Gah, I've been way to busy and the sticky note to comment on this thread fell off. Oops.
She's commissioned in 1965, so she's a contemporary of the Kittyhawks and CVA-01. It's also probably the first class of ships built from the keep up with an angled deck right?
Here is a graphic that should help show get you a feel for different layouts:
Figure 1: Deck Layouts fof CVA-01, CVV, and USS Midway As she appeared after he last refit.
You are looking at an airwing of around 60 planes on a displacement of around 55-60k tons. You're big enough at this point that continuous flight ops (IE simultaneous or near simultaneous launch and recovery is going to be a strong goal. To that end, you've got your cats and wires in the right place. You will also want to have a good traffic flow, and I would put the island between the elevators and use the aft elevator to strike aircraft down below deck and bring them up on the forward elevator.
You'll note the deck space outboard the Island on CVA-01, that is because the Brits used the forward elevator to strike down planes, and then brought them up the aft elevator, and then around on the space outboard of the island (called the 'Alaskan Highway'). This allowed the Brits to make a shorter, wider carrier at the expense of deck park for large strike groups (although that happens with anything in this size it is my understanding that CVA-01 was designed for the continuous ops tempo, not the alpha-strike tempo of the US carriers of the time).
For the engine she's probably running a steam plant (gas turbines were still new and lord knows you don't want to experiment like that on a major fleet asset). How big the stacks are depends on how fast she is supposed to go. You'll note that the stacks on CVV and CVA-01 are much smaller than those on CV-41, partly because they have half of the engine power of the Midways and a bit over a third of the power of one of the larger carriers (Forestals on up). This reduction of engine power means that the ships can't go much above 30 knots while the larger ships can make 33+. Adding additional boilers to the ship between the 100k and 200k shp ranges wouldn't add a lot of speed to the ship, but it might make steaming at nearly full speed and conducting flight ops much easier. Such a decision would come down to fleet doctrine. The exception is CVA-66, which had a smaller stack, but CVA-66 was unique in a lot of ways.
As for the armament, I'd think that by 1960 (when the design is being finalized) the ship is probably down to 4 gun turrets - probably one on each end of each sponson. I'd also see them being removed for generating too much spray by 1975. I do know that the French shipped 8 100mm mounts on Foch and Le Clem in the mid 60s. It's always possible that the BuShips/Admiralty analog gets the design off and the ships are more wet than expected
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Were I doing this, I'd have the 4 twin turrets and place 4 Sea Cat Launchers in such a way that you've got at least one that can fire forward and one that can fire aft (without the guns getting in the way).
As for the radars on the Island, At this era you are going to see:
- A Long Range 2D air Search Set
- A Height-Finder set, possibly replaced with a longer ranged 3D set.
- Air Traffic Control Radars (several different types - in US designations these are the AN/SPN radars)
- Lots of Communications gear for talking to the planes
- At least a pair of fire control units for the guns.
Were I doing this, I'd trunk the funnel up the island and also then angle it outboard as was seen on CVA-67.
I'll try and ponder this some more this evening and get back to you in the morning.