Mikey wrote:It doesn't matter, though, whether the Forrestal-class brought many of those concepts to the fore - it was the Nimitz-class that took those concepts, and more, and welded them into an instrument of force projection that is unparalleled.
Its this very reason I'd expect that the Forrestal wasn't even considered when they talked about this list.
Captain Seafort wrote:No, it isn't. It's certainly a great advantage, but it's only a refinement and improvement on the basic supercarrier concept - it was Forrestal's synergy of angled flight deck, steam catapult and step-change in size over her predecessors that made the modern supercarrier possible. The Nimitz class ships would still be able to perform their current role even without nuclear power, albeit they'd need greater support. They would not be able to do so without the combination of advances brought in with Forrestal.
I'll take this as a comment from someone who has no idea about the trouble that comes from supplying a Carrier Group at sea. The space needed on board for the ships fuel is less space for other things. Needing to stop every week for a resupply or adding the risk to the supply fleet itself which now needs protection. Or the carrier group having to stop operations for a day to allow for the resupply.
The modern carrier group operates 24/7, six to eight months at a time. Nuclear power gives the ability of non-stop operation, something that an Oil based fleet could simply not mimic.
Captain Seafort wrote:This is, I suspect, a misunderstanding on your part due to me not phrasing that point very well. I wasn't saying that nuclear power was unimportant, but that it was nowhere near as important as the basic Forrestal concept-model.
As mikey pointed out and as spoken in your own words right here. Forrestal was just a concept where the Enterprise Class was the first time those concepts were put together with the ability to deploy those concepts world wide. Followed by the Nimitz which was the first class that molded those two classes together and enhanced with modern technology. Allowing for the current superiority that comes from the USN over any other power on earth. The merger of nuclear power with unlimited range, large airwings, Air+surface+sub surface defenses and lastly the projection of power.
Captain Seafort wrote:Not even close - the change from sail to steam was the greatest step-change in the history of naval warfare. The advantage the ability to move at will to any point of the compass, at whatever speed the commander desired, granted an incalculable advantage over an opponent without that ability. Not even the development of the aircraft carrier can match it.
Really... lets break this comment down to size. First being the ability move to any point on the compass, they could do that in a row boat. That's not really what makes or breaks the issue. The reason nuclear power is important is that it allows you to reach anywhere in the world and return without stopping or even slowing your travel.
As to the "aircraft carrier can't match it"... again that's not true. The aircraft carrier was and is the single greatest advance in navel technology ever created. The ability to strike beyond eyesight range and put non-aircraft baring ships into a permanently secondary position will remain the defining moment of navel design until "Naval" means "Space Navies".