Tuesday, July 30, 2019

The U.S. Navy Can't Get Munitions Onto The Deck Of Its Newest Aircraft Carrier

Sailors on the aircraft carrier Gerald R. Ford during its commissioning ceremony at Naval Station Norfolk in Virginia. US Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Julio Martinez Martinez

CNN: U.S. Navy's new $13B aircraft carrier can't fight

(CNN)The $13-billion USS Gerald R. Ford is already two years behind schedule, and the U.S. Navy's newest aircraft carrier is facing more delays after the Pentagon's top weapons tester concluded the ship is still not ready for combat despite expectations it would be delivered to the fleet this September.

According to a June 28 memo obtained by CNN, Michael Gilmore, the Defense Department's director of operational test and evaluation, said the most expensive warship in history continues to struggle launching and recovering aircraft, moving onboard munitions, conducting air traffic control and with ship self-defense.

"These four systems affect major areas of flight operations," Gilmore wrote in his report to Pentagon and Navy weapons buyers Frank Kendall and Sean Stackley. "Unless these issues are resolved ... they will significantly limit CVN-78's ability to conduct combat operations."

Read more ....

Update #1: On Costliest U.S. Warship Ever, Navy Can’t Get Munitions on Deck (Bloomberg)
Update #2: Navy’s $13 Billion Carrier Can’t Move Munitions to Its Deck (Fiscal Times)

WNU Editor: The US Navy's newest destroyer cannot fire its guns .... The destroyer Zumwalt's big guns don't have any ammo, and the Navy may ditch them entirely because they don't even work right (Business Insider). The Littoral Combat Ship program cannot deploy ships .... How the Navy Blew $30 Billion on 10 ‘Cheap’ Ships (Daily Beast). And now the Navy's newest carrier cannot even get munitions onto the deck of its newest aircraft carrier. For a department that spends over $200 billion a year, someone has some explaining to do.

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

A working mock up of an elevator would have been good.

You have several per ship and a few ships, so a working several story mock up makes sense.

Anonymous said...

You could build a mock up using an old crane to provide the supporting outer lattice. Hook up power and you have you basic black box like in programming where you pass parameters or your basic modular design with the interfaces determined.

Anonymous said...

Ammo elevators don't work, catapults don't work... Do they ever fire someone for things like this - nope. Program Managers are TRAINED to worry about only two things, program and budget. On time and on budget count. Combat effectiveness does not.
It's not just the Navy. They're all working from the same flawed script. Vendors run the show.

Anonymous said...

The catapults had t have had a prototype, which were tested through several hundreds of cycles. Not sure what happened there. I'll hazard a guess that the reliability formulas do not apply, but were applied. there are no components similar to what they were trying to do.
I do not find the comments on Program Managers helpful. IMO that shows very limited knowledge.

Dakota Wood said...

The lead CNN story is from 3 years ago.

Mike Feldhake said...

Oops!

jimbrown said...

At least it floats.

Anonymous said...

"'Leveraging lessons learned and key build strategy changes, Kennedy is on track to be built with considerably fewer man-hours than the first ship in its class, Gerald R. Ford.'"