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  AIRCRAFT CARRIER MODELS

An aircraft carrier is considered the most valuable sea-based asset. Considering that the earth is covered mostly by water and that a major portion of the population lives within 100 miles of the sea, as a floating airbase, an aircraft carrier can do much but does not have the problems linked to the diplomatic authorizations necessary to operate from a land airport abroad, and the clearances to overfly other countries’ airspace. An aircraft carrier is an autonomous microcosm, as it has everything needed to operate internally, from food to fuel, from ordnance to supplies, and is therefore capable to express the maximum of its capabilities from the very first day of intervention.

When you shop for an aircraft carrier model, be careful with the phrase "museum quality" which is overused by mediocre builders. Here are some things to look at:

1/Hull:  ship hull presents a considerable challenge to a mediocre builder because half of it, being submerged, does not show. The stern is the most difficult to build and some builders are very reluctant to show it.

2/Weapons and radars: many aircraft carrier models miss MK38 and CWIS guns. Their radars have incorrect shapes and colors.

3/Fine details: do not assume that a model that looks good from afar (small photos) has beautiful small details. Those who are not very proud of their fine parts seldom show their models in close-up photos.

It takes much more time to produce a premium aircraft carrier model than a mediocre one. An accurate model requires not only time but also top artists. We hope that when you look at the beautiful models below, you will see our extraordinary skills, our passion, and our research prowess. With the help of many distinguished individuals, ModelShipMaster proudly produces works of art.

Please note that the aircraft are not fixed onto the deck and can be arranged creatively by you.


USS Constellation

O
ne of the fastest ships in the Navy. Known officially as "America's Flagship".
 


 


 


USS Forrestal (CV-59)

The Navy's first 'super' aircraft Carrier and a Game Changer. The first aircraft carrier with an angled flight deck, steam catapult, and an optical landing system.
 


 

 

USS Midway

The first aircraft carrier that employed steel flight deck.
 

 


 

Bonhomme Richard (LHD-6)

 


 


USS America (LHA-6)

Flagship of an expeditionary strike group, carrying part of a Marine expeditionary unit with helicopters and V-22 Osprey, supported by F-35 and helicopter gunships.


 


USS Gerald Ford




 


 


USS Nimitz CVN-68

A flagship carrier with more than four decades of service. A ship that well deserves good attention.


 


 

 

USS Theodore Roosevelt


The first aircraft carrier to be assembled using modular construction



 


 


USS Oriskany


 

 

HMS Queen Elizabeth


 


 


 


HMS Hermes
 

 



 


 

HMS Argus

The world's first aircraft carrier built. The first full-length flat deck.



 



USS Gambier Bay


 


 


USS Enterprise CV-6   

First design that had hangar deck that doubled the number of planes carried.
First American ship to sink a full-sized enemy warship. 20 battle stars in World War II.


USS Lexington (CV-2)

First aircraft carrier battle in history. Also the first in which opposing ships never came within sight of each other.


 

Akagi
 

An accurate and beautiful Japanese aircraft carrier model.

 


Hosho

The first aircraft carrier in action.



 


USS Langley

The very first aircraft carrier of the US Navy. Of those aviators who served aboard Langley, five became rear admirals, four became vice admirals and four became four-star admirals.


Mistral class




 

 


Essex class aircraft carrier



 

 


USS North Carolina (ACR-12) 

The first ship in history to launch an aircraft using a catapult


 


 

HMS Ark Royal

The birthplace of all aircraft carriers.


 


 
 


While expensive to buy and operate, aircraft carriers may be ultimately less expensive and far more flexible than deploying and sustaining land-based air assets to an available friendly host nation, and therefore well worth the investment. Based on the capabilities to support the launch and recovery of fixed-wing assets, aircraft carriers can be categorized into three groups:

The CATOBAR aircraft carriers (Catapulted Assisted Taken Off Barrier Arrested Recovery): these units, equipped with nuclear propulsion and a flat-deck with a catapult launching system, ensure exceptional autonomy and represent fully-capable floating military airbases that can be deployed for long periods at great distances from their motherland. This group includes the US Navy super-carriers of the Nimitz and Ford classes. 

The STOBAR aircraft carriers (Short Take-Off Barrier Arrested Recovery):
utilize conventional propulsion and were all launched from Ukrainian shipyards of the former Soviet Navy. They are currently in service within the Russian Navy and the Chinese People’s Liberation Army Navy.

The STOVL aircraft carriers (Short Take-Off and Vertical Landing): capable to support fixed-wing assets operations, are equipped with conventional propulsion and are in use in major NATO Navies, namely the Royal UK Navy (HMS Queen Elizabeth), the Italian Navy, the Spanish Navy, along with the US Marine Corps’ Landing Helicopter Dock (LHD) Wasp and Landing Helicopter Assault (LHA) America Class units.

 

Learn more about aircraft carriers here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aircraft_carrier