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The Hawk Checks Out

May 18, 2009: The American carrier, USS Kitty Hawk (CV 63), after a four month delay, was finally decommissioned in Bremerton, Washington on May 13th. The Kitty Hawk served for 48 years and 13 days. In that time, about 100,000 sailors served on the ship. The ship was the navy's last non-nuclear carrier and, since 1998, the oldest ship in commission. "The Hawk" did not age well, and had lots of breakdowns in its final years. This led members of the crew to nickname the shipr "Shitty Hawk".

The USS Enterprise (CVN 65) now assumes that role of oldest ship in the fleet. For the last decade, the Kitty Hawk had operated out of Yokosuka, Japan. During its career, the Kitty Hawk carried out 448,235 catapult assisted aircraft takeoffs (9,338 a year), and 407,507 arrested carrier landings (8,489 a year).

The Kitty Hawk retirement was delayed because of a fire, last May 22nd, on the carrier USS George Washington (CVN-73), which was to replace the Kitty Hawk in Japan. At the time, the navy still expected to decommission the Kitty Hawk in January, 2009, as scheduled.

The captain and executive officer of the USS George Washington were relieved after a few months, when the details of the fire became clear. The navy inquiry found out that sailors were smoking in an unauthorized area, which was adjacent to where combustible materials were improperly stored. The fire spread so far and so fast because one of the unauthorized items was a container containing 90 gallons of compressor oil. This blaze heavily damaged 80 compartments, and over 400,000 feet of electrical and communications cable. It cost over $70 million, and several months, to repair the damage. The fire delayed, by four months, the George Washington replacing the USS Kitty Hawk. This change over was supposed to take place in August. The schedule was rearranged and the Washington showed up in Japan in September. The Kitty Hawk then returned to the United States in October, and began the decommissioning process, as scheduled, in January of this year. 

The Hawk will ride at anchor near Bremerton, in the hope that some organization may turn the ship into a museum. If that doesn't happen, the Hawk will eventually be broken up for scrap. Another long shot is giving the ship to India, which is seeking to expand its carrier fleet.

 

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   Nicknames, What Is Old Is New   5/18/2009 4:03:26 PM

In 1981 the Kitty Hawk came in to the Bremerton WA drydock when we on the Big E were just finishing up our time in the yard.  At that time I heard her nickname to be the "Shitty Kitty", mostly because she the reeked of fuel oil.

 
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tenX    freeze dried F18's???   5/18/2009 7:26:33 PM
Hmmm... how does one have more catapult assisted aircraft takeoff than landings?  Freeze dried F18's?

Seriously, i suppose there are aircraft that need a cat to launch but not to land?
 
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kirby1       5/18/2009 9:31:44 PM
Transfers to other ships, ship to shore launches, Ship to storage launches. There are lots of reasons for a plane to leave and not come back. Not all of them are bad.
 
 
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benellim4       5/18/2009 9:41:08 PM
"Transfers to other ships, ship to shore launches, Ship to storage launches. There are lots of reasons for a plane to leave and not come back. Not all of them are bad."
 
I think his point was how did they get on deck in the first place, they had to land right? Even the Hawkeye "traps." And the helos don't use either system. I can't see them craning on ~1K aircraft per year.
 
 
Anyway about the "nickname." Every ship gets a colorful nickname. The CHINOOK is often known as the "Shithook." The ARLEIGH BURKE is often called the "Already Broke." I won't tell you what the KLAKRING has been known as...
 
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Beazz       5/18/2009 9:55:27 PM

Transfers to other ships, ship to shore launches, Ship to storage launches. There are lots of reasons for a plane to leave and not come back. Not all of them are bad.


 


Yea, but didn't every plane that left and didn't come back, have to come there and land in the first place?
 
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sjdoc    Outsourcing the Shitty Kitty   5/20/2009 2:09:32 PM
--
"Another long shot is giving the ship to India, which is seeking to expand its carrier fleet."
 
Not a good idea, for a couple of reasons.  The first is the misguided notion that the interests of India and those of these United States coincide in any reliable way, and that putting such a resource in the hands of those who govern in India will be to the collective or particular benefit of our citizenry.
 
Second is the thought that if the U.S. Navy - with depth, breadth, and quality of resources better than anyplace else in the world (including tons of salvage retained from the retirement of the Forrestal class carriers) - can't cost-efficiently keep the Kitty Hawk in operation - what's the likelihood that a woggish establishment like the Indian Navy is going to be able to keep the ship running effectively?
 
The expression "white elephant" is borne of Southeast Asia's culture, and should be familiar to the officers of the Indian Navy. If they're smart, they'll fight like hell against taking the Kitty Hawk into their inventory as anything but potential scrap metal.
--
 
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Herald12345    ???????????????????????????/   5/20/2009 2:42:47 PM

Hmmm... how does one have more catapult assisted aircraft takeoff than landings?  Freeze dried F18's?




Seriously, i suppose there are aircraft that need a cat to launch but not to land?
Run out fuel, get splashed, smash on the fantail, blow up in flight, fall out of the sky from causes unknown, land ashore etc.    
 
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