Callsign Posted June 27, 2019 Share Posted June 27, 2019 The U.S.N. is scrapping the USS Enterprise CVN-65 we MUST stop this and have it preserved!! Who's with me?!:helpsmilie: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Steve Gee Posted June 27, 2019 Share Posted June 27, 2019 Isn't part of the material from it going to be used for either it's replacement, CVN-80, or one of the other Ford-class carriers? "These are NOT 1 to 1 replicas of the real aircraft, there are countless compromises made on each of them" - Senior ED Member Modules - Damn near all of them (no Christian Eagle or Yak) System - i7-12700K, 64Gig DDR4 3200 RAM, RTX-3080, 3 32" monitors at 5760 x 1080, default settings of High (minor tweaks) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Callsign Posted June 27, 2019 Author Share Posted June 27, 2019 (edited) Isn't part of the material from it going to be used for either it's replacement, CVN-80, or one of the other Ford-class carriers? Even if that is true the Enterprise is a piece of history not some random ship no one's heard of like the Bon Homme Richard (CV-31)! It's the world's first nuclear carrier for duck-sake. It belongs in a museum or better sailing the seas with a full airwing alongside her Nimitz and Ford class sisters! Just imagine CVN-80 and CVN-65 sailing alongside each other both revolutionary ships! And the Kitty Hawk should be preserved too! Edited June 27, 2019 by Callsign Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Callsign Posted June 27, 2019 Author Share Posted June 27, 2019 (edited) Feel free to vote and comment guys! Anyone have any ideas on how to save it? Edited June 27, 2019 by Callsign Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Callsign Posted June 27, 2019 Author Share Posted June 27, 2019 Please Post ideas! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
_mu110_ Posted June 27, 2019 Share Posted June 27, 2019 I have no way of knowing of course, but my guess is that it's a lot less efficient in many ways than it's successors. Don't see much point in sailing around in outdated tech when we have things much more capable, but it would be great to see it preserved in some way. Check out my skins and mods on the User Files. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ravenzino Posted June 27, 2019 Share Posted June 27, 2019 Its upkeep could be quite high, with or without its nuclear plant. Who's paying for that? i9-9900K, G.Skill 3200 32GB RAM, AORUS Z390 Pro Wifi, Gigabyte Windforce RTX 2080 Ti, Samsung 960 Pro NVMe 512G + 860 Pro 1T, TM Warthog HOTAS, VKB T-Rudder, Samsung O+ F/A-18C, F-16C, A-10C, UH-1, AV-8B, F-14, JF-17, FC3, SA342 Gazelle, L-39, KA-50, CEII, Supercarrier Preordered. (Almost abandoned: CA - VR support please?) PG, NTTR Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Callsign Posted June 27, 2019 Author Share Posted June 27, 2019 Its upkeep could be quite high, with or without its nuclear plant. Who's paying for that? That is true...It's best bet would be to be put in a museum like Yorktown or Midway Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KTFBGB Posted June 27, 2019 Share Posted June 27, 2019 I guess you could send a letter to your State Senator. I cant think of any other way to accomplish this. If the powers that be have decided to decommission the ship and use thee steel, probably nothing can be done. My buddy was part of the USS Carl Vinson battle group. I have a call into him to see if he has any connections. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MRSHADO Posted June 27, 2019 Share Posted June 27, 2019 I'm not a Navy Guy, but I'd imagine the World First Nuclear Powered Aircraft Carrier is probably also the first nuclear powered aircraft carrier to be scrapped. I don't know how many reactors Big E had, but I'm sure that has a LOT to do with saving the thing as a museum. Besides, there's another Big E in the works. Let it go. i7-8700K / 64GB RAM / ASUS Strix GTX 1080 Ti / (Win 10 Pro) / Oculus Rift S Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KTFBGB Posted June 27, 2019 Share Posted June 27, 2019 I guess you could send a letter to your State Senator. I cant think of any other way to accomplish this. If the powers that be have decided to decommission the ship and use thee steel, probably nothing can be done. My buddy was part of the USS Carl Vinson battle group. I have a call into him to see if he has any connections. He said State Senators are the best bet. He also said that there are so many museum ships now, and they cost so much money to keep up that its probably not going to happen. His ship was slated for a museum piece, It was the Adams Class Robinson, but the Navy pulled the plug on it due to funding and it was scrapped. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Raisuli Posted June 27, 2019 Share Posted June 27, 2019 I'm not a Navy Guy, but I'd imagine the World First Nuclear Powered Aircraft Carrier is probably also the first nuclear powered aircraft carrier to be scrapped. I don't know how many reactors Big E had, but I'm sure that has a LOT to do with saving the thing as a museum. Besides, there's another Big E in the works. Let it go. 8 reactors. Really. I've been on it, hung out in the MMRs, sat around in EOSs (each of which have two reactor panels, which is unique). There are valid technical reasons for not turning it into a museum. I'm going to miss her, too, but let her go. Maybe they can turn a Numbnutz class into a museum, but they won't let me go in my old playgrounds anyway. With two exceptions every ship I set foot on in the Navy is either scrap metal, about to be scrap metal, or blown up, sunk, sitting on the bottom of the ocean scrap metal. The parts that survive are in trench 94 at Hanford. The two exceptions are Cell Block 70, the Carl Vinson and one Ayatollah class frigate that serves with the Taiwanese Navy now. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
macrossMX Posted June 27, 2019 Share Posted June 27, 2019 As good as it is to preserve the world's first nuclear powered supercarrier, the reason to scrap the vessel is the risk posed by the reactors (those were 1st generation naval nuclear reactors after all). But not all is lost as the Enterprises "island" will be preserved. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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