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![]() by Christen Mccurdy Washington DC (UPI) Feb 05, 2020
The aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford has successfully completed Aircraft Compatibility Testing, the U.S. Navy announced on Wednesday. During the compatibility test, which began Jan. 16 and lasted 16 days, the crew launched and recovered 211 aircraft, according to the Navy. "There are so many firsts happening, and many of them we frankly don't even really realize," Ford's Air Boss, Cmdr. Mehdi Akacem toward the end of the testing evolution, said in a press release. "We've had the first ever T-45, EA-18 Growler, E-2D Hawkeye, and C-2A Greyhound, and there are pilots on board this ship right now who will forever be able to say that their contribution to the Navy was to be the first pilot or NFO [Naval Flight Officer] to come aboard the Gerald R. Ford-class in that type aircraft." The testing phase also included catapult launches for the F/A-18F Super Hornets from VX-23 and C-2A Greyhound from Air Test and Evaluation Squadron 20. Crews tested the Ford's capability to launch and recover aircraft using the electromagnetic aircraft launch system and advanced arresting gear, two systems unique to the carrier. "There's no simulator for an aircraft carrier," Akacem said. "There's a lot of learning going on end-to-end, and we are learning a ton about how to operationalize these new technologies, and that's the benefit of finally being out here at sea. We're seeing the ship come to life. Just over the last few weeks, we've got salt air on the flight deck, we've got skid marks on the flight deck, and it's really starting to feel like an aircraft carrier." The Ford was built to replace Nimitz-class carriers but has been troubled by cost overruns and delays. The carrier last flew aircraft in January 2018.
![]() ![]() Audit finds unaddressed training deficiencies on Burke-class destroyers Washington DC (UPI) Feb 04, 2020 Navy fleet commanders identified - but did not address - training deficiencies during deployment cycles for Arleigh Burke-class missile destroyers, said a Department of Defense report released Tuesday. According to the Department of Defense Inspector General, investigators - who examined Navy readiness assessments and ships' waivers from readiness requirements between August 2013 and April 2018 - found that training deficiencies persisted because the Navy did not always complete training re ... read more
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