Cliffy B wrote:
Build a new ship
In all seriousness though, what was her material condition at that time? I still find it hard to believe a ship that's been a museum IE NOT mothballed, since the 1960's would still be viable and worth the effort the bring back. Please explain as much as you can/you're allowed.
The JJMA scheme for
North Carolina was drawn up as
Wisconsin was being pulled in 1987 and was for a 1990-1991 commissioning.
There were lots of "phases" of the battleship program that effected everything from their reactivation schedule and which ships were to be reactivated to their weapons load outs and sensor packages. For instance, the Iowas were originally planned to receive 16 Tomahawks and 8 Harpoons. However, they wound up getting twice that!
In one of these earlier phases of the battleship reactivation program,
Missouri was excluded from the reactivation list so she could be preserved as a museum, and
North Carolina was in her place. He also said that when they had removed all of the spare parts from
North Carolina, she had refloated, and most of her equipment was in
very good condition. As you can tell, the original
North Carolina plan did not last very long. My contact said that one of the biggest reasons is because it would have been pretty difficult to squeeze the Iowa-class weapons payload modernization on
NC.
I asked a retired JJMA engineer I talk with about this, and he described the
North Carolina modernization scheme a little better. He said that after JJMA had done work on the Des Moines-class Modernization scheme, NAVSEA had issued a directive to make configuration plans to modernize the
North Carolina with the same weapons payload as the Iowa-class battleships following
Wisconsin's modernization. He said that they could have only achieved the same payload by using the Mk41 VLS. The aft two 5" upper handling rooms would have been replaced with 16 VLS cells a piece providing the full 32 tomahawk missile compliment. However, JJMA had also just finished the Warfighting Improvement Program modernization for all 4 Iowas (which they wanted to do on Wisconsin right off the bat), and they expanded the VLS from 32-cells to 96-cells. They also incorporated 4 CIWS and 2 NATO Sea Sparrow missile launchers.
So, after weighing the complications caused by the overpressure from the 16" guns, the existing structure, accommodating the entire Iowa-class modernizations scheme plus the WIP conversion, I think I may have come up with a pretty solid arrangement. It would cut four of the 5"/38caliber mounts and need to build a new couple of masts and some new super structure to accommodate the VLS and the Sea Sparrow launchers. The full WIP would be feasible, and the Sea Sparrow launches could be accommodated without deleting even more 5" guns. If I jump into this project this year, I will describe and illustrate it.
