Snowplows on aircraft carriers?

From a link I followed on the page linked by dqa: “Crewmen use flight deck tractors with power brooms to sweep snow from the carrier’s flight deck, during operations off Korea, circa early 1951.

That, of course, was 50 years ago.

But, that’s 6,000 shovels or the equivalent. At $10,000 per shovel, that about doubles the cost of the carrier. :smiley:

But it does indeed answer my question. The picture says it all.

I don’t think they went back to shoveling since then.

Thank you very much!

I’ve heard of the Cessna thing before, but I can’t see why it would necessitate the dumping of more than one or two choppers: How much space would a Cessna take up on deck? Sure, you’d need to clear a runway, but you could do that with helicopters just taking off, and landing again after the Cessna had landed. I can’t imagine that that quantity of air fuel would cost more than the equipment itself.

For that matter, they didn’t need to dump any helicopters: They could have just dumped the Cessna itself (probably much cheaper than a Navy bird), after the passengers got out.

Hmm… you’re right. Plus they could just have taken them down the elevators to the hangar deck.

Weird.

See photos of USS Midway especially the last three where “things” were being off loaded onto barges and ??? at the fall of Saigon:

http://www.mississippi.net/~comcents/tendertale.com/ttonl/newlife.html

Jois

Holy Cow!

http://www-personal.umich.edu/~buzznau/ship.html

DQA’s source. See Jack Frost’s photo of the Cessna landing!

Jois

I asked the Public Affairs Office of USS John C. Stennis (CVN 74) about it. Here’s what I got:

Well, I guess it does. Thank you.