HMS Queen Elizabeth (CVF)
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This article contains information about an as-yet unfinished ship.
It may contain preliminary or speculative information, and may not reflect the final version of the ship.
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Career (United Kingdom) | |
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Ordered: | May 20, 2008 |
Builder: | BAE Systems Thales Group KBR VT Group Babcock International Group |
Fate: | Planned; First steel is due to be cut at Babcock's Rosyth yard in August 2008. |
General characteristics | |
Displacement: | 65,000 tonnes (full load)[1] |
Length: | 274m |
Beam: | 39 metres (waterline) c.70 metres overall |
Draught: | 9 metres |
Range: | 10,000 nautical miles (18,520 km) |
Capacity: | 1,450 |
Complement: | 600 |
Aircraft carried: | 48 aircraft, such as F-35 Lightning II & the EH101 Merlin helicopter |
HMS Queen Elizabeth will be the first of the Royal Navy's two new Queen Elizabeth class aircraft carriers and is scheduled to enter service in 2014.[2] She will be the second ship to be called HMS Queen Elizabeth, after Queen Elizabeth I.
Queen Elizabeth and her sister ship (Prince of Wales) will be the largest warships ever built in the United Kingdom. They are multi-purpose carriers that can adapt to complete multiple roles. It will be capable of carrying 40 aircraft (the F-35B Lightning II) or 25 Chinook helicopters, a major capability upgrade from the current Invincible class carriers.
The ships will be built in four sections, at Portsmouth, Rosyth, Barrow-in-Furness, and on the Clyde, by BAE Systems and VT Group before being assembled in the Firth of Forth at Rosyth Royal Dockyard. Number One dry dock at the docks is currently undergoing modification to fit the HMS Queen Elizabeth and HMS Prince of Wales. [3]
The aircraft currently selected to be used on these carriers are the Short Take Off Vertical Landing (STOVL) variant of the Lightning II. Originally the carrier will be fitted with a ski-jump ramp but in the future, the flight deck will have the provision to be converted to use a catapult launch and arrestor recovery system should the UK choose to operate the conventional F-35C or an Unmanned Combat Air Vehicle (UCAV) similar to the X-47 Pegasus.
Defence secretary Des Browne confirmed the £3.8bn order for the two carriers on 25 July 2007. The news was welcomed by politicians, trade unions and business. Both ships of the class will be based at Portsmouth Naval Dockyard.[citation needed]
The naming of the ship as Queen Elizabeth will see a situation identical to that between 1940 and 1948 - during those years, Cunard's Queen Elizabeth was in service at the same time as the Royal Navy battleship Queen Elizabeth. In 2010, two years before this ship joins the fleet, Cunard plan to introduce into service the new cruise liner Queen Elizabeth.
[edit] See also
- HMS Queen Elizabeth for other ships of this name.
- The Royal Navy in the 21st Century
[edit] References
- ^ Future Aircraft Carrier (CVF) MOD website. Retrieved 21 May 2008
- ^ Parliamentary Debates, House of Commons, 2007-07-25
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