+

Cookies on the Business Insider India website

Business Insider India has updated its Privacy and Cookie policy. We use cookies to ensure that we give you the better experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we\'ll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies on the Business Insider India website. However, you can change your cookie setting at any time by clicking on our Cookie Policy at any time. You can also see our Privacy Policy.

Close
HomeQuizzoneWhatsappShare Flash Reads
 

The US Navy's next advanced aircraft carrier is 70% complete - watch the latest 888-ton chuck drop into place

Feb 27, 2018, 22:04 IST

Advertisement
A crane moves the lower stern into place on the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS John F. Kennedy at Huntington Ingalls Shipbuilding in Newport News, Virginia, making the second Gerald R. Ford-class aircraft carrier 50% structurally complete, June 22, 2017.US Navy

  • The USS John F. Kennedy is the second of the Navy's Gerald R. Ford-class advanced nuclear-powered aircraft carriers.
  • The Kennedy reached 70% completion in late February.
  • Construction on the Kennedy started in February 2011.


The USS John F. Kennedy, the second of the Navy's Gerald R. Ford-class advanced nuclear-powered aircraft carriers, reached 70% completion in late February, according to shipbuilder Huntington Ingalls.

Like the first-in-class Gerald R. Ford, the Kennedy's construction is being done with a modular technique, in which smaller parts of the ship are welded together to form larger chunks, called superlifts, that are then hoisted together.

The latest construction milestone came when crews at Huntington Ingalls' Newport News Shipbuilding dropped an 888-ton superlift - a 171-foot long, 92-foot wide section composed of berthing areas, electrical-equipment rooms, and workshops - into place between the carrier's bow and midship.

Below, you can see footage of the superlift being moved into place by the company's 1,157-ton gantry crane at Dry Dock 12.

The latest superlift took 18 months to construct and it "represents one of the key build strategy changes for Kennedy: building superlifts that are larger and more complete before they are erected on the ship," Mike Butler, the program director for the Kennedy, said in a Huntington Ingalls press release.

Construction on the Kennedy started in February 2011, with the "first cut of steel" ceremony at Newport News. The ship's keel was laid in August 2015, and it hit the 50%-constructed mark in June 2017, when crews moved the 1,027-ton lower-stern section - containing rudders, tanks, steering-gear rooms and electrical-power-distribution rooms - into place.

"We are pleased with how construction on the Kennedy is progressing, and we look forward to additional milestones as we inch closer to christening of the ship," Butler said in the February release. The Kennedy is set to launch in 2020.

Gerald R. Ford sitting in dry dock during construction.US Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Joshua J. Wahl

Like the Ford, the Kennedy contains an array of advanced features, including the Electromagnetic Launch System and Advanced Arresting Gear, both of which assist with launching and landing aircraft. (The Ford lacked one notable feature: urinals.)

The Ford, however, was delivered to the Navy two years later than planned and cost about $12.9 billion - 23% more than originally estimated.

The Government Accountability Office warned in summer 2017 that the $11.4 billion budget set for the Kennedy was unreliable and didn't address lessons learned during the building of the Ford. The Pentagon partially agreed with those conclusions.

In August 2017, Huntington Ingalls completed the first-cut-of-steel ceremony for the third Ford-class carrier, the USS Enterprise.

NOW WATCH: How the US's futuristic new aircraft carrier will change naval warfare forever

Next Article