Northrop Grumman Awarded $1.94
Billion Contract
for Work on USS Carl Vinson
|

The USS Carl
Vinson arrived at Northrop Grumman's Newport
News sector on Nov. 11 for its one and only refueling
and complex overhaul in a 50-year life span. (Photo
by Chris Oxley)
Higher
Resolution Image
|
NEWPORT NEWS, Va. – Nov. 29, 2005
– The U.S. Navy has awarded Northrop Grumman Corporation
(NYSE: NOC) a contract valued at approximately $1.94 billion
for the refueling and complex overhaul of the aircraft
carrier USS Carl Vinson (CVN 70).
The work will be performed by the company’s
Newport News sector and will include the refueling of
the ship’s reactors, as well as extensive modernization
work to more than 2,300 compartments and hundreds of systems.
In addition, nearly 3,000 valves will be replaced and
another 600 will be overhauled in various ship systems.
Major upgrades will be made to the flight deck, catapults,
combat systems and the island. The top two levels of the
island will be removed and replaced with a reconfigured
structure to provide enhanced operability and support
a new antenna mast designed for more modern sensors.
“This project is very large and complex,
and requires a tremendous Newport News and Navy team effort,”
said Ken Mahler, vice president of aircraft carrier overhauls
for Northrop Grumman Newport News. “We’ll
touch almost every piece of the ship, refurbishing existing
equipment and installing the latest advancements in technology
to increase and modernize Vinson’s capabilities
and mission effectiveness when she returns to the fleet
for another 23 years of service.”
Work is scheduled to last more than three
years and will be the ship's one and only refueling and
complex overhaul in a 50-year life span. Vinson
is the third ship of the Nimitz class to undergo
this major life-cycle milestone. The ship arrived at the
company’s Newport News sector on Nov. 11. More than
3,500 Northrop Grumman Newport News employees will be
working aboard Vinson during peak periods of
the project.
Named for former U.S. Rep. Carl Vinson,
the carrier Vinson was built at Northrop Grumman
Newport News and christened in 1980. The congressman attended
the christening ceremony at age 96 and became the first
living American to have a Navy ship named in his honor.
The ship was commissioned by the Navy in 1982.
Northrop Grumman Newport News, headquartered
in Newport News, Va., is the nation's sole designer, builder
and refueler of nuclear-powered aircraft carriers and
one of only two companies capable of designing and building
nuclear-powered submarines. Newport News also provides
after-market services for a wide array of naval and commercial
vessels. The Newport News sector employs about 19,000
people.