In
a shipyard in Scotland
the future of the Royal Navy is slowly taking shape. But the construction of
the aircraft carrier HMS Queen Elizabeth is a mammoth task.
Imagine
an aircraft carrier as a 65,000-tonne jigsaw puzzle and you have got a good
idea of the scale of the building of HMS Queen Elizabeth.
The
pieces are being built at six shipyards around the UK
and will be slotted together at Rosyth in Fife using an enormous crane which
was transported by sea from China .
Around
10,000 workers across Britain
are employed on the £5bn project with up to 25,000 engaged in building
components for the Lockheed Martin F-35 aircraft.
The
carrier will have between 12 and 40 F-35s, or Joint Strike Fighters, costing
around £65m each.
"It's
the biggest shipbuilding project for the Royal Navy ever and is second only in
engineering terms to the Olympics," says the man in charge of the whole
project, David Downs, engineering director with the Aircraft Carrier Alliance
(ACA) consortium.
"All
my nights are sleepless, worrying about it," he jokes.
The
Queen Elizabeth and sister ship Prince of Wales will be far bigger than the Ark
Royal but still significantly smaller than US equivalents.
Uniquely,
a team of assessors from Lloyd's Register are on hand at all the yards to check
the work as it proceeds.
See how a QE Class aircraft carrier (left) would
compare in dry dock alongside HMS Illustrious.
BAE
Systems is part of ACA and at its Govan yard in Glasgow, integrated work teams
manager David Thomas gives a tour around one huge segment of the ship.
Clambering
under the hulk, wearing only a hard hat for protection, it's hard not to think
of what would happen if the frame holding up 14,000 tons of steel gave way. But
Thomas is reassuring on the yard's safety record.
He
has been supervising the insertion of some of the 450 prefabricated cabins and
150 shower rooms - made by a firm on Teesside - in the ship's innards. He
carries with him a small manual showing where everything fitted.
Anyone
who finds the instructions to flatpack furniture a challenge would find it
mind-boggling.
The
whole process starts with the arrival of huge sheets of steel. They are
"burned" into various shapes and sizes - some of them quite small -
which are welded into position.
Gradually
the sections become bigger as deck after deck is welded together.
One
of the Govan team is Lyn Gordon, 23, an apprentice fabricator and one of a
number of women working on the project.
"My
fascination with shipbuilding came from living on the Clyde ,"
she says. "I realise that it will eventually be an aircraft carrier and I
will get to see it turning from a sheet of a metal, to a component, to HMS
Queen Elizabeth."
The
first segment from Govan should be ready this summer and will be towed by
barge, around the northern tip of Scotland , to Rosyth.
At
Rosyth the dry dock is ready for the assembly process. Last month the crane
arrived from Shanghai , having squeezed under the
Forth Bridge at low tide.
Rosyth
has List X status, meaning everyone working there has to be security cleared,
including the 50 Chinese workers who are helping to erect the 93m crane.
This piece, less than 1% of the entire ship, was brought to Scotland from Devon by barge |
The
first piece of steel was cut in 2009 but HMS Queen Elizabeth will not be
finished until 2016 at the earliest, and may not be ready for action until
2020.
The
construction of her sister ship, the HMS Prince of Wales, will overlap and the
current plan is for one of them to be operational while the other would be kept
in "extended readiness".
With
the Ark Royal's fleet of Harrier jump jets being decommissioned the Navy will
be without carrier-based planes for almost a decade.
Recent
events in Libya
have showed the importance of mobile air power.
The
MoD complicated matters in October when it decided, in the Strategic Defence
Review, to fit the carriers with catapults and arrester wires.
The
"cats and traps" will enable them to fly the carrier variant F-35 and
will also enable US and French jets to land on the deck. But it will also delay
the completion of the carriers.
"If
they get the two ships in the form they are expected they will be enormously
capable ships. It's like having a piece of Britain you can place anywhere in
the world," says naval historian Nick Hewitt.
Aircraft
carriers are arguably the ultimate symbol of military prestige, a mobile
projection of military might.
The
Royal Navy pioneered carriers, explains Hewitt, head of attractions and
collections at the Portsmouth Naval Base Property Trust. The first carriers
were converted ships like the 7,500 ton Ark Royal, whose biplanes first saw
action in February 1915 against the Turks in the Dardanelles .
Since
the 1930s, US carriers have dwarfed their British allies, Hewitt notes.
"The
US
carriers were designed for the Pacific and to be away from base indefinitely.
The British carriers were designed to operate in the North Sea, the
Mediterranean and the North Atlantic or from bases in Singapore or India ."
HMS
Invincible, which fought in the Falklands , and
HMS Ark Royal, which was recently pensioned off, weighed in at a puny 22,000 tons
compared to the American carriers such as the USS George H W Bush, at 101,000
tons.
The
QE Class weighs in in between - at 65,000 tonnes full displacement.
When
it is finally ready the Queen Elizabeth will only be able to navigate the Forth Bridge
and reach the open sea by waiting for low tide, and even then they will have to
retract the radar masts.
The
project has had its critics.
The
former deputy chairman of Babcock - which is part of the ACA - Lord Hesketh
resigned in November after describing the project as a "disaster".
He
told the BBC the carriers could have been built for a fraction of the cost at a
shipyard in South Korea
and claims the project only went ahead in its present form because of the
number of jobs it preserved.
But
whatever the controversy over the carriers and the cost, the effort involved
will be phenomenal.
Source: BBS News. By Chris
Summers. 7 April 2011
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-12308437
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