Northrop Grumman Propels Forward
on Bush Carrier
Construction
|

The George H.W.
Bush's four propellers weigh approximately
60,000 pounds each and are currently outfitted with
a protective covering that will be removed later
in the construction process.
Photo by Chris Oxley
Higher
Resolution Image

Northrop Grumman
Newport News employee Terry Dunn rigs one of the
George H.W. Bush's propellers for installation
onto the ship.
Photo by John Whalen
Higher
Resolution Image
|
NEWPORT NEWS, Va. – May 12, 2006 –
Northrop Grumman Corporation (NYSE: NOC) has finished
installing the propellers on the nation’s tenth
and final Nimitz-class aircraft carrier, George
H. W. Bush (CVN 77).
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. The George H. W. Bush’s four
propellers weigh approximately 60,000 pounds each and
are a new design from previous Nimitz-class carriers.
The new propellers are very similar in size, weight and
material to previous ships of the class, but the blades
are shaped differently to reduce wear and erosion.
“The installation of the propellers
marks a major milestone in the construction of our final
Nimitz-class carrier and completes the last major
piece of structural work below the ship's waterline,”
said Kenney Overman, CVN 77 machinery installation general
foreman for Northrop Grumman. “The work we’ve
done on this ship sets the benchmark for the design and
installation of these new propellers on future carriers
of the fleet.”
The new propellers are planned for use on
the future-generation carrier class, CVN 21, and they
will be installed on the USS Carl Vinson, currently
in the Newport News shipyard undergoing a refueling and
complex overhaul.
Other new design features for the George
H. W. Bush include an updated aviation-fuel distribution
system, a new marine sewage system and a new underwater
hull-coating system. 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. The ship’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 technologically advanced, innovative
products, services and solutions in systems integration,
defense electronics, information technology, advanced
aircraft, shipbuilding and space technology. With approximately
125,000 employees and operations in all 50 states and
25 countries, Northrop Grumman serves U.S. and international
military, government and commercial customers.