Structural cracks will keep the Navy ship in Pearl Harbor shipyard until FebruaryPort Royal returns for $20M in repairsBy William Cole
POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Dec 25, 2010
The Navy cruiser USS Port Royal is back in Pearl Harbor shipyard for more than $20 million in repairs — on top of the $40 million spent to fix damage from a 2009 grounding and an $18 million refurbishment immediately before the warship ran aground.
The latest yard period, which began in September and is expected to end in late February, is to address cracks discovered in the aluminum alloy superstructures on all 22 of the Navy's Ticonderoga-class cruisers, officials said. The ships were commissioned between 1986 and 1994.The Naval Sea Systems Command in Washington, D.C., said cruiser hulls are made of steel and that superstructures — everything above the main deck — were fabricated using lighter-weight aluminum alloy 5456, a material that has been used by the Navy on deckhouses since 1958.
The superstructures of all the cruisers in the fleet are prone to "sensitization," which contributes to stress-corrosion cracking and worsens with age and heat, said Chris Johnson, a NAVSEA spokesman.
"At this point, all ships in the class are experiencing cracking issues that are related to sensitization," Johnson said in e-mailed answers to Star-Advertiser questions. "There have been various degrees of crack repair on every (cruiser) in the past year."