Portaaviones

Nocturno Culto

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USS Makassar Strait (CVE-91) breaking up on San Nicholas Island, California, where she had gone aground while used as a Pacific Missile Range target ship, 22 January 1963. The entire escort carrier eventually split in half by the effects of the grounding.

Antes y después



 

Nocturno Culto

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USS Enterprise photographed by U24 in 2001. None of the ships or helicopters of the strike group detected the german submarine
 

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General Electric F414 being tested on the fantail of USS George H.W. Bush (CVN 77) somewhere in the Adriatic sea, October 30, 2022.
 

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The incomplete Graf Zeppelin on 6 February 1942, at Gotenhafen by British Royal Air Force aircraft. A three-masted sailing ship, possibly one of the German Navy's vessels (Horst Wessel, Albert Leo Schlageter, or Gorch Fock) appears at a nearby pier.
 

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Launched in 1985, becoming fully operational in the Russian Navy in 1995. The initial name of the ship was Riga; it was launched as Leonid Brezhnev, embarked on sea trials as Tbilisi, and finally named Admiral Flota Sovetskogo Soyuza Kuznetsov
 

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A F-15 Eagle and a RF-4C Phantom II from the 18th tactical fighter wing fly past soviet aircraft cruiser Minsk during Exercise Ostfriesland II in the Sea of Japan in 1983, photo taken by another F-15
 

Así es el portaaviones más moderno y poderoso del mundo​

Con una eslora de 337 metros, longitud equivalente a tres campos de fútbol, y capacidad para transportar hasta 90 aviones de combate, el portaaviones estadounidense de propulsión nuclear USS Gerald R. Ford es el más poderoso y tecnológicamente avanzado del mundo e inició su primera misión el jueves.​





 
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