swash
04-19-07, 12:00 AM
Hope this is the best place to post this.
I have a coworker that plays SH3 and we talk about subs and stuff.
He asked me a question about the 1957 movie "the Enemy Below" and why the U-boat captain always puts on his gloves before touching the periscope.:hmm:
My first thought was it being cold, I don't recall the movie much at the moment, but he said the crew was sweating so it was obviously hot in the sub.
He thinks it's because of a static shock touching the metal when the scope is in the water, but I disagree because I never see every commander wearing gloves in pictures from WW2.
I also thought maybe it was just a Hollywood thing like an assasin putting on gloves before picking up a rifle, or just because he didn't want to get his hands dirty touching the thing (compulsive disorder).
Thoughts, suggestions, ideas? We looked on the web and found the same suggestions. Hollywood flair, cold handles, assasin mode, static, etc, etc.
Someone mentioned in a movie post that it was because a lot of ship fittings were made of brass and the gloves prevented getting them grimey with use over time.
I used to work in a cutlery shop and I know how hard it can be to get fingerprints off the brass handles and keeping them clean.
I have a coworker that plays SH3 and we talk about subs and stuff.
He asked me a question about the 1957 movie "the Enemy Below" and why the U-boat captain always puts on his gloves before touching the periscope.:hmm:
My first thought was it being cold, I don't recall the movie much at the moment, but he said the crew was sweating so it was obviously hot in the sub.
He thinks it's because of a static shock touching the metal when the scope is in the water, but I disagree because I never see every commander wearing gloves in pictures from WW2.
I also thought maybe it was just a Hollywood thing like an assasin putting on gloves before picking up a rifle, or just because he didn't want to get his hands dirty touching the thing (compulsive disorder).
Thoughts, suggestions, ideas? We looked on the web and found the same suggestions. Hollywood flair, cold handles, assasin mode, static, etc, etc.
Someone mentioned in a movie post that it was because a lot of ship fittings were made of brass and the gloves prevented getting them grimey with use over time.
I used to work in a cutlery shop and I know how hard it can be to get fingerprints off the brass handles and keeping them clean.