Saturday, October 28, 2006

Airscoop: EP-3E Returns Home - Brief Article

Three months after a Fleet Air Reconnaissance Squadron 1 EP-3E Aries II made an emergency landing in Hainan, China, following a collision with a Chinese F-8 fighter (see May--Jun 01, PP. 6--7), the plane was released. Chinese officials refused the U.S. request to repair the plane in Hainan and fly it home, so the EP-3E was disassembled and returned in pieces on board a Russian Antonov-124 cargo jet, arriving at Dobbins ARB, Marietta, Georgia, on 5 July. The fuselage will be repacked with surveillance equipment and fitted with a new tail section plus new wings and engine nacelles. The old nacelles will be retained in the Navy supply system.

Carriers Get Mid-Life Boost

Nimitz (CVN 68) departed Newport News Shipbuilding on 25 June, right, at the completion of a three-year refueling and complex overhaul (RCOH). After three days of sea trials, the carrier returned to her Norfolk, Va., home port. She was the first Nimitz-class aircraft carrier to undergo the mid-life refueling, modernization and overhaul. The ship was flight deck certified in July, and in August underwent a material inspection conducted by the Board of Inspection and Survey. In late September, the ship will steam around South America to her new home port in San Diego, Calif. In early 2002, Nimitz will start the last phase of RCOH, post-shakedown availability and selected-restricted availability, to complete all remaining work in support of the ship's next deployment.

The second Nimitz-class ship to undergo RCOH is Dwight D. Eisenhower (CVN 69), which arrived at Newport News Shipbuilding in May. The major lifecycle milestone marks the ship's only refueling in a 50-year life span. The scope of the work is valued at approximately $1.5 billion and includes a major upgrade of the island house, a new antenna mast and a new radar tower. Both of Eisenhower's reactors will be refueled and modernized. Remains Identified

The remains of a Marine Corps aerial observer missing in action from the Vietnam War were identified. The O-1 Bird Dog in which Col. Winfield W. Sisson was flying crashed in South Vietnam on 18 October 1965.

For the Record

On 22 June the AH-1Z Super Cobra, above right, logged its 100th flight hour in a test program at NAS Patuxent River, Md. The previous week, Lt. Gen. Fred McCorkle, head of Marine Corps aviation, flew the AH-1Z.

With the S-3 Viking (below) fleet nearing its planned 13,000-hour structural life, Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Company began full-scale fatigue testing of an S-3 on 26 June to determine how much longer the platform can remain in service.

Ingalls Shipbuilding received an $81.3 million contract modification on 2 July for continuation of work toward the construction of an eighth Wasp-class large-deck multipurpose amphibious assault ship.

Mishaps

An F/A-18C Hornet of Fighter Attack Squadron 106 crashed in Florida on 29 May, killing the pilot.

A T-34C Turbo-Mentor assigned to Training Air Wing 6 crashed in Alabama on 8 June, killing both occupants.

On 22 June a Helicopter Combat Support Squadron 8 HH-46D Sea Knight operating from Kearsarge (LHD 3) crashed into the Mediterranean Sea. There were no fatalities.

An HH-1N "Huey" assigned to NAS Fallon, Nev., was damaged by a hard landing in California on 8 July.

On 9 July a CH-46E Sea Knight of Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron 365 crashed into the water at MCAS New River, S.C., killing three crew members.

Two F/A-18C Hornets assigned to Fighter Attack Squadron 151 were damaged but landed safely after a midair collision while operating from Constellation (CV 64) in the Arabian Gulf on 14 July.

The aircrew of a Training Squadron 21 T-45A Goshawk ejected safely as the aircraft departed the runway during field arrested landing training on 18 July.

RELATED ARTICLE: IWO JIMA COMMISSIONED

JOSN Dan Ball

The Navy's newest amphibious assault ship, Iwo Jima (LHD 7), officially joined the fleet following a 30 June commissioning at NAS Pensacola, Fla. Iwo Jima is the seventh of the Wasp-class amphibious assault ships. At 40,500 tons, Iwo Jima is larger than the aircraft carriers that supported her namesake WW II battle. She has a large flight deck for helicopters, AV-8B Harrier II jets and the new MV-22 Osprey tilt-rotor transport aircraft. The ship also has a large floodable well deck to carry and deploy three air-cushion landing craft.

LHD-7's command, control, communications, computers and intelligence system equips the ship to serve as the flagship of an amphibious readiness group. She also features a 600-bed hospital, complete with surgical facilities.

"This ship is the right ship at the right time in the right place," said General Michael J. Williams, assistant commandant of the Marine Corps. "She's going to sail with a main battery of almost 2,000 Marines. Their presence in friendly waters will reassure our allies, and in unfriendly waters they can ensure that the United States has the means to meet its goals anywhere in the world."

While the ship represents the state of the art in "brown-water" warfare, current plans call for her to be the last Navy ship built with a conventional steam propulsion plant. In the future, only nuclear-powered ships will use boilers and steam turbines to drive their propellers. Other new ships will use gas turbines or diesel engines.

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