Forrestal Class Cv Parts

(Page 44) End item NSN parts page 44 of 488
Part Number
NSN
NIIN
030005 Annular Ball Bearing
001982462
0300081 Electrical Wire
010492360
0300255 Electrical Special Purpose Cable
011367177
03003-10-919 Electrical Contact
004968009
03003-50-919 Electrical Contact
004968009
03003070 Ceramic Diele Variable Capacitor
006364271
03004-50-125 Electrical Contact
002413785
03005-09-020 Electrical Contact
000899520
030063 Dropping Bottle
010772468
03007-120FT Flexible Control Casing
002776545
030101 Sleeve Spacer
001420437
030101A Sleeve Spacer
001420437
0301767 Tube To Hose Straight Adapter
001067384
03045 Packing Assembly
014250046
03058 Preformed Packing
013955887
030602 Nonind Wire Wound Fixed Resistor
008685395
0306031 Urinal-water Cl Flush Connection
002031038
030682 Nonind Wire Wound Fixed Resistor
008685395
031-0900-000 Electrical Contact
009723361
Page: 44 ...

Forrestal Class Cv

Picture of Forrestal Class Cv

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 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). 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. The most visible differences were between the first pair and second pair: the Forrestal and Saratoga were completed with two island masts, an open fantail and a larger flight deck segment forward of the port aircraft elevator; the Ranger and Independence had a single island mast, a more closed fantail (as seen in all carriers since) and a smaller flight deck segment forward of the port aircraft elevator. 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

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