Video: Future aircraft carrier John F. Kennedy 50 percent complete

America’s military shipbuilder Huntington Ingalls Industries (HII) reached the midpoint in the construction of the future nuclear-powered aircraft carrier John F. Kennedy (CVN 79), following the installation of one of the largest units on the ship.

John F. Kennedy (CVN 79) Aft Section Superlift; Photo: HII

Weighing approximately 905 metric tons, the unit is one of the heaviest of the planned steel structures, known as superlifts, that will be joined together to make up the second ship in the Gerald R. Ford class.

John F. Kennedy (CVN 79) Aft Section Superlift; Photo: HII

The superlift of the aft section of the ship between the hangar bay and flight deck is 80 feet long, about 110 feet wide and four decks in height.

Combining 19 smaller units into one superlift allowed HII’s division Newport News Shipbuilding to install a majority of the outfitting equipment—grating, pumps, valves, pipe, electrical panels, mounting studs, lighting, ventilation and other components—before the structure was hoisted into the dry dock using the shipyard’s 1,050-metric ton gantry crane.

This approach resulted in this work being completed 14 months earlier than it was on USS Gerald R. Ford, said Lucas Hicks, Newport News’ vice president, CVN 79 program.

“This was a game changer for us. Performing higher levels of pre-outfitting represents a significant improvement in aircraft carrier construction, allowing us to build larger structures than ever before and providing greater cost savings,” Hicks explained.

“This superlift represents the future build strategy for Ford-class carriers,” Mike Butler, program director of CVN 79, said.

“Not only did we build this superlift larger and with significantly more pre-outfitting, we managed much of the work on the deckplate with new digital project management tools as part of our Integrated Digital Shipbuilding initiative. The lessons we learned from this successful superlift will allow us to build even more similar superlifts on future ships in the Ford class,” he added.

Kennedy is scheduled to move from the dry dock to an outfitting berth in the fourth quarter of 2019, three months ahead of schedule.

Watch the construction of Kennedy in the video below:

Video: HII