HMS Victorious on Wikipedia
There's been a lot of talk over the years about how different Enterprise was after the refit, and that it was strange how she was going to be decommissioned not that long after such an extensive refit.
Well, there's a historical precedent:
There's been a lot of talk over the years about how different Enterprise was after the refit, and that it was strange how she was going to be decommissioned not that long after such an extensive refit.
Well, there's a historical precedent:
After the war, her service was broken by periods in reserve and, between 1950-8, the most complete reconstruction of any Royal Navy carrier. This involved the construction of new superstructure above the hangar deck level, a new angled flight deck,[1][page needed] new boilers and the fitting of Type 984 3D AW and AD radar and data links and heavy shipboard computers, able to track 50 targets and assess their priority for interrogation and interception. The reduction of Britain's naval commitment in 1967, the end of the Indonesia–Malaysia confrontation, and a fire while under refit, prompted her final withdrawal from service, 3–5 years early, and she was scrapped in 1969.
Victorious ended up being so heavily rebuilt that when she relaunched after the refit, she was essentially a new ship, and despite still being called an Illustrious-class ship, had she been originally built this way she surely would have been the lead ship in her own class.