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    USS Gerald R. Ford Successfully Sails Into Post-Shakedown Availability Period

    Transit to HII

    Photo By Petty Officer 1st Class Joshua Sheppard | NORFOLK, Va. (July 15, 2018) -- USS Gerald R. Ford is pushed by tugs as it passes the...... read more read more

    VA, UNITED STATES

    07.15.2018

    Courtesy Story

    USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78)           

    NORFOLK – The Navy’s newest aircraft carrier, USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78), departed Naval Station Norfolk on Sunday, July 15, 2018 to begin a post-shakedown availability (PSA) period at Newport News Shipbuilding in Newport News, Virginia.

    As the ship closes in on one year since its commissioning, the first-in-class aircraft carrier has seen many ‘firsts,’ with the ship and crew exceeding expectations in some cases. Since first getting underway on her own power April 8, 2017, Ford has safely conducted 10 underway evolutions and completed all of the testing required prior to beginning the PSA.

    “My team has completed a very important phase in Ford’s lifecycle,” said Ford’s Commanding Officer, Capt. Richard McCormack. “The shakedown period was an opportunity for the Navy to run the ship through a rigorous set of operational tasks and assess her performance. My team of talented Sailors, shipyard workers, and program engineers have learned a great deal from our time at sea and provided critical feedback on performance to Navy and industry leaders. We now enter a post-shakedown availability period to incorporate several design changes to correct performance deficiencies and complete the installation of other systems needed to ensure the ship, her embarked airwing and the strike group are ready to support national tasking when called upon by the President.”

    Following her delivery on May 31, 2017, the ship has operated for 81 days at sea during seven independent steaming events (ISE), supported by inport Windows of Opportunity (WOO). Ford has also successfully completed fixed-wing aircraft/helicopter integration and compatibility testing, air traffic control center certification, JP-5 fuel system certification, daytime and nighttime underway replenishment capability demonstrations, ship’s defensive system demonstration, Dual Band Radar (DBR) testing, and propulsion plant operations.

    One of the most rewarding aspects of bringing Ford to this point has been execution of the fleet’s first shipboard Electromagnetic Aircraft Launching System (EMALS) launches. Ford’s Air Department, combined with the efforts of Huntington Ingalls Newport News Shipbuilding and Naval Air Systems Command Joint Test Group, successfully executed complete system testing events for all 13 redesigned Aircraft Launch and Recovery Equipment weapon systems, including the first 747 shipboard landings – the first coming only six days following the ship’s commissioning – utilizing the Advanced Arresting Gear (AAG), against a plan of approximately 400.

    Ford’s Operations Department synchronized with Carrier Air Wing Three (CVW-3), CVW-8, Helicopter Sea Combat Wing Atlantic, Helicopter Maritime Strike Wing Atlantic, and numerous PMS-378 test organizations to safely and successfully complete 454 mishap-free rotary and fixed-wing sorties and 1,173 flight hours. The crew also executed 25 air defense and surface tracking exercises, the initial structural test firing of the Close-In Weapons System (CIWS), and all development testing of the Integrated Combat System.

    Further, the carrier’s crew successfully executed the night carrier qualification of 78 Fleet F/A-18 pilots, significantly enhancing the combat readiness of both CVW-3 and CVW-8. Ford’s Air Operations team also developed, prepared and trained robust procedures for conducting air traffic control with the first-of-its-kind DBR. This led to Ford becoming the fleet’s first aircraft carrier to conduct fixed-wing positive, advisory and monitor control with organic phased-array radar, establishing precedence for the next generation of Naval Aviation.

    Another notable system that separates the ship from her Nimitz-class predecessors is the Navy’s first Plasma Arc Waste Destruction System (PAWDS), which allows Ford to dispose of trash in an environmentally safe manner. Ford’s Engineering team oversaw major developmental milestones, including the safe installation, integration, and operation of the system. Overcoming system challenges consistent with any ‘first’ system, the Engineering team’s efforts resulted in system improvements, serving to increase overall system availability from less than five percent to more than 90 percent.

    For Capt. Brent Gaut, Ford’s executive officer, it was the “old-fashioned Sailor ingenuity, tenacity, and intelligence” of Ford’s Sailors that saw the ship through to this point.

    “Daily, our extraordinary team of Sailors brings engineering concepts to life aboard this amazing warship,” said Gaut. “Time and again, our Sailors have demonstrated their excellence and subject matter expertise, some in areas unique to all of naval aviation, in support of Ford-class development and enhancement. Our Sailors represent the best of the best, and we could not be more proud of what they have accomplished individually, and more importantly as a team.”

    Overall, the ship’s crew identified and corrected numerous system challenges that will be implemented in follow-on Ford-class CVNs. Collectively, the work done in the ship’s first year of service has brought a tremendous amount of knowledge to the Ford-class program. During PSA, adjustments will be made to bring Ford closer to becoming an active member of the fleet of global force aircraft carriers.

    “Sailors are the lifeblood of any warship and the men and women of the USS Gerald R. Ford are the best that our Navy has to offer,” said McCormack. “There’s a sense of pride that comes from watching the crew rise to the occasion time-and-time again, in the face of engineering, technological, and manning challenges that are common with any first-in-class ship. Ford’s Sailors are strong, resilient, and truly embody our ship’s motto of ‘Integrity at the Helm.’”

    For more information on USS Gerald R. Ford, follow the ship’s fan page on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/USSGeraldRFord

    For more news from USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78), visit https://www.dvidshub.net/unit/CVN78.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 07.15.2018
    Date Posted: 07.15.2018 15:29
    Story ID: 284328
    Location: VA, US

    Web Views: 2,053
    Downloads: 0

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