Fox2! wrote:Don't forget that all they did was replace the steam generators from a Forrestal on a one for one basis on Enterprise, oil for neutrons. There are going to be a lot of valves for watchstanders to watch.
Actually the Enterprise was a nuke version of the Kitty Hawk class.
It certainly has the aircraft elevators arranged as per Kitty Hawk (port elevator moved from the forward end of the angled flight deck rearward)
But the Enterprise's engineering plant shares the 600-psi steam of the USS Forrestal (though as noted above at lower temperature).
Oddly the rest of the Forrestal class got 1200-psi steam plants; which the Kitty Hawks retained)
Enterprise's hull was a modification (one off) of the
Kitty Hawk, a bit longer and wider providing a "finer" hydrodynamic outline which equated to a higher top speed. At the time of her retirement the 50 year old girl was still reputed to be the fastest carrier in the Atlantic Fleet if not the whole USN and still capable of outrunning the gas turbine powered cruisers and destroyers of her escort which she did during exercises off the North Carolina coast just prior to her "retirement" just to prove she still "had it."
Her powerplant limitations came from the necessity of having to mount 8 of the same reactors that went into the first generation SSNs like
Nautilus.All those reactors amounted to a more complex plant than the later
Nimitz and
Ford needed and required more watchstanding personnel.
As for the design of the flight deck and elevators, it was found that the 4 elevators of the
Kitty Hawk made for faster aircraft handling times than the 3 found in the earlier
Forrestals so we see that arrangement continued in the
Nimitz class. The
Ford design reverted back to 3 elevators, two forward of the island on the starboard side with the 3rd on the port side opposite the island.
Ford is still undergoing acceptance trials but should finish those shortly to be followed by her formal commissioning ceremony.
Enterprise herself is now a dead hulk, still moored at Newport News shipbuilding while the Navy tries to figure out whether or not to tow her to Bremerton Washington or get NNSB to remove the rest of the nuclear hardware and tow what's left to the shipbreakers in Brownsville Texas.