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Light aircraft carrier: Difference between revisions

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==Japan Navy==
==Japan Navy==

*[[Osumi class LST]]
*[[Osumi class LST]]
*[[13500t class DDH]] Under construction
*[[13500t class DDH]] Under construction


==South Korea Navy==
==South Korea Navy==

*[[Dokdo class landing platform experimental]]
*[[Dokdo class landing platform experimental]]

==Spanish Navy==

*[[Spanish aircraft carrier Principe de Asturias|Príncipe de Asturias]] One ship
*[[Buque de Proyección Estratégica]] One Ship (his name were be [[Juan Carlos I]])


==Royal Navy==
==Royal Navy==
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* [[HNLMS Karel Doorman II]] - one ship (ex-Colossus-class)
* [[HNLMS Karel Doorman II]] - one ship (ex-Colossus-class)

==Royal Thailand Navy==

* [[HTMS Chakri Nareubet]] - one ship


==United States Navy==
==United States Navy==

Revision as of 22:51, 25 March 2007

A light aircraft carrier is an aircraft carrier that is smaller than the standard carriers of a navy. The precise definition of the type varies by country, typically having a capacity of 1/2 to 2/3 of the aircraft of a full-sized carrier.

In the post War period, the Royal Navy operated a force of Light Aircraft Carriers, all of which were born out of Wartime designs. In World War II, the United States Navy produced a number of light carriers by converting cruiser hulls. The Independence class aircraft carriers, converted from Cleveland-class light cruisers, were unsatisfactory ships for aviation with their narrow, short decks and slender, high-sheer hulls; in virtually all respects the escort carriers were superior aviation vessels. The Independence class ships, however, had the virtue of being available at a time when available carrier decks had been reduced to Enterprise and Saratoga in the Pacific and Ranger in the Atlantic. Late in the war, a follow on design to the Independence class, the Saipan-class light carrier, was designed. Two vessels in this class, USS Saipan (CVL-48) and USS Wright (CVL-49), were completed after the war's end. After very brief lives as carriers, the Saipans were converted to command and communication ships.

Some modern references call the French Charles de Gaulle a "light carrier," though at 40,000 tons and nuclear powered she dwarfs the vast majority of the world's aircraft carriers with the exception of the American supercarriers and the Russian Admiral Kuznetsov. By the standards of U.S. nuclear aircraft carriers, however, the primary example of which is the 100,000 ton Nimitz class, CdG is indeed "light."

Argentine Navy

Brazilian Navy

French Navy

Indian Navy

Japan Navy

South Korea Navy

Spanish Navy

Royal Navy

Royal Australian Navy

Royal Canadian Navy

Royal Netherlands Navy

Royal Thailand Navy

United States Navy