Didact
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Why do we need a nuclear carrier?
> Longer operational endurance.
> Power projection.
At the outset, it appears obvious that CVNs will have longer endurance than a CV. Reality, however, is not so straight forward. Sure the carrier can hold station indefinitely, however as far as combat effectiveness is concerned, it is another story. There are a lot of other variables at play in determining this.
According to an April 1988 Congressional Budget Office study, a typical carrier battle group, exclusive of its logistics ships, has enough supplies for only about five days of combat before it needs resupply. With its logistics ships, a carrier can only operate for about 15 days before requiring outside replenishment. A modern Nimitz class nuclear carrier can only carry sufficient aviation fuel for about two weeks of flight operations (9,000 tons aviation fuel),while a conventional carrier can store about 65 percent of this, corresponding to about 10 days of flight operations.
And for sustained endurance at a theatre of operations:
Also a little trivia: The actual record for the longest sustained deployment after WW2 goes to the USS Coral Sea (CV-43). During the Vietnam War the USS Coral Sea (CV-43) set a record of 331 days away from home from 7 December 1964 until 1 November 1965.
These figures show that if need arises, a CV can stay as long as it needs to, provided it can be replenished by support vessels. The CVNs, as shown above, have similar need of replenishment ships from supply ships.
These are a part of my own research into GAO documents for carrier operations, USN. I don't like the idea of posting links to my own research.