Northrop Grumman’s Newest Aircraft Carrier Takes a Bow
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Higher
Resolution Image
The nation's tenth and final Nimitz-class aircraft carrier,
George H. W. Bush (CVN 77), grows by 780 tons as the upper bow unit is
placed onto the ship.
Photo by Chris Oxley

Higher
Resolution Image
The George H. W. Bush is the second carrier with the
bulbous bow design. USS Ronald Reagan (CVN 76) is the first.
Photo by Rick Thompson

Higher
Resolution Image
The addition of the upper bow on the George H. W. Bush
(CVN 77) completes the flight deck and extends the overall length of the
carrier to its full size, which is as long as the Empire State Building is tall
Photo by Rick Thompson
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NEWPORT NEWS, Va. - March 15, 2006 - The
nation's tenth and final Nimitz-class aircraft
carrier, George H. W. Bush (CVN 77), grew by nearly
800 tons today as Northrop Grumman Corporation (NYSE:
NOC) lowered the upper bow section of the ship into place.
The addition of the upper bow completes the flight deck
and extends the overall length of the carrier to its full
size, which is as long as the Empire State Building is
tall.
The carrier is under construction at Northrop
Grumman's Newport News sector, the nation's sole designer,
builder and refueler of nuclear-powered aircraft carriers.
Weighing 780 tons and made up of 25 steel sections, the
upper bow is one of the heaviest crane lifts in the ship's
production plan. Newport News began construction on the
upper bow unit last February.
"Landing the fully-outfitted upper
bow on the ship is a significant milestone in the design
and construction of CVN 77, and most importantly, a great
team effort by our shipbuilders," said Scott Stabler,
vice president for the CVN 77 program at Northrop Grumman
Newport News. "We are on track for record shipboard
construction progress at launch in October."
Newport News is building the George H.
W. Bush using modular construction, a process where
smaller sections of the ship are welded together to form
units called super lifts. These super lifts are pre-outfitted
and then lifted into the construction dry dock with the
sector's massive 900-ton gantry crane. The upper bow unit
is the 155th of 161 super lifts used to build the carrier.
It joins the lower bow section which was set into place
in the dry dock nearly one year ago.
The George H. W. Bush is the second
carrier to have a new bulbous bow design that provides
more buoyancy to the forward end of the ship and improves
hull efficiency. Other new design features include an
updated aviation fuel distribution system, a new marine
sewage system and new propellers. The George H. W.
Bush's keel was laid Sept. 6, 2003. The christening
will occur in October 2006 with delivery to the U.S. Navy
in late 2008.
Northrop Grumman Corporation is a global
defense company headquartered in Los Angeles, Calif. Northrop
Grumman provides a broad array of technologically advanced,
innovative products, services and solutions in systems
integration, defense electronics, information technology,
advanced aircraft, shipbuilding, and space technology.
The company has approximately 125,000 employees and operates
in all 50 states and 25 countries and serves U.S. and
international military, government and commercial customers.