Video: Why Aircraft Carriers Have an Angled Runway?

Last updated on September 29th, 2021 at 04:05 pm

Have you ever wondered that Why do Aircraft carriers have an angled runway? Well, this question made us curious and we found out the answer for you. Let’s jump in!

The angled deck was one of the three improvements to aircraft carrier design conceived by the Royal Navy that made fast-jet operations both possible and safe. The idea of canting or skewing the landing area to port of the ship’s centreline had evolved from experiments with a rubber deck and Sea Vampire fighters without undercarriages in HMS Warrior in 1948. Although the rubber deck itself proved impractical, the ‘skewed deck’ as it was called at first was seen as a very effective way of making arrested landings safer on existing, relatively small, flight decks.

The generation of jets planned for the 1950s were much heavier than their predecessors, had higher landing speeds and would have needed most of the deck available to complete an arrested landing. The standard technique of centreline landings with a barrier to protect the deck park forward from aircraft that missed the wires was no longer sustainable and, with little or no room for the deck park, the number of aircraft that could be operated was small.


Worse still; if the whole deck had to be clear for every landing, the number of aircraft operated at any one time would be low and the speed with which they could be recovered would be slow. The angled runway / deck solved this dilemma for the aircraft carriers by providing a landing runway that was longer than the portion of deck aft of the existing barriers. The sum of the lengths of the landing and launch/parking areas was greater than the length of the ship.

Trials were carried out on an angled deck painted on HMS Triumph, on USS Antietam, the first carrier actually fitted with a full angled deck in 1953 and in HMS Centaur, the first British angled deck carrier in 1954.

The trials were successful, so successful that every carrier navy moved to copy the idea quickly, led by the US Navy. Not only did the angled deck provide a longer runway in which the arresting wires could be moved nearer the centre of pitch to make landing easier in bad weather but other advantages soon became apparent. There was no longer a need for a barrier since, with clear deck space ahead of the wires, an aircraft that missed the wires, known as a ‘bolter’, could open the throttle to go round for another circuit.

The area to starboard of the runway gave clear parking space for a number of aircraft, allowing rapid multiple aircraft recoveries and a deck park for refuelling and re-arming.


Although simple in concept, the conversion of existing carriers to have angled decks involved structural alterations, loss of the armament and aerials mounted on the port beam. The arrester wire machinery had to be re-aligned to lie athwart the angled deck. Once the new structure was installed, it provided useful volume for mess decks and machinery.

Watch- Why Queen Elizabeth Carriers Have Twin Islands?

So, what are your views about the angled runways on Aircraft carriers?

 

TMP Staff

At TMP Staff, our devoted team of seasoned journalists and maritime enthusiasts tirelessly navigates through the vast ocean of maritime news to bring you the latest and most pertinent updates from the seas. With an unyielding dedication to precision, depth, and timeliness, we are committed to keeping you well-informed about the dynamic maritime world. Our mission is to deliver a comprehensive understanding of maritime affairs, from shipping trends to oceanic conservation. Join us on a voyage across the waves as we uncover and share the stories that shape our global maritime community.

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