compressioncut |
10-02-05 10:52 AM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by SquidB
And it only comes in red?
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Canadian West Coast navy ships are painted a nice bright blue under the waterline. It really depends what paint the contractor wants to use during the refit. It used to be a lead-oxide paint, and it was red color due to the ingredients, but since that stuff is highly toxic, it's not used anymore. It seems the new, environmentally safe paints can be any sort of color.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Smaragdadler
What about modern anechoic rubber hulls? Sealife gets no hold, or have they to clean it regulary or must the sub get 'a new skin' from time to time...? Maybe this rubber already functions as a 'fouling'-protection... should not 'taste' too well... :hmm:
Who not asks, stays stupid. :)
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After HMCS Victoria, a sub covered pretty much 100% in tiles, transited over here from Halifax, she was covered in sea life of all sorts. When they put her in the base graving dock, the horrible smell of rotting organisms and plant life made it all the way to the main gate and maybe beyond. Dockyard mateys spent a couple of weeks with pressure washers hosing it off. They didn't replace all of the tiles.
I think, too, in the pictures of the USS San Francisco in drydock after her collision show a lot of crap covering her hull.
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