jstevenson
Sailor Stevenson
Yeah, "30 knots" my ass lol.
yeah, our aircraft carriers can move way faster than that.
Yeah, "30 knots" my ass lol.
The Enterprise could go over 70 knots, they are admittedly slower now, but US carriers are the fastest warships on the planet.yeah, our aircraft carriers can move way faster than that.
yeah, our aircraft carriers can move way faster than that.
Now I can join the others.
The Enterprise could go over 70 knots, they are admittedly slower now, but US carriers are the fastest warships on the planet.
it probably is, that's just the number I heard from people who served there, the actual top speeds are classified though, so I no one here actually knows the top speed.Over 70 is probably exaggeration, lol. But that carrier had a lot more nuclear reactors than later CVNs, so it definitely had the horsepower.
CNN
Gets commissioned tomorrow.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y-OSlb97kOU
https://theaviationist.com/?p=42985
UK, US and China got new carriers in 2017. None for Russia :'(
What a colossal waste of money.
and a million bucks in skin repair if it gets caught in a rainstorm
The bigger point that the article makes is that naval aircraft these days lack the kind of range necessary to conduct stand off attacks when opposed by modern peer-state anti-shipping weapons. So you can't hit targets anymore without putting the carrier itself, and it's battle group, at risk.Its always been that way though. Even in WWII. Enterprise for instance carried 90 Aircraft but 30-40 were reserve aircraft with around 50-60 Active. At its most active point Enterprise had 72 aircraft active with the rest reserve.
Reserve Planes are important. During the Cold War Carriers were basically kept at full war footing with conflict breaking out at any point
There's a SF series I enjoyed where a 21st Century carrier battle group, led by (depressingly enough) the American supercarrier USS Hillary R. Clinton, gets dropped in the middle of Admiral Spruance's Task Force 16 on the eve of the Battle of Midway.
Watching the video the footage of the test sled being launched is hilarious lol.
That's crazy, considering they have a whole department within the department.
As has been mentioned here Aircraft Carriers are probably pretty low on the totem pole as far as wasting money on military assets.
Just in terms of humanitarian aid, they can carry thousands of crew, have state of the art medical facilities and can carry an ungodly number of supplies to areas in need. Not to mention they can produce hundreds of thousands of gallons of fresh water every day.
The US sends carriers to many natural disaster areas to provide support. Off the top of my head I know they sent at least 1 to Haiti after the earthquake that provided supplies and personnel to help the area.
They are certainly warships, but they have a ton of other uses that makes them amazing for humanitarian stuff.
The bigger point that the article makes is that naval aircraft these days lack the kind of range necessary to conduct stand off attacks when opposed by modern peer-state anti-shipping weapons. So you can't hit targets anymore without putting the carrier itself, and it's battle group, at risk.
Life on a frigate serving as a radar picket back in the Cold War mustn't have been hell. If the ballon ever went up you'd be the first to die.
That ship is so amazing. Great to see the US keep modernizing and keep pushing the boundaries between the tech and military.
The crew size on that thing is greatly reduced also!
Wow, I didn't know France was the only country apart the US to have a nuclear aircraft carrier, the Charles de Gaulle...
In fact I'm surprised so few countries got them. Cost must be phenomenal.
Huntington Ingalls made a bunch of ships for the Coast Guard that weren't sea worthy and broke under the stress of their own weight.
Yeah, "30 knots" my ass lol.
Not just that, but the design specs of the US reactor plants are classified information that they are careful about not getting out.Wow, I didn't know France was the only country apart the US to have a nuclear aircraft carrier, the Charles de Gaulle...
In fact I'm surprised so few countries got them. Cost must be phenomenal.
Huntington Ingalls made a bunch of ships for the Coast Guard that weren't sea worthy and broke under the stress of their own weight.
But does it have a mini-fridge? Spicey wants to know or he'll quit the reserves too.
Was reading this article yesterday how the strike capability of these gigantic supercarriers is actually diminishing.
http://foxtrotalpha.jalopnik.com/the-slow-death-of-the-carrier-air-wing-1796726088
Yeah the range issue is a problem and its one where the Navy screwed up. When the decision was being made on a future ship type in the early 90s it came down to 2 classes. A Modern Assault Battleship or a Modern Destroyer Program. Budget Hawks felt it would be better to invest the money into the Destroyer program because they could spread the cost on 30+ ships instead of the 4-6 Assault Battleships.
Problem is the Destroyer Program morphed into the Zumwalt class which is ending with only 3-4 being made. The Assault Battleship would have been immensely more useful with extreme range and firepower.
Always so great to see American weapons of war at their most modern and expensive!
It wouldn't be modern America if they didn't have the best possible gear for bombing the shit out of poor people.
And now they don't even employ as many Americans! Result!
They should name US naval flag ships after fictional sci-fi ships, like naming this carrier the USS Millennium Falcon.
They should name US naval flag ships after fictional sci-fi ships, like naming this carrier the USS Millennium Falcon.
Because fuck education, feeding people and better infrastructure?
Not as many as it could have.I guarantee you that 13 billion kept alot of families fed and sheltered
I guarantee you that 13 billion kept alot of families fed and sheltered
Sure, the government can just stop funding everything so we can feed everyone.Not as many as it could have.
As has been mentioned here Aircraft Carriers are probably pretty low on the totem pole as far as wasting money on military assets.
Just in terms of humanitarian aid, they can carry thousands of crew, have state of the art medical facilities and can carry an ungodly number of supplies to areas in need. Not to mention they can produce hundreds of thousands of gallons of fresh water every day.
The US sends carriers to many natural disaster areas to provide support. Off the top of my head I know they sent at least 1 to Haiti after the earthquake that provided supplies and personnel to help the area.
They are certainly warships, but they have a ton of other uses that makes them amazing for humanitarian stuff.
Agreed, well said.Since people keep complaining about the cost...
Economic and military power are very much related. It is in the US's interests to keep massive power projection capability. The existence of massive military might alone is a reason to be friendly with the US, and that in turn profits both nations economically.
The US undoubtedly overspends on military but ultimately maintaining a global military presence is not waste.
Plus, as someone noted, the carrier will server half a century or so. Over time, it is pretty cheap military investment.