Nimitz-class: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:Nimitz Task Group from 1976.jpg|thumb|300px|right|{{Nimitz Task Group from 1976.jpg/credit}}<br />The ''Nimitz'' Task Group from 1976 with [[USS South Carolina (CGN-37)|USS ''South Carolina'' (CGN-37)]] (top), USS ''Nimitz'' (CVN-68) (center), and [[USS California (CGN-36)|USS ''California'' (CGN-36)]] (bottom).]] | [[Image:Nimitz Task Group from 1976.jpg|thumb|300px|right|{{Nimitz Task Group from 1976.jpg/credit}}<br />The ''Nimitz'' Task Group from 1976 with [[USS South Carolina (CGN-37)|USS ''South Carolina'' (CGN-37)]] (top), USS ''Nimitz'' (CVN-68) (center), and [[USS California (CGN-36)|USS ''California'' (CGN-36)]] (bottom).]] |
Revision as of 14:42, 8 April 2024
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In the United States Navy, the ten ships of the Nimitz-class are its major aircraft carriers. The Gerald R. Ford-class carriers, entering construction, will supplement them.[1] They followed the one-of-a-kind USS Enterprise (CVN-65), built in 1961, though several conventionally powered carriers entered service thereafter. By now, all of the conventionally powered aircraft carriers of the U.S. Navy have been decommissioned, leaving only nuclear-powered carriers for the U.S. ShipsThis class of aircraft carriers is named after its lead ship, the USS Nimitz. That ship, in turn, memorializes Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz.
CVN 77, USS George H.W. Bush, is intended as a transition between the Nimitz and Ford classes. New features include:[2]
Characteristics
Electronics
Typical air wing
References
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