Prospector, now Marcona Prospector, an ore-bulk-oil carrier that is 973 ft (296.57 m) long, with a beam of 106 ft (32.31 m).[9] The widest ships to transit are the four battleships of both the South Dakota class and Iowa class battleships, which have a maximum beam of 108’ 2” (32.96 m), leaving less than 6 in (15 cm) margin of error between the ships and the walls of the locks.[10]”
Dimensions USS Kitty Hawk:
“Class and type Kitty Hawk-class aircraft carrier
Displacement
61,351 long tons (62,335 t) standard
81,985 long tons (83,301 t) full load[2]
Length 1,068.9 ft (325.8 m) LOA[2]
Beam
282 ft (86 m) extreme
130 ft (40 m) waterline[2]
Draft 38 ft (12 m)[2]”
Looks like a very tight fit if at all.
Anything to get the Kennedy name out there. I was on Saratoga in the Gulf War. We were on station a week after Saddam invaded Kuwait. Fastest translant in history from Jacksonville to the Suez Canal and Red Sea. We were there during the entire 6 month build up to the war and then until the conclusion of the conflict. Over 12,000 launches and recoveries during that time. The non-skid on the deck was stripped to bare metal. But oohhhh, it was sooooo important that we wait until Kennedy could arrive...Thats what gave the media tingles up their legs...
IIRC, the Brits scrapped a few warships in the 1930s (due to treaty obligations??), that I imagine they would have liked to have had available just a few years later...
Agree. After iuseful life is over, and any repairs are more correctly called patches, these ships would be unreliable in a battle, one step above floating cardboard. It would be an environmental disaster to just sink one of these without rendering, and that costs money.
The reason it’s a penny cost is that it is a nominal transfer fee. Like junking a car before it’s crashed and burned, this is one case , rare, that a responsible someone is ridding these now behemoths before they breakdown somewhere impossible.
Towing and ship-breaking is a costly process and the Navy has previously paid ISL large sums of money to recycle its ships,
Imagine if you had to pay $50 to have your old washer hauled away, but this week you can have your dryer carried out of your basement for free.
Lots of odd sentences...
“Both have spent their time since being maintained in naval yards.”
Who wrote this? Some ESL foreigner?
I want an aircraft carrier!!!
Well you missed your chance. A nickel bid would have easily won.
The US Navy betraying the taxpayer
I knew it. The Marines paid $1 for the USS Princeton to use as an LPH in 1959. I have always maintained that the Marines were overcharged.
Kinda like leaving millions of dollars of active military inventory so your enemy can find and use it, eh?
What an odd sentence.Yes, the one you wrote is odd.
True enough! Typing too fast and not proof-reading!
Oh man, I had dibs on the Kitty Hawk!
Well, being as they are going to Brownsville, probably lots of inexpensive labor available nearby.
I would have bought the Kitty Hawk.
Anchor it just over 12 Nautical miles off the Southeastern Coast, declare it my own Country, make it into a Casino, Entertainment venue.
Cha-Ching!!
LOL! Thanks for looking. My dad transited on the New Jersey during the kerfuffle in Korea. Some co-workers transited taking a Space Shuttle External Tank from New Orleans to Vandenburg AFB using a covered ocean going barge. Later the unused ET had to make a return trip for use at Kennedy Space Center. Then, after the Shuttle program shut down one of the ETs was sent to Los Angeles for display.
Yeah, from CHINA!
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