USS Forrestal
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Class overview | |
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Name: | Forrestal class |
Builders: | |
Operators: | United States Navy |
Preceded by: | Midway class |
Succeeded by: | Kitty Hawk class and Enterprise class |
In commission: | 1 October 1955 – 30 September 1998 |
Completed: | 4 |
Laid up: | 1 |
Scrapped: | 3 |
General characteristics | |
Type: | Aircraft carrier |
Displacement: | 60,000 tons |
Length: |
1,070 ft (326.1 m) 990 ft (301.7 m) waterline |
Beam: | 129 ft 4 in (39.42 m) waterline |
Draft: | 35 ft 9 in (10.90 m) |
Propulsion: |
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Speed: | 34 knots (63 km/h) |
Complement: | 4,378 |
Armament: |
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Aircraft carried: | Up to 90 |
Aviation facilities: | 326 m × 77 m (1,069 ft 7 in × 252 ft 7 in) flight deck |
1,070 ft (326.1 m)
The Forrestal-class aircraft carriers were four aircraft carriers designed and built for the United States Navy in the 1950s. It was the first class of supercarriers, combining high tonnage, deck-edge elevators and an angled deck. The first ship was commissioned in 1955, the last decommissioned in 1998.
The Forrestal class was the first completed class of "supercarriers" of the Navy, so called because of their then-extraordinarily high tonnage (75,000 tons, 25% larger than the post-World War II-era Midway class), full integration of the angled deck (Forrestal and Saratoga were laid down as axial deck carriers and converted to angled deck ships while under construction; Ranger and Independence were laid down as angled deck ships and had various minor improvements compared to the first two), a very large island and most importantly their extremely strong air wing (80–100 jet aircraft, compared to 65–75 for the Midway class and fewer than 50 for the Essex class). Compared to the Midway class, the Forrestals were 100 feet (30 m) longer and nearly 20 feet (6 m) wider abeam, resulting in a far more stable and comfortable aircraft platform even in very rough weather. When commissioned, the Forrestal-class ships had the roomiest hangar decks and largest flight decks of any carrier ever built. Because of their immense size they were built to a new, deep-hulled design that incorporated the armored flight deck into the hull (previous American design practice was to design the flight deck as superstructure). This was a very similar structural design as used on British "armored" carriers, and grew out of the requirement for such a very large carrier, because carrying the strength deck at the flight deck level produced a stronger and lighter hull. The Midway-class ships sat very low in the water and were poor sea boats through their long careers; they were very wet forward and their aviation characteristics were poor. The deeper Forrestal hull allowed the ships more freeboard and better seakeeping. The Forrestal-class carriers, like the Midway class that preceded it, were designed with armored flight decks.