Why do Navy ships have wooden decks?

Wooden decking served to insulate the deck. Heat travels quickly through metal, and not so well through wood. As such, adding a wooden deck would help keep the ship warm in winter and cool in summer.
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Why did warships have teak decks?

It had purpose. An active battleship had large amount of gunpowder that had to be transported on and off of the ship. Teak served as protection preventing metal-on-metal scraping, which could potentially create sparks, thus fires. Teak served as insulation.
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Did the USS Missouri have wooden decks?

3) Teak Deck

The reason the deck of the USS Missouri was built out of teak was because of the massive amounts of gunpowder that was transported on and off the battleship for the large guns.
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Did carriers have wooden decks?

USN carriers with hangar deck armour only usually had wooden decking over thin mild steel flight decks which were easy to repair. The USN moved the structural strength deck to the flight deck, starting with the Forrestal class which had "...an enclosed..." hangar.
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Did US aircraft carriers in ww2 have wooden decks?

American carriers in World War II and Korea used wood due to its ease of repairability.
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Why Does a Battleship Have a Wooden Deck?



Did the USS Yorktown have a wooden deck?

Summary. Black smoke pours from the U.S. Navy aircraft carrier USS Yorktown (CV-5), at circa 1400 hrs on 4 June 1942, after she suffered hits from Japanese dive bombers during the Battle of Midway. Note the sailor in the foreground attempting to repair the wooden flight deck.
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Do aircraft carriers have sprinklers?

A wash-down system on a Nimitz-class carrier is a series of flush-deck nozzles mounted on the deck, the flight deck perimeter and the four elevators. These nozzles discharge up to 27000 gallons per minute (1700 L per second) of water and AFFF to flood the deck in case it is necessary.
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Why are carrier flight decks angled?

The angled part of the deck allows landing aircraft to go around if necessary as well as permitting simultaneous takeoffs and landings safely when that is necessary. As I understand it (perhaps a carrier pilot could enlarge on this), a carrier pilot wants a 4G landing impact.
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Did the USS Lexington have a wooden deck?

Portions of Lexington's original wooden flight deck are preserved in a small carrier deck mock-up at the National Naval Aviation Museum in Pensacola, Florida. Lexington received the Presidential Unit Citation and 11 battle stars for World War II service.
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What type of wood was used on aircraft carriers?

In the mid 1900's heavy wood planking, usually Teak was used to protect decks of many naval vessels including aircraft carriers.
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Did the Bismarck have a wooden deck?

Re: Bismarck deck details

The main deck and maybe parts of the first superstructure deck (level 01 in US terms) normally was planked with teak.
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Why did Iowa class battleships have wooden decks?

Wooden decking served to insulate the deck. Heat travels quickly through metal, and not so well through wood. As such, adding a wooden deck would help keep the ship warm in winter and cool in summer.
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Why do boats use teak?

What makes teak such an ideal wood for its use on the water is its high content of silica and oil, which makes teak extremely weather resistant. Its tight grain creates high tensile strength and its characteristics create a resistance to rot, fungi and mildew.
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Why is holystone a deck?

Holystone is a soft and brittle sandstone that was formerly used for scouring and whitening the wooden decks of ships. It was used in the British and American Navy for scrubbing the decks of sailing ships. The term may have come from the fact that 'holystoning the deck' was originally done on one's knees, as in prayer.
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Is teak a wood?

What type of wood is teak? Teak is a close-grained type of hardwood. It is widely considered to be the 'king of woods' and makes excellent outdoor furniture due to its water-resistance, durability and beauty.
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Where is the USS Long Beach?

Long Beach was stricken on 1 May 1995, more than 33 years after she had entered service. On 13 July 2012, Long Beach was sold at auction, for recycling, as prescribed for nuclear-powered vessels by Code 350, at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, Bremerton, Wash.
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What is the oldest aircraft carrier still in service?

In January 2015, Nimitz changed home port from Everett back to Naval Base Kitsap. With the inactivation of USS Enterprise in 2012 and decommissioning in 2017, Nimitz is now the oldest U.S. aircraft carrier in service, and the oldest serving aircraft carrier in the world.
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What does USS stand for?

A Note on Navy Ship Name Prefixes

The prefix “USS,” meaning “United States Ship,” is used in official documents to identify a commissioned ship of the Navy. It applies to a ship while she is in commission. Before commissioning, or after decommissioning, she is referred to by name, with no prefix.
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Why is the USS Lexington called The Blue Ghost?

The name Blue Ghost comes from a couple of places. It was reported, no less than four times, that USS LEXINGTON had been sunk. Japanese propaganda radio broadcasts, typically called Tokyo Rose, nicknamed her the Blue Ghost because she just kept coming back...and the paint helped too.
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Why are aircraft carriers not straight?

In the case of an aborted landing, and angled runway gave returning planes plenty of room and open air to speed up and take off again. Better yet, this angled design kept carriers from having to sacrifice any on-deck parking space for planes not currently in flight.
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Do planes ever fall off aircraft carriers?

Eisenhower. After an arresting cable broke as an E2-C Hawkeye aircraft was landing on the ship on March 18, the plane flew off the end of the carrier. The footage shows the plane, with its distinctive radar on top, disappearing over the side, but then reappearing after it recovers.
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What will replace carriers?

Ford class is a class of nuclear powered aircraft carriers currently being constructed for the United States Navy. The class, with a planned total of ten ships, will replace the Navy's current carriers on a one-for-one basis, starting with the lead ship, Gerald R.
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What could replace aircraft carriers?

What Could Replace U.S. Aircraft Carriers?
  • The consensus could be … more giant, nuclear-powered aircraft carriers. ...
  • The Navy in early 2020 launched a formal study of aviation-ship requirements after the current order for five Ford-class supercarriers.
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Are aircraft carriers made of steel?

The Use of Steel. Each U.S. aircraft carrier contains 50,000 tons or more of steel plate. The USS Ronald Reagan, commissioned in 2003, used 70,000 tons of steel.
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