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SUBSIM: The Web's #1 resource for all submarine & naval simulations since 1997 |
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Ocean Warrior
![]() Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Miami, FL
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I'm determined to join the Navy, despite my last two attempts to do so(didn't join out of stupidity, not because they wouldn't take me), I've realized it's my best option for getting somewhere in life. I'm still determined to become a Nuke(and I only have 2 years before I'm disqualified
![]() Anyways, my questions: 1. From my understanding, submarines go out for 6 months and then come back for 6 months. Is this true? 2. Does the submarine stay in dock for these 6 months, or do they just rotate the crew? 3. What is Navy life like back at base? Particularly when it comes to E4's and up? Is it like any other job with shifts and day's off? Or is it like your time on the submarine? 4. Do you and your family have to live on base and Navy housing complexes, or is it your choice? IE. can you buy an actual house and live there if you want to? 5. I've heard that there is online college courses you can take while on ships, is this true? Bonus Questions: 6. How long do other ships spend out at sea? And do they rotate the crews off of them? More exactly, how do they handle the crew of carriers? But I am interested in knowing about Destroyers, Cruisers, etc. 7. I've heard that captain's of aircraft carriers are only ex-pilots. Is this true? What command would a nuclear officer get, if any?
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#2 | |
Cold War Boomer
![]() Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Walla Walla
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2. SSBN and for the moment SSGN submarines have two crews blue and gold these crews alternate on 90 day cycles keeping the submarine at sea for most of that time except for a five/six day turn around. 3. The first 30 days were free to do whatever you wanted to do after morning quarters around 8:15am or so. You can go to the commisary or the exchange or visit people on base or even go home. Just don't go to a bar in the day time getting drunk and being forced to return to base and blow the whole time off thingy for everyone else ... lol 4. Yes you can buy a house, but who can afford the payments? Navy housing charges the same extra pay you get for being married for Navy housing, which is not very much to pay ( couple of hundred dollars) compared to off base housing, especially in Hawaii. However you do need to be married (man/woman thingy right now) and the best houses go to the families with the most children. 5. Yes, lots of online courses available that resemble your rating for one, but submarines have a little conection problem with the outside world. They code everything in Washington and send it late at night and then it has to be decoded to be a drill or surprise surprise they even send family grams telling you a baby has been born in the same coded message we just recieved to go to war. Question six and seven can be answered by surface craft types of people of which I was not one ... well there was that one time early in my young seaman life that I was a radarman on a heavy crusier. Added advice: If your wise you will study and ask for extra schools even get another job in the same field you want to be in when you retire in six or twenty years. Save your money in the 10% overseas savings plan and don't touch it till you need a down payment on a house (not a corvette)
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#3 | ||||||||
Ace of the Deep
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Disclaimer: The following is "to the best of my knowledge". I left my last boat in 1991. Things change.
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Fast attacks - no rotating crews. No set schedules for most boats. Deployments can last 3 - 9 months depending where you are going. All boats can be tasked with fleet training exercises, not to mention training and certification cruises, various other tasking lasting from days to weeks. Quote:
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Once you are no longer a useless, air breather that is. (i.e. have your dolphins) Get qualified nub. ![]() Quote:
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In the month of July of the year 1348, between the feasts of St. Benedict and of St. Swithin, a strange thing came upon England... My U297 build thread |
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#4 | |||
Ocean Warrior
![]() Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Miami, FL
Posts: 3,052
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Thank you for the answers.
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Back in 09, they put Nuclear and Submarine in my contract. I've heard that most people don't want to volunteer for subs. Edit2: As I'm not actually married yet, when would be the best time to actually get married, before I sign my contract, or after?
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Last edited by Spike88; 01-10-12 at 01:11 PM. |
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#5 |
Silent Hunter
![]() Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Along the Watchtower
Posts: 3,810
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From my time reading blogs such as Information Dissemination, USNI, Neptunus Lex, and CDR Salamander (for example), it does seem like the people most likely to be promoted to Rear Admiral to command a CSG are usually aviators. There is a lot of criticism that not enough people from subs and 'phibs are selected for flag rank, and that is leading to a lack of diversity of thought in naval strategy. Perhaps the criticism is a sign this could be changing.
The navy posts bios of its COs and admirals. You might want to browse them and see what paths got them where they are today.
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