While you've got that hull in for repairs, you might want to call the Doc to get that wart on the nose checked out...
Never had trouble holding depth with sail planes on the Ohios... Well, except for that time we got sucked up from 160ft, and the waves were so tall that the OOD couldn't see the tops of them with the scope looking all the way up. Nav Center said we did 2 knots straight up. 27deg rolls side to side, +-10 pitch while broached.Aesthetically, uglier than sin. But the ship control party loved those things!
Amazingly, we did not lose all the plates. And that was the patrol we all got 16oz insulated plastic mugs, so no coffee cups were in use.... and you finished the patrol eating off paper plates and drinking coffee from plastic cups.
Not fitting that bow ram as a launchable torpedo? }
Ah, good you beat me to that.Now, time to step up the painting game...
Vanguard Submarine Arrives Home Absolutely Caked In Algae
The Royal Navy nuclear ballistic missile boat looked like a sea monster that had emerged from a long slumber at the bottom of the ocean.www.thedrive.com
Is that your new understudy?
One of my Grand-Kids. Thinks he's going to be an 'artist' or some fool thing.Is that your new understudy?
If he's got your work ethic, I think he'll do alright for himself!One of my Grand-Kids. Thinks he's going to be an 'artist' or some fool thing.
What's that side door for?
Torpedo ejection pump inlet doors (we called 'em 'barn doors') One for each side of the nest. Needed to balance the ejection pump piston on the inlet side as it discharged the water slug from the ejection side. The barn door is an artifact of the earlier hydraulic ejection type torpedo tubes. Barn doors, shutter doors, and Main Sea Water inlets were renowned husbandry diver eaters.All these cool pictures making me want to jump in and build a Barbel class even faster...
What's that side door for?
(Problem of being a 2000s submariner, never got to see the cool stuff from when we were still figuring out the optimum arrangements...)
Yeah, I remember seeing the enormous stack of diver's tagouts...Torpedo ejection pump inlet doors (we called 'em 'barn doors') One for each side of the nest. Needed to balance the ejection pump piston on the inlet side as it discharged the water slug from the ejection side. The barn door is an artifact of the earlier hydraulic ejection type torpedo tubes. Barn doors, shutter doors, and Main Sea Water inlets were renowned husbandry diver eaters.