USS Gerald R. Ford

USS Gerald R. Ford
Gerald R. Ford CVN-78
Gerald R. Ford on the James River in November 2013.
History
United States
Name: Gerald R. Ford
Namesake: Gerald R. Ford
Awarded: 10 September 2008
Builder: Huntington Ingalls Industries
Cost: $12.8 billion + $4.7 billion R&D (estimated)[1][2]
Laid down: 13 November 2009[3]
Launched: 9 November 2013
Sponsored by: Susan Ford[4]
Christened: 9 November 2013[5]
Commissioned: 2016[6] (planned)
Status: Launched
Badge:
General characteristics
Class and type: Gerald R. Ford-class aircraft carrier
Displacement: Approximately 100,000 long tons (110,000 short tons; 100,000 tonnes) (full load)[7]
Length: 1,106 ft (337 m)[8]
Beam:
  • 134 ft (41 m) (waterline)
  • 256 ft (78 m) (flight deck)
Height: nearly 250 ft (76 m)
Decks: 25
Installed power: Two A1B nuclear reactors
Propulsion: Four shafts
Speed: In excess of 30 knots (56 km/h; 35 mph)
Range: Unlimited distance; 20–25 years
Complement: 4,660
Armament:
Aircraft carried: More than 75
Aviation facilities: 1,092 ft × 256 ft (333 m × 78 m) flight deck

PCU Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78) is the lead ship of her class of United States Navy supercarriers. As announced by the U.S. Navy on 16 January 2007, the ship is named after the 38th President of the United States Gerald R. Ford, whose World War II naval service included combat duty aboard the light aircraft carrier Monterey in the Pacific Theater.[9]

The keel of Gerald R. Ford was laid down on 13 November 2009.[3] Construction began on 11 August 2005, when Northrop Grumman held a ceremonial steel cut for a 15-ton plate that forms part of a side shell unit of the carrier.[10] She was christened on 9 November 2013.[2] The schedule called for the ship to join the U.S. Navy's fleet in March 2016 with the first deployment in 2019.[11] Gerald R. Ford will enter the fleet replacing the inactive USS Enterprise (CVN-65), which ended her 51 years of active service in December 2012.[12][13]

Naming

Ford in U.S. Navy uniform, 1945

In 2006, while Gerald Ford was still alive, Senator John Warner of Virginia proposed to amend a 2007 defense-spending bill to declare that CVN-78 "shall be named the USS Gerald Ford."[14] The final version signed by President George W. Bush on 17 October 2006[15] declared only that it "is the sense of Congress that ... CVN-78 should be named the U.S.S. Gerald R. Ford."[16] Since such "sense of" language is typically non-binding and does not carry the force of law,[17] the Navy was not required to name the ship after Ford.

On 3 January 2007, former United States Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld announced that the aircraft carrier would be named after Ford during a eulogy for President Ford at Grace Episcopal Church in East Grand Rapids, Michigan.[18] Rumsfeld indicated that he had personally told Ford of the honor during a visit to his home in Rancho Mirage a few weeks before Ford's death. This makes the aircraft carrier one of the few U.S. ships named after a living person. Later in the day, the Navy confirmed that the aircraft carrier would indeed be named after the former President.[19] On 16 January 2007, Navy Secretary Donald Winter officially named CVN-78 USS Gerald R. Ford. Ford's daughter Susan Ford Bales was named the ship's sponsor. The announcements were made at a Pentagon ceremony attended by Vice President Dick Cheney, Senators Warner (R-VA) and Levin (D-MI), Major General Guy C. Swan III, Bales, Ford's other three children, and others.[20]

The USS America Carrier Veterans Association (CVA) had pushed to name the ship USS America. The CVA is an association of sailors who served aboard USS America (CV-66), which was decommissioned in 1996 and scuttled in the Atlantic as part of a damage test of large deck aircraft carriers in 2005.[21] Eventually, LHA-6 was named America.

History

The 555-metric ton island sits in place after being lifted into position on the ship's flight deck during a ceremony at Newport News Shipbuilding in January 2013.

Construction

On 10 September 2008, the U.S. Navy signed a $5.1 billion contract with Northrop Grumman Shipbuilding in Newport News, Virginia, to design and construct the carrier. Northrop had begun advance construction of the carrier under a $2.7 billion contract in 2005. The carrier is being constructed at the Huntington Ingalls (formerly Northrop Grumman) Newport News Shipbuilding facilities in Newport News, Virginia, which employs 19,000 workers.[22]

The keel of the new warship was ceremonially laid on 14 November 2009 in Dry Dock 12[23] by Ford's daughter, Susan Ford Bales. In a speech to the assembled shipworkers and DoD officials, Bales said: "Dad met the staggering challenges of restoring trust in the presidency and healing the nation's wounds after Watergate in the only way he knew how — with complete honesty and integrity. And that is the legacy we remember this morning."[24]

As of August 2011, the carrier was reported to be "structurally halfway complete".[25] In April 2012, it was said to be 75 percent complete.[26] On 24 May 2012, the important milestone of completing the vessel up to the waterline was reached when the critical lower bow was lifted into place.[27] This was the 390th of the nearly 500 lifts of the integral modular components (from which the vessel is assembled) that the ship's construction will ultimately require. On 8 October 2012, the carrier reached over 88 percent of the complete structural construction. Huntington Ingalls reported (in an 8 Nov. 2012 GLOBE NEWSWIRE press release) that they have "Reached 87 percent structural completion of CVN-78 Gerald R. Ford".[28] By 19 December 2012, construction had reached 90 percent structural completion. "Of the nearly 500 total structural lifts needed to complete the ship, 446 have been accomplished."[29]

Gerald R. Ford sitting in drydock during construction.

The island was originally scheduled to land in 2012.[30] However, the island landing and ceremony actually took place on 26 January 2013.[30]

On 9 April 2013, the flight deck of the carrier was completed following the addition of the ship's upper bow section, bringing the ship to 96 percent structural completion.[31]

On 7 May 2013, the last of 162 superlifts was put in place, bringing the ship to 100 percent structural completion.[32] Remaining work that needed to be done included hull painting, shafting work, completion of electrical systems, mooring equipment, installation of radar arrays, and flooding of the dry dock.[33]

On 11 July 2013, a time capsule was welded into a small room just above the floor, continuing a long Navy tradition. The time capsule holds items chosen by President Ford's daughter, Susan Ford Bales, and includes sandstone from the White House, Navy coins, and aviator wings from its first commanding officer.[34]

The ship was originally scheduled for launch in July 2013 and delivery in 2015.[25] Production delays meant that the launch had to be delayed until 11 October 2013 and the naming ceremony until 9 November 2013,[35] with delivery February 2016.[2][36]

On 3 October 2013, Gerald R. Ford had four 30-ton, 21 ft (6.4 m)-diameter bronze propellers installed. The installation of the propellers required more than 10 months of work to install the underwater shafting.[37]

Susan Ford Bales, daughter of President Gerald R. Ford, christens Gerald R. Ford.

On 11 October 2013, the ship's drydock was flooded for the first time in order to test various seawater-based systems.[38] Her launch date was set to be on the same day as her naming ceremony on 9 November 2013.[39]

On 9 November 2013, the ship was christened by Ford's daughter, Susan Ford Bales, with a bottle of American sparkling wine.[2][40]

As of 2013, construction costs are estimated at $12.8 billion, 22% over the 2008 budget, plus $4.7 billion in research and development costs. Because of budget difficulties, the Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral Jonathan Greenert, has warned there may be a two-year delay beyond 2016 in completing Gerald R. Ford.[2] The GAO reports that the price cap will be met by the Navy accepting an incomplete ship for that cost.[41]

On 23 September 2015, the Navy announced that several weeks of testing delays will likely slip the delivery date into April or May 2016. In addition, construction is 93% complete as of September 2015.[42]

Performance improvements

Gerald R. Ford is intended to be the first of a class of aircraft carriers that offer significant performance improvements over the previous Nimitz class. Gerald R. Ford is equipped with an AN/SPY-3 active electronically scanned array multi-function radar, and an island that is shorter in length and 20 feet (6.1 m) taller than that of the Nimitz class; it is set 140 feet (43 m) further aft and 3 feet (0.91 m) closer to the edge of the ship. Replacing traditional steam catapults, the Electromagnetic Aircraft Launch System (EMALS) will launch all carrier aircraft. This innovation eliminates the traditional requirement to generate and store steam, freeing up considerable below-deck square footage. With this EMALS innovation, Gerald R. Ford can accomplish 25% more aircraft launches per day than the Nimitz class and requires 25% fewer crew members. The Navy estimates it will save $4 billion in operating costs over a 50-year lifespan.[43] According to an Associated Press story:

‘She is truly a technological marvel,' Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Jonathan Greenert said in a webcast ceremony at the Newport News, Va., shipyard where Gerald R. Ford is being built. 'She will carry unmanned aircraft, joint strike fighters, and she will deploy lasers.’[44]

However, these performance enhancers have proven problematic in Pentagon tests.[45] In January, 2014, the annual Director, Operational Test and Evaluation (DOT&E) report said that critical ship systems including the EMALS, Advanced Arresting Gear (AAG), Dual Band Radar, and weapons elevators were not reliable enough and needed more testing and improvements. EMALS testing recorded 201 launch failures out of 1,967 launches, equaling a reliability rate of 240 mean cycles (launching of one aircraft) between critical failures. Testing of the AAG recorded 9 arresting failures out of 71 attempts, equaling a reliability rate of 20 mean cycles (recovery of one aircraft) between operational mission failure, a failure rate 248 times higher than should be expected. Those systems performed at a fraction of their requirements for shipboard configurations, and even less of required standards. Radar and weapons elevator test data was not made available, but were also below expectations. The Navy maintains that further testing will resolve the problems. Tests also showed that the launching and landing systems on Gerald R. Ford would place extra stress on aircraft with external fuel tanks.[46] Gerald R. Ford is projected to be able to generate 30 percent more sorties than Nimitz-class carriers, but the DOT&E report claims that is too optimistic, though the Navy also maintains that assumption based on modeling and simulations. Gerald R. Ford is planned to complete Initial Operational Test & Evaluation in 2017 before entering service.[47]

See also

References

  1. Ronald O'Rourke (22 October 2013). "Navy Ford (CVN-78) Class Aircraft Carrier Program: Background and Issues for Congress" (PDF). Congressional Research Service. p. 4. Retrieved 8 February 2014. FY14 cost of CVN-79 (procured in FY13) in then-year dollars; the same budget puts the cost of CVN-78 (procured in FY08) at $12,829.3 million but that includes ~$3.3bn of development costs. CVN-80 is estimated at $13,874.2m, making the total cost of the first three Fords $38,041.9m, or $12.68bn each.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 "US Navy Christens Costly New Carrier, USS Ford". Defense News (Gannett). 10 November 2013. Retrieved 22 December 2013.
  3. 1 2 "Keel laid for newest Navy aircraft carrier", www.navytimes.com, 13 November 2009.
  4. "Gerald R. Ford ship ceremony brings Susan Ford Bales, Family to Newport News, Virginia", The Grand Rapids Press, 13 November 2009.
  5. Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78) - The Ford-class
  6. "The Commissioning". USS Gerald R Ford Commissioning. Retrieved 28 March 2016.
  7. "Aircraft Carriers - CVN". Fact File. United States Navy. 12 January 2016. Retrieved 25 January 2016.
  8. "787-Ton Superlift: Ford Upper Bow". Newport News Shipbuilding. Huntington Ingalls. 15 April 2013. Retrieved 27 January 2016.
  9. Navy Names New Aircraft Carrier USS Gerald R. Ford - Official Announcement from Secretary of the Navy.
  10. "USS Gerld R. Ford CVN 78". U.S. Carriers. 8 March 2015. Retrieved 4 March 2016.
  11. "CNO's Position Report: 2014" (pdf). US Navy. 4 November 2014. Retrieved 2014-11-26.
  12. Navy CVN-21 Aircraft Carrier Program: Background and Issues for Congress Retrieved 8 December 2006.
  13. "USS Enterprise: Past Present And Future". The Official US Navy Blog. US Navy. Retrieved 1 December 2012.
  14. United States Library of Congress. Congressional Record, S5815 PDF, Senate Amendment 4211. Retrieved 5 December 2006.
  15. Defense Link News Article. President Signs 2007 Defense Authorization Act. Retrieved 1 December 2006
  16. United States Library of Congress. House Resolution 5122, Section 1012 (p. 292). Retrieved 1 December 2006.
  17. C-SPAN's Capitol Questions. Sense of Congress. Retrieved 5 December 2006.
  18. Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library and Museum
  19. Next Navy aircraft carrier to be named for late President Gerald Ford, buried Wednesday Retrieved 3 January 2007.
  20. Gerald R. Ford Foundation and exhibits, speakers and activities it supports
  21. "Name CVN78 USS America: A new flagship for America!". USS America Carrier Veterans Association. 21 January 2007. Retrieved 5 December 2008.
  22. Adams, Kathy, "Newport News Shipyard Gets $ 5.1 B Contract For Carrier Ford", Norfolk Virginian-Pilot, 11 September 2008.
  23. 37°00′05″N 76°26′46″W / 37.0014°N 76.4462°W
  24. Frost, Peter, "Shipyard Lays Keel Of Carrier In Solemn Tribute To Gerald R. Ford", Newport News Daily Press, 15 November 2009.
  25. 1 2 "Navy's next aircraft carrier halfway complete". Signon San Diego. 18 August 2011. Retrieved 15 August 2012.
  26. "Topic Galleries". Daily press. Retrieved 15 August 2012.
  27. "Bow piece for USS Gerald R. Ford lifted into place". WVEC Television. Retrieved 27 May 2012.
  28. "Huntington Ingalls Industries Reports Third Quarter Results; Reaches Significant Milestones on Path to 2015 Financial Targets". 4 Traders. Huntington Ingalls Industries. 11 August 2012. Retrieved 10 November 2013.
  29. "Gerald R Ford (CVN 78) Hits the 90 Percent Mark for Structural Completion", Industries reports (Huntington Ingalls), 19 December 2012.
  30. 1 2 "Gerald R Ford CVN 78". Newport News Shipbuilding. Huntington Ingalls. Retrieved 15 August 2012.
  31. Newport News Shipbuilding Completes Flight Deck On Aircraft Carrier Gerald R. Ford - Navyrecognition.com, 16 April 2013
  32. Next milestone today for carrier USS Gerald R. Ford - WVEC.com, 7 May 2013
  33. Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78) Aircraft Carrier's Primary Hull Structure Reaches 100 Percent Completion - Huntingtoningalls.com, 8 May 2013
  34. Time capsule welded into future USS Gerald R. Ford, Military Times, 11 July 2013
  35. Cavas, Christopher (3 October 2013). "New Ship News – Sub launched, Carrier prepped, LCS delivered". Defense News.
  36. "3rd elevator installed on USS Gerald R. Ford at Newport News Shipyard". 13News Now. August 16, 2013.
  37. Newport News Shipbuilding Installs 30-Ton Propellers on Aircraft Carrier Gerald R. Ford - WSJ.com, 3 October 2013
  38. Floating the Ford: New carrier meets the water - dailypress.com, 11 October 2013
  39. Ellison, Garret (15 October 2013). "Navy floods dry dock around USS Gerald R. Ford aircraft carrier ahead of Nov. 9 christening". Michigan Live.
  40. "Aircraft Carrier Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78) Christened At Newport News Shipbuilding". 12 November 2013.
  41. Slavin, Erik (21 November 2014). "GAO: Navy carrier will be incomplete, cost more at delivery". Stars and Stripes. Retrieved 21 November 2014.
  42. "Delivery of US Navy's USS Gerald R Ford aircraft carrier further delayed". Naval-technology.com (Kable). 23 September 2015. Retrieved 25 September 2015.
  43. "New Ford-class aircraft carrier: 25 percent more flights per day". CS monitor. 9 November 2013.
  44. Vergakis, Brock (9 October 2013). "Navy christens next generation of aircraft carrier". Yahoo.
  45. "In testing phase, new carrier plagued by problems". Stars and Stripes. 10 January 2014. Retrieved 10 January 2014.
  46. Capaccio, Tony (26 March 2015). "Navy jets with too much fuel can't launch from new aircraft carrier". hamptonroads.com (Bloomberg News Tribune News Service). Retrieved 26 March 2015.
  47. "Navy Alerted to Ford-class Carrier Reliability Issues", DoD Buzz, 31 January 2014.

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