The USS Ford, the lead ship of the new Ford-class aircraft-carrier series, is expected to join the US Navy in early 2016,
according
to CNN. Once deployed, the ship will be among the largest carriers ever
to ply the seas and will feature a number of changes and advancements
over the US' current Nimitz-class aircraft carrier.
Here's a look at this multibillion-dollar beast:
The USS Gerald Ford is expected to cost upward of $13 billion by the time it is deployed.
(Screengrab/Youtube) The USS Gerald R. Ford.
The Ford, and the Ford-class of
aircraft carrier, is intended to relieve stress and overdeployment
within the US Navy. Currently, the Navy operates 10 carriers but wants
an additional vessel to take pressure off of the rest of the fleet.
(U.S. Navy/Huntington Ingalls Industries/Chris Oxley)
The ship will feature a host of changes over the Nimitz-class carrier. Ford-class carriers will be capable of generating three times more electrical power than the older carrier classes, for example.
(US Navy/Newport News Shipbuilding) A 3D model of the USS John F. Kennedy, the second ship the Ford-class carrier series.
This increased power supply
allows the Ford to run more cutting-edge hardware. The newly designed
Electro-Magnetic Aircraft Launch System (EMALS) will allow the vessel to
launch 25% more aircraft a day than the previous steam-powered launch
systems.
The amount of electricity onboard also makes Ford-class carriers ideal candidates to field laser and directed-energy weapons in the future, like rail guns and missile interceptors.
(Screenshot/www.usatoday.com/videos/news/2014/04/08/7464129/) A demonstration of a rail gun.
Once launched, the Ford will be
among the largest warships in the world. It will be 1,092 feet long and
displace upward of 100,000 tons.
(US Navy/John Whalen) Newport
News Shipbuilding floods Dry Dock 12 to float the first-in-class
aircraft carrier, Pre-Commissioning Unit Gerald R. Ford.
This size will allow the carrier to house about 4,400 staff and personnel while carrying more than 75 aircraft.
(US Navy/Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Aidan P. Campbell) The
aircraft carrier Pre-Commissioning Unit (PCU) Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78)
gets underway, beginning the ship’s launch and transit to Newport News
Shipyard pier 3 for the final stages of construction and testing.
The Ford is expected to carry F-35s and carrier-based drone aircraft once they become available.
(REUTERS/Mike Blake) A
Lockheed Martin Corp's F-35C Joint Strike Fighter is shown on the deck
of the USS Nimitz aircraft carrier after making the plane's first ever
carrier landing using its tailhook system, off the coast of California,
November 3, 2014.
But for all the advances within the Ford-class carrier group, some have questioned
the wisdom of continuing an astronomically expensive carrier-heavy
naval strategy in a time when interstate warfare is rare and nations
like China are working on potentially carrier-killing long-range antiship cruise missiles.
(Wikimedia Commons) The USS Eisenhower aircraft carrier.
Yahoo News
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