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Saipan Class Carriers in WWII and the 1950th

klnowak

Charter Member
Saipan Class Carrier CVL-48 Saipan / CVL-49 Wright

Did another group of carriers in the last weeks. The Saipan Class Carriers.
Carriers are ready and loadup is done... so i will show up some pictures in here and will give you a little information about this carriers from wikipedia

The Saipan-class aircraft carriers were a class of two light carriers Saipan (CVL-48) and Wright (CVL-49) built for the United States Navy during World War II. Like the nine Independence-class light carriers, they were based on cruiser hulls. However, they differed from the earlier light carriers in that they were built from the keel up as carriers, and were based on heavy rather than light cruiser hulls. Completed too late for the war, they served as carriers until the mid-1950s, then were converted into a command ship (Wright) and a major communications relay ship (Saipan) in the late 1950s, and in those roles served until 1970.

They were both scrapped in 1980.

Intended to offset expected wartime losses of the smaller Independence-class light carriers, the two ships of the Saipan class were designed from the keel up as aircraft carriers, with many improvements based on experience with the Independence class. The Saipan class was based on the hull and machinery of the 13,600-ton Baltimore-class heavy cruiser hull rather than the smaller Cleveland-class light cruiser upon which the Independence class was built, allowing better seakeeping, improved hull subdivision, enhanced protection, greater magazine volume, a stronger flight deck, an expanded air group and a slightly higher speed than in the Independence class. Compared to their cruiser halfsisters, they were eight feet wider in beam to accommodate the size and weight of the hangar and flight deck. They had very brief service lives as light carriers, serving respectively from 1946 to 1957 (Saipan) and 1947 to 1956 (Wright). As carriers, they were swiftly outdated by the deckspaceeating jet aircraft of the 1950s, and quickly rendered far too small in a military environment where the 900-foot (270 m)-long Essex-class aircraft carriers were increasingly seen as
cramped and small. The two ships were seen as valuable hulls, however, with a large void space within the ship that could easily be translated to other use. They were converted for non-carrier duties in the late 1950s, Saipan as the communications relay ship USS Arlington and Wright as a command ship. In these capacities the two ships served until being decommissioned in 1970 and scrapped in 1980.

and some pictures---

37121780ac.jpg


37121781es.jpg


37121782qd.jpg


37121783sk.jpg
 
Command Ship USS Wright

Over in the Tonkin Gulf in 1968 on our lookouts used to mistake the Wright for an aircraft carrier until it came closer and they could see the huge antennae in the middle of the flight deck which were top secret communications gear back then. In the Combat Information Center we couldn't figure out what aircraft carrier they were talking about knowing where all of the carriers were supposed to be. The USS Wright operated on its own schedule.
 
Over in the Tonkin Gulf in 1968 on our lookouts used to mistake the Wright for an aircraft carrier until it came closer and they could see the huge antennae in the middle of the flight deck which were top secret communications gear back then. In the Combat Information Center we couldn't figure out what aircraft carrier they were talking about knowing where all of the carriers were supposed to be. The USS Wright operated on its own schedule.

Do you mean this one ?

37129066lc.jpg


It`s on my todo-list in near future :wavey:

greetings
Klaus
 
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