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RL Submariners
I've allways been interested in hearing navy stories and hearing about what it was like living aboard ship, and now that I'm into SH3 and DW, I'd like to hear about life aboard a submarine. If any RL submariners would like to share, I would love to hear about it, specifically things like living conditions, the food, the various gadgets you got to mess around with on(or off) duty, what anemenities you missed most when the novelty of being on a sub wore off, and what kind of adjusments you had to make when your tour of duty was over(like trying to sleep in a room all by yourself, with no alarms going off, etc..:) )
Oh! I especially like hearing about jokes you played on others to overcome the boredom :P |
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http://www.subsim.com/almanac/ TG |
OH MY GOD IT CANT BE !
timmy goo is back wow Ok sorry for the hijack here |
Never really left... been very busy. I need to clear my schedule so i can start re-exploring DW... it's been too long.
TG |
Great news Timmyg00 - 'Leadership position still open !'
Joflo :''Tim I hope that you will continue both to be standard bearer and the standard setter for our game. Your contribution has been and is immense.'' http://www.subclub.info/phpBB_subclu...5535688102516b The MP game badly needs you as a key stone. With Patch 1.04, new LuwAmi mods and this news, DWs future is assured. :|\\ |
SUre, I'll share. I'll tell you the story about the second scariest event I ever had while poking holes in the ocean.
Twas the middle of the year in 82, and I was aboard the USS Jacksonville. Having been on the commisioning crew and just being commisioned the previous year. We were undergoing some type of readiness training which is what a newly commisioned boat or one coming from overhaul will do for almost a year after returning to actual sea duty. Anyway I am a little green behing the ears, although nearly qualified. Still a non-qual puke though and one without much experience in the realism level of at sea drills. Particularly the inspection ones. Subs never announce that a situation is a drill. They want you to experience the real stresses of an emergency. I was aware of this but usually when you are drilling amonst the crew, there is still often some awareness that a certain type of drill may be going off in the next XX hours. When the inspectors are on board it is constant monitoring and little about what might happen next is known among the crew. By the time you are in day 3 or 4 of the trip you are beat, because there is always something going on that requires you to be awake and on station. Often twiddling your thumbs wondering how much longer it may last. Well several days in, I am offwatch and we have been without a shipwide drill long enough I am in a deep slumber. Dreaming about what I might do in various drills of course. My berthing area was on the middle level just forward of the galley, and coincidently the 3 inch signal launcher. Suddenly I awake from my slumber to hear the most godawful loud flow noise I had ever heard in my life, and people yelling over the top of the deafoning noise. I couldn't make out words though. I lept from my top rack head a spining wondering what the hell was amiss. I felt my feet hit cold water as they hit the floor. Still dark I heard at almost that same moment the collision alarm. FLOODING in the LAUNCHER!!! OMFG I am going to friggin DIE! My knees almost buckled, but I kept my composure. Realized immedietly that my normal path to my station would be blocked by the on scene damage control party. I took the alternate path to reach my station and for the almost 2 hours that followed still believed that we had experienced a true flooding incident. Only later would I find that clever use of a high pressure air line and a few buckets of cold water had accomplished the desired goal of determining how we might react when we truly did believe the emergency was real. Never again did I have to wonder in the back of my mind if I could stay focused when faced with a deadly situation. If I hadn't lost my cool in that moment I was going to be just fine. |
Here is a coll video I haven't noticed anyone else posting as well.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3MUBgG6rzO8 |
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TG |
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He was a tricky SOB but you know what? When they ran the TRE or ORSE drills, you could sleepwalk thru them. I still respect that man to this day and would go back in if he asked me to. |
Here's a real life submarine question I've always wondered about...
How many toilets are there on an LA? :p I'm thinking for 115 guys... one bad night for the cook and no matter how many there are its not going to be enough!:o :lol: :doh: |
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Back aft? The official answer is none. :up: |
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I never did this of course (I don't work back there.) |
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