((CVN 78)) Ford Getting Fixed, But No Delivery Date Yet
http://breakingdefense.com/2016/11/ford-getting-fixed-but-no-delivery-date-yet-navsea/
Ford Getting Fixed, But No Delivery Date Yet: NAVSEA
By Sydney J. Freedberg Jr.
on November 02, 2016 at 5:23 PM
WASHINGTON NAVY YARD: The USS Ford is getting back on track, said Vice Adm. Thomas Moore, though the head of Naval Sea Systems Command declined to give a new date for the long-delayed supercarrier to be delivered to the fleet. The Ford program is under review by the Pentagons procurement chief, Frank Kendall, and has been repeatedly blasted by Senate Armed Services chairman John McCain, a former carrier pilot himself.
Were having regular conversations with the Hill and CNO (Chief of Naval Operations Adm. John Richardson) about that, and I expect before the end of the year here, well be able to set a date certain, the NAVSEA commander told reporters this afternoon. I cant give you a date today, because weve got two months or so of testing.
The Ford was originally scheduled for March delivery. That got repeatedly delayed as testing revealed new problems with the ships many innovative systems, most dramatically with the Advanced Arresting Gear (AAG) crucial to let planes land on the deck and the Main Turbine Generators (MTGs) crucial to powering the ship.
The problem with the MTGs is isolated to the MTGs, and were just about done (with) the root cause analysis and putting some fixes in place, Moore said, and I expect us to be back into testing the MTGs on Ford here in the next couple weeks.
The rest of the test program on the ship is continuing, Moore continued. EMALS Electromagnetic Aircraft Launch System) is done, AAG (the landing system) is about 56 percent done with the test program on the ship. Additional testing is underway at an AAG set up on land, which has progressed to landing actual aircraft.
We will have an aircraft recovery bulletin (i.e. landing instructions) for Super Hornet by February, Moore said. When that ship delivers we will be ready to land aircraft on the AAG.
Testing remains to be done on two more new systems, the power-hungry Dual-Band Radar and the Advanced Weapons Elevators. (Fords prime problem has been trying to pack too many unproven bright ideas into a single ship). Other than that, Moore said, the rest of the ship is essentially complete.
Ford is just the highest-profile problem for Moore, who ran the carrier program until he took over NAVSEA in June. The Navy is also struggling with delays in maintenance overhauls for its existing carriers, most painfully the USS George H.W. Bush, whose planned six-month maintenance availability actually dragged on for 13 months a staggering 115 percent too long and jeopardized the Bushs scheduled deployment to the Persian Gulf just as Iran appears set to challenge the next administration.
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