North Carolina Submarine
Comes Together
at Northrop Grumman
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Northrop Grumman
reached an important construction milestone on August
31 when it completed the final hull welds of the
Virginia-class submarine North Carolina
(SSN 777).
Photo by Ricky Thompson
Higher
Resolution Image

Northrop Grumman
employee George Love was one of the 1,000 Virginia-class
shipbuilders to sign a special banner marking pressure
hull complete for the North Carolina.
Photo by John Whalen
Higher
Resolution Image
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NEWPORT NEWS, Va. – Sept. 14, 2006
– Northrop Grumman (NYSE: NOC) reached an important
construction milestone on August 31 when it completed
the final hull welds of the Virginia-class submarine
North Carolina (SSN 777). This accomplishment,
known as “pressure hull complete,” signifies
the hull sections being joined to form a single unit.
It is the last major milestone before the ship’s
christening next spring.
“This is a giant step on the path
to deliver North Carolina,” said Becky
Stewart, vice president of the submarine program for Northrop
Grumman’s Newport News sector. “She’s
starting to come together and look like a submarine now,
which is a testament to our shipbuilders and their commitment
to not only producing a high-quality product, but to their
tireless efforts to improve processes and results along
the way.”
Northrop Grumman is building North Carolina,
the fourth ship of the Virginia-class, using
lessons learned from the previous three ships of the class.
It is currently 76 percent complete and is on track to
deliver in February 2008.
Many of the 1,000 Newport News employees
building the Virginia-class submarines signed
a special banner to mark the occasion. George Love, a
machinist in the Virginia-class submarine program,
said he was honored to sign his name to his work.
“Today signifies the completion of
the pressure hull complete – joining all the modules
together, more or less bringing the ship alive, giving
it a personality,” Love said. “Now she looks
like a boat.”
Northrop Grumman is teamed with General
Dynamics Electric Boat to build the first 10 ships of
the Virginia class. Current plans call for 30
Virginia-class submarines in the fleet. Designed
to meet the Navy’s requirements in a post-Cold War
security environment, the submarines use advanced technologies
to increase firepower, maneuverability and stealth. The
377-foot long submarines are capable of submerged speeds
of more than 25 knots and can stay submerged for months
at a time.
The keel for North Carolina was
laid on May 22, 2004. Upon delivery to the Navy in early
2008, it will be the most modern and sophisticated attack
submarine in the world, providing undersea supremacy well
into the 21st century.
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 more
than 120,000 employees and operations in all 50 states
and 25 countries, Northrop Grumman serves U.S. and international
military, government and commercial customers.