USS AVC-1. Unnamed ~ Unpowered ~ Underutilized

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USS AVC-1 Unnamed ~ Unpowered ~ Underutilized In the late 1930s, the US Navy was engaged in the development of flying boats for long range patrol and bombing purposes. However, the amount of fuel and bomb load such amphibian aircraft could carry was limited by the considerable drag experienced during water takeoffs. Calculations indicated that once airborne, such planes could carry more fuel and a much bigger payload than they could manage to lift during a normal takeoff from water. Thus was born the idea of catapulting such aircraft from a floating platform. To facilitate such an evolution using a Martin PPM Mariner amphibian, a large catapult was developed for installation on a barge. This unusual naval unit was classified...and commissioned...as an Auxiliary Vessel - Catapult Lighter (AVC). Once it was built and successfully tested, using a one-of-a-kind modified Mariner that was given the designation XPBM-2 [depicted to the right], the Navy envisioned adding propulsion capability to the AVC design, and positioning a number of the barges at advanced island bases in the Pacific to further expand the aircraft's range and bombdelivery capability. In March 1939 the Philadelphia Navy Yard was selected to construct a prototype catapult lighter, which was assigned just a number...avc-1...but no name. It essentially was a 424 foot-long barge that displaced a little over 5,800 tons. The nearby Baldwin Locomotive Works was asked to design a giant hydraulic catapult capable of launching a 60,000 pound flying boat at a speed of 120 MPH.

This catapult, given the classification XH Mark 3, was several times larger than the hydraulic catapults being installed in the US Navy's fleet aircraft carriers at that time. Consequently, it was a huge device, requiring the AVC-1 to be built around it. The following image, and a stern view on the next page shows AVC-1 on her building ways in August 1940, on the day of her no-ceremony launch and before the catapult was installed. She was 72% complete at the time. 2

Once launched, completion of the AVC-1 was delayed as the navy yard awaited delivery of the catapult. That didn't begin until almost a year later, in late July 1941, and further delays in delivery of some of its parts resulted in the barge not being completed until early May 1942. Oddly, the incomplete barge was commissioned as USS AVC-1 several months earlier, and one officer and forty enlisted men were assigned as her crew; most likely to assist in catapult installation and preliminary testing. 3

The vessel was then towed into the Delaware River and moored. Dead load testing of the catapult using weights of up to 60,000 pounds were then successfully conducted. Available records do not indicate when the modified Martin Mariner was first catapulted from the barge, but that event likely took place in late May 1942. The XPBM-2 's airframe had been reinforced to survive the stress of repeated catapult launches. Overloaded, its fuel capacity had been increased from 2,700 gallons to 4,815 gallons, giving it a range of 4,000 miles. It is not known how much...if any...its bomb load was increased. The following image is the only known picture of the XPBM-2 being successfully catapulted into the air from the AVC-1. It is dated June 2, 1942. It is also unknown how many catapult launch tests using the modified Martin Mariner were made. What is known is that by mid-1942 the US Navy's priorities had shifted radically from using long range flying boats for bombing to the development and mass production of fast attack aircraft carriers whose embarked multi-purpose aircraft were far superior and less vulnerable. Plans to add propulsion and living spaces onboard AVC-1 were soon terminated. Design studies for a still larger catapult, the XH-VII, were also shelved. Intended for use with a larger seaplane, possibly onboard the AVC-1, the XH-VII catapult's design characteristics included the requirement to launch a 120,000 pound aircraft at a speed of 130 MPH. Such a seaplane was never built. 4

This put the AVC-1 in limbo, and she remained tied up, unused at the Philadelphia Navy Yard until early 1944. At that time, contemplating the need to preserve a large number of decommissioned combat vessels at the end of World War II, plans were advanced to test proposed methods of preservation and dehumidification. Officially placed 'in commission in reserve' on March 3, 1945, the AVC-1 was used as test bed for such systems for several months. In August of 1947 she was decommissioned. In November of that same year, her catapult and associated equipment were removed and installed ashore at the Naval Air Material Center, Philadelphia. Although taken out of service in 1947, she languished in the backwaters of the Philadelphia Naval Base along with other discarded naval units until April 1956, when she was sold for scrap. But rather than being scrapped, the AVC-1 lived on for many more years. Apparently sold by the firm who procured her from the Navy, she was towed to Jacksonville, Florida where she became an undocumented pulpwood barge. Designated by a Bahamas logging company as Pulpwood Barge No. 1, the former catapult lighter AVC-1 transported pine logs from the Bahamas to Florida paper mills until 1979. That year, she was sold to a Canadian firm and for the first time was documented as a commercial vessel and given an actual name: JEAN- RAYMOND. The JEAN-RAYMOND (ex- AVC-1) plied the waters of the Great Lakes for decades before being discarded by her last owner in 2011, and presumably has now been scrapped. The image on the right shows the rusty, but still sturdy barge in a floating dry dock in 2001. 5

~ Postscript ~ To help put this unheralded bit of naval aviation history in perspective, consider the following comparison between the XH-Mark 3 catapult installed onboard AVC-1 and the Type H Mark 8 pneumatic hydraulic catapults installed in ESSEX- Class aircraft carriers during World War II: CATAPULT TYPE: XH Mark 3 (AVC-1) Type H Mark 8 (ESSEX) Maximum aircraft speed 120 MPH 105 mph at launch Maximum aircraft weight 60,000 pounds 15,500 pounds at launch Length of Catapult 350 feet (estimated) 150 feet Since the 1940s, aircraft carrier catapult launch systems have been greatly improved, making them more capable and reliable. Hydraulic cats began to be phased out in the 1950s, and for several decades steam catapults were the staple of the US Navy. Today, they await replacement when proof-testing at sea of the 21st century design called the Electro Magnetic Aircraft Launch System (EMALS) is completed. The first catapult launch in US Navy history from a ship underway took place in 1915 from the stern of the coal-fired USS NORTH CAROLINA (ACR-12); built by Newport News Shipbuilding as Hull #57 and delivered in 1908. Now, a century later, history will soon somewhat repeat itself when the first aircraft to be launched at sea using the EMALS will do so from the flight deck of the nuclear-powered GERALD R. FORD (CVN-78)...the latest in a long line of NNS-built aircraft carriers. Bill Lee April 2016 6