USS Nimitz (CVN-68)

USS Nimitz at sea near Victoria, Canada
USS Nimitz at sea near Victoria, Canada
Career (US) USN Jack

<tr valign=top><td>Ordered:</td><td>31 March 1967</td></tr>

Laid down: 22 June 1968
Launched: 13 May 1972

<tr valign=top><td>Commissioned:</td><td>3 May 1975</td></tr>

Status: active in service

<tr valign=top><td>Homeport:</td><td>San Diego, California</td></tr>

General Characteristics
Displacement: 101,000 to 104,000 tons full load
Length: Overall: 1,092 ft (333 m)
Waterline: 1,040 ft (317 m)
Beam: Overall: 252 ft (76.8 m)
Waterline: 134 ft (40.8 m)

<tr valign=top><td>Draft:</td><td>Maximum navigational: 37 ft (11.3 m)
Limit: 41 ft (12.5 m)</td></tr><tr valign=top><td>Propulsion and power:</td><td>2 × Westinghouse A4W nuclear reactors
4 × steam turbines
4 × shafts
260,000 shp (194 MW)</td></tr>

Speed: 30+ knots (56+ km/h)

<tr valign=top><td>Range:</td><td>Essentially unlimited</td></tr>

Complement: Ship's company: 3,200
Air wing: 2,480

<tr valign=top><td>Sensors and processing systems:</td><td>SPS-48E 3-D air search radar
SPS-49(V)5 2-D air search radar
Mk 23 target acquisition radar
2 × SPN-46 air traffic control radars
SPN-43B air traffic control radar
SPN-44 landing aid radars
3 × Mk 91 NSSM guidance systems
3 × Mk 95 radars</td></tr><tr valign=top><td>Electronic warfare and decoys:</td><td>SLQ-32(V)4 jamming/deception suite
Mk36 SRBOC decoy RL
SLQ-25A Nixie torpedo countermeasures</td></tr><tr valign=top><td>Armament:</td><td>3 × Phalanx CIWS
2 × 21 cell Sea RAM
2 × Mk 29 Sea Sparrow</td></tr><tr valign=top><td>Armour:</td><td>Unknown</td></tr><tr valign=top><td>Aircraft and aviation facilities:</td><td>90 fixed wing and helicopters</td></tr><tr valign=top><td>Motto:</td><td>Teamwork, a Tradition</td></tr><tr valign=top><td>Nickname:</td><td>Old Salt</td></tr>

USS Nimitz (CVN-68) is a supercarrier in the United States Navy, the lead ship of its class. It is one of the largest warships in the world.

The keel of Nimitz was laid down 22 June 1968 by Newport News Shipbuilding in Newport News, Virginia, and she was commissioned 3 May 1975 by President Gerald Ford. The ship was named for Admiral Chester Nimitz, who commanded the Pacific fleet in World War II. Currently, it is commanded by Captain Ted N. Branch.

Ship's History

Nimitz first deployed to the Mediterranean, departing 7 July 1976, in company with the cruisers South Carolina and California. This was the first time in ten years that the US had deployed nuclear-powered ships in the Mediterranean. The cruise was uneventful, and Nimitz returned to Norfolk, Virginia 7 February 1977. A second Mediterranean cruise 1977-1978 was similarly quiet, but on the third cruise, which began 10 September 1979, Nimitz was the launchpad for Operation Evening Light, the attempt to rescue the US Embassy workers being held hostage in Tehran, Iran. The mission was aborted when helicopters crashed at a rendezvous point in the Iranian desert. The ship finally returned home 26 May 1980.

In the following year, one of Nimitz's EA-6B Prowlers crash-landed on its flight deck, killing 14 crewmen and injuring 45 others.

In the Gulf of Sidra incident (1981), while conducting a freedom of navigation exercise in the Gulf of Sidra near what Libya had proclaimed as the "line of death", two aircraft (F-14As) of Nimitz's VF-41 were fired on by Libyan pilots, but they returned fire and shot down both Libyans.

In 1987, Nimitz changed home ports to Bremerton, Washington. She left from there on 25 February 1991 to relieve Ranger in Operation Desert Storm, returning herself on 24 August, 1991. She deployed again to the Gulf for several months in 1993, relieving Kitty Hawk during Operation Southern Watch. In March 1996, she was deployed to patrol the waters off Taiwan amid missile tests by the PRC in the area, becoming the first U.S. warship to pass though the Taiwan Strait since 1976.

On 1 September 1997, Nimitz began an around-the-world cruise with the destination of Newport News, for a mid-life Service Life Extension Program (SLEP) that lasted until 25 June, 2001. She then changed home port to San Diego, California, arriving there on 13 November, 2001.

In mid-April 2003, Nimitz relieved Abraham Lincoln in the Persian Gulf, launching sorties over Iraq in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.

Nimitz returned to San Diego on 2 November 2003 where she underwent regularly scheduled maintenance and repair. Nimitz set sail on yet another deployment to the Persian Gulf in May 2005, returning from an uneventful deployment on 8 November 2005

Nimitz in fiction

  • The size and power of Nimitz fascinated navy buffs when it first sailed, and that eventually translated into a 1980 movie, The Final Countdown, a what-if story featuring the Nimitz going back in time to the day before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, complete with the predictable encounters between F-14A Tomcat jets and Japanese Zeros.
  • In Tom Clancy's novel Red Storm Rising, Nimitz is sent to protect U.S. convoys from Soviet attack. The ship is severely damaged by Soviet AS-6 Kingfish missiles during an air raid. Listing badly, Nimitz limped into Southampton for repairs before participating in the NATO campaign to liberate Iceland

In the book : Ship Of The Damned By James F. David, the Nimitz is transported toa place known as 'Pot Of Gold, a place made through the Unconfirmed 'Philidelphia Experiment, by a group of radicals known as Specials, where they plan to use its nuclear aresenal against the outside wold

External links


Image:cvn68.jpg


Nimitz-class aircraft carrier
Nimitz | Dwight D. Eisenhower | Carl Vinson

Modified Nimitz-class aircraft carrier (Theodore Roosevelt-subclass)
Theodore Roosevelt | Abraham Lincoln | George Washington | John C. Stennis | Harry S. Truman | Ronald Reagan | George H. W. Bush

List of aircraft carriers of the United States Navy