And I do understand the need to completely dismantle the ship to get the reactors out, the Enterprise herself was a test bed for the feasibility of using Nuclear Reactors on a Naval Ship. I'm sure that the subsequent Nimitz and Ford class carriers would have an easier time getting the reactors out.
Actually, the Enterprise wasn't the first nuclear powered ship in the USN, that honor goes to the Nautilus. I don't see how the Nimitz and Ford class carriers could really be more modular, but they do have fewer reactors, so I guess its possible to remove them without messing up the ship as much.
You're both correct. With the success of
Nautilus Navy brass wanted to see what might happen with a nuclear surface ship.
Nautilus paved the way for awesome vessels like (and in no particular order)
Triton,
Seawolf,
Seawolf (yes, there were two nuke powered boats),
Los Angeles,
Pittsburg,
Ohio,
Michigan,
Jimmy Carter,
Parche,
Thresher,
Scorpion,
Virginia,
NR-1 and
Enterprise.
Enterprise paved the way for overly expensive and generally design failure vessels - there were several nuclear cruisers, destroyers and frigates... Not so much any more - and a handful of expensive and moderately successful
targets (sorry - its the submariner in me) vessels.
Enterprise was the 6 Million Dollar Man of carriers, everything else was shorter, slower, weaker, etc.
USS ENTERPRISE - the Navy's eighth ship to bear the name - was the world's first nuclear-powered aircraft carrier. During her more than 50 years of service she has set many records and milestones including steaming with a speed of more than 40 knots during her sea trials after construction. Later, she became the first nuclear carrier to transit the Suez Canal and the first carrier to operate the F-14 fighter aircraft. Additionally, the ENTERPRISE is still the longest warship ever put to sea
Don't get me wrong, I'm all about nuclear powered anything. However, I do agree with them-who-said-it-first: Keep it underwater.