Navy christens next generation of aircraft carrier
"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 the Ford is being built. "She will carry unmanned aircraft, joint strike fighters, and she will deploy lasers."
Saturday's christening was one part tribute to the future of Naval warfare and one part tribute to the ship's namesake, former President Gerald R. Ford. Ford was a lieutenant commander aboard an aircraft carrier during World War II and frequently spoke fondly of his time in the Navy.
Ford's daughter, Susan Ford Bales, is the ship's sponsor and had the duty of smashing the wine bottle into the ship.
In her speech to shipyard workers, Navy personnel and other dignitaries, she said she hopes future generations of sailors will understand the integrity her father showed during his years of public service — much as the current crew has honored him. The ship's motto is 'Integrity at the helm.'
"Dad, their message fills this shipyard. You kept your promise. You healed the nation. You gave the American people a president that was a shining beacon of integrity at the helm," she said. "And as demonstrated by Capt. (John) Meier and by the crew and by this mighty carrier, the American people are forever grateful to you. And Dad, I'll always be proud."
Other speakers honoring Ford included former Vice President Dick Cheney and former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld.
The Ford — with a new nuclear power plant, electromagnetic catapults and an enhanced 5-acre flight deck — will leave dry dock and head to a pier at Newport News Shipbuilding next week. The Navy says construction on the ship is about 70 percent complete and will finish up in 2015. It will then undergo a series of sea trials before it is commissioned and becomes operational.
Until then, the Navy will be down to a 10-carrier fleet following the USS Enterprise's deactivation last year.
The Ford is about $2 billion over budget and is about 70 percent complete, with most of the remaining work occurring on its internal systems. The cost overruns are eating into the aircraft carrier's projected savings. The aircraft carrier was designed to operate with fewer crew members, which is expected to save $4 billion over the ship's 50-year life span.
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Brock Vergakis can be reached at www.twitter.com/BrockVergakis
1 comment:
It was much expensive but a great technology used and completed in just four years since the first keel was laid in 2009,here is the video which covered complete four years effort of shipyard workers who labored around the clock to complete this Giant…
http://www.naval-technology.com/features/feature-video-feature-building-supercarrier-uss-gerald-r-ford/
Four years of making in less than Four Minutes
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