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The British Navy’s fourth Ark Royal was their
largest warship built in the 20th Century. There were two
ships in this class laid down in the midst of World War
Two. The British Admiralty had the construction of both
ships put on hold, as they believed they could not be
completed in time to take part in the war. In the years
following the war, changes in design delayed their
completion even more. Originally to be named
Audacious, the first of the two ships entered
service in 1952 under the name Eagle. The second
ship originally to be named Irresistible, entered
service in 1955 under the name Ark Royal.
After the cancellation of a 50,000-ton British carrier
design in 1966, Ark Royal had to go through a refit
and modernization program in 1967 to help keep her in
service longer than intended. The completion of that work
increased her displacement to 53,000 tons and her flight
deck to 169 feet wide. Ark Royal re-entered service
after the refit with an air wing of 12 F-4 Phantoms, 14
Buccaneers, 4 Gannet AEW aircraft and 6 Wessex ASW
helicopters. Eagle was the only one of the two ships
to be involved in a war, this being the week long Suez
Canal War in 1956.
By the early 1970s, both ships were showing their age
and had become expensive to maintain. Eagle was
taken out of service in 1972 and placed in reserve at
Plymouth. With Ark Royal’s continuing
maintenance problems, Eagle was stripped for spares
to allow her sister ship to continue in service. The
Admiralty had Eagle towed to the Clyde/Scotland for
scrapping in September 1978 and decommissioned Ark
Royal two months later. As Ark Royal was
being dismantled at Cairn Ryan/South West Scotland,
Argentine troops invaded the British controlled Falkland
Islands April 2nd 1982.
The scrapping of Ark Royal forced the
Royal Navy to fight a war with aircraft carriers that could
only carry sub-sonic Harrier Jump Jets. Although these were
highly maneuverable jets fitted with American Sidewinder
missiles, they struggled to protect British forces from the
Argentine supersonic French designed jets.
The carriers that Britain now relied on were the
Invincible class vertical take off and landing carriers.
The introduction of Harrier’s led to this new design
of ship that no longer had to be large enough to operate
the large jets in service at that time. The Ilustrious
class carriers are 17,000 tons with ski jumps on the bow.
This allows the Harrier’s to carry heavier loads and
save fuel on takeoff. The third carrier of this class
entered service in 1985 as the fifth ship to use the name
Ark Royal. Now the flagship of the British fleet,
this ship differs slightly from her two sisters
Invincible and Illustious, as she has a
12-degree ski jump compared to the 7 degrees of the other
two ships.
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