The overhaul of the ship from the keel up is a massive combined effort between the ship’s crew, Newport News Shipbuilding (NNS) and other contractors. Their collective work will prepare the ship for the second half of its 50 year service life.
“We cannot accomplish this mission without the partnership we’ve established over the last year with NNS,” said Capt. Cassidy Norman, commanding officer of the John C. Stennis. “RCOH is critical to the future operation of the ship and takes tremendous planning and teamwork to get to the finish line.”
RCOH accounts for approximately 35 percent of all depot-level maintenance in the ship’s life. This maintenance period was created to recapitalize the nation’s aircraft carriers and quickly get them back in the fight. RCOH extends the life of one of the nation’s most strategically critical national assets.
At the 25-year mark in a carrier’s life it will typically go through RCOH. This process involves years of continuous planning and assessments, disassembly and replacement of surfaces and structures, and replacement of, or repairs to, complex machinery and systems. Essentially, the ship is gutted, rebuilt, and modernized.
In preparation for RCOH the ship went through a maintenance process called “Smart Start,” in which temporary services and systems were installed throughout the ship, decking and catapult equipment was removed, painting, lagging and tile sampling was done, and refueling preparations were made.
A component of Smart Start also included the Shipboard Consolidated Offload and Outfitting Plan (SCOOP). During SCOOP the crew and contractors worked together to remove equipment, tools, devices and almost everything not built into the ship, and placed it into storage.
While in Newport News, the ship will accomplish major key events including propulsion plant repairs, shore steaming, cold operations, hot operations, and power range testing. This work will prepare the ship to conduct a total ship test program, followed by “fast cruise,” sea trials, and finally it will be ready to carry out operations at sea.
"For the last three years, we have planned each step of the aircraft carrier USS John C. Stennis' RCOH, including procuring long lead-time materials, conducting shipboard inspections and readying our facilities for this extensive engineering and construction project," said Todd West, Newport News' vice president, in-service aircraft carrier programs. "We look forward to continuing our work with the ship's crew and our 579 vendors across 36 states that provide material and services which brings stability of this industrial base and is critical to our ability to continue to build and maintain the Navy fleet our Navy and nation needs."
Stennis will be the seventh Nimitz-class aircraft carrier to undergo an RCOH. She will be dry-docked at NNS, a division of Huntington Ingalls Industries, for an approximate, 48-month maintenance period.
The completion of RCOH will ensure the enduring mission of USS John C. Stennis to precisely project U.S. national power, in all domains, in peacetime and in war, anywhere in the world.
For more news on John C. Stennis, visit https://www.airpac.navy.mil/Organization/USS-John-C-Stennis-CVN-74 or follow along on Facebook at www.facebook.com/stennis74.