Jonathan_S wrote:I thought the Navy finally removed the last Iowas from the Naval register around '06 and designated them permanent museum ships around '09-'10. Wouldn't that preempt the old law requiring them to be preserved in a manner compatible with reactivation?
By the way of your additional museum ships I know the Liberty Ship SS Jeremiah O'Brien (in San Francisco) and the PT-305 in New Orleans still take people out under their own power. (As, arguably, does USS Constitution, on admittedly rare occasions). So saber964 might have been correct about the ships he listed not being capable of sailing, but that's not true of all US Navy museum ships.
All four
Iowa class battleships were removed from the Naval Register as reactivation assets, BB-61 and BB-64 were fully stricken 3 or 4 years ago which is why you can now tour the interior of the ships.
If you get the chance, I heartily recommend a tour. You will be amazed at just how cramped huge ships like these are, especially the 5" and 16" turret gunhouses. And the steel armor protecting the turret faces and the pilothouse is thicker than any vault this side of Fort Knox.
Wisconsin still carries the 8 armored box launchers for Tomahawk that were installed in the '80s as well as four 4 tube racks for Harpoon and four 20mm Vulcan Phalanx gun mounts (empty electronics housings and "safed" guns) and I assume the other three ships do as well.
I'm not certain but I THINK all four screws (propellers) are still in place with the propeller shafts locked to prevent damage when or if the ship has to be moved for some reason.
About reactivating them, even after they moved
Wisconsin to her permanent moorings at Nauticus in Norfolk VA she was officially still in reserve, the museum (Nauticus) was forbidden to open the interior for visitors.
Even after 10 or more years in mothballs the official Navy line was "6 months from the order to reactivate this ship WILL be ready to toss lines and deploy." After that much time even a ship that hadn't moved would need considerably more than "6 months" worth of round the clock work both above and below the waterline. 18 to 24 months, minimum now.
Reactivating Battleship Texas? Forget it. Much of her hull plating and interior hull framing is very badly corroded. She's over 100 years old and salt water is very corrosive and very unforgiving. Even after a drydocking a few years back where some hull work was done on the most badly corroded sections she's still in danger of sinking at her moorings.