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SUBSIM: The Web's #1 resource for all submarine & naval simulations since 1997 |
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#16 |
Ocean Warrior
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El W; I'll try to keep this as basic as I can for now, if you want to talk submarines- we can do that. But not now.
![]() Figure out what you want to do and what you want to be. Keep your mind open, you don't even have to join the military at this point. ![]() Next, figure out your goals. Where do you want to wind up when it gets close to your retirement? Keep a little wiggle room in your plans but definitely start to think about long-term goals. You want to be a what? Why do you want that? What other options are out there? If you are sold on that military career, do you want to be an officer or enlisted? Both have their plusses and minuses. Both are separated by a "glass wall", you can't really be both (there's the concept of a Warrant Officer, but this career path tends to be very tricky to navigate) but both can be rewarding in their own way. Also, keep in mind that at its core, a job in the military is a Federal job. Some of this can be a headache, they tell you exactly what is expected and what isn't tolerated and there's very little room to innovate or experiment. |
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#17 |
Navy Seal
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Not quite sure about that abscessed-tooth-as-a-liability theory; whenever I've had toothaches, I've been in moods to take out the pain anyone around me and, if given a bayonet, God help the guy on the other end when my tooth is aching...
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#18 | ||
Gefallen Engel U-666
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"Only two things are infinite; The Universe and human squirrelyness?!! Last edited by Aktungbby; 04-07-21 at 11:34 PM. |
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#19 | |
Helmsman
![]() Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Pennsylvania-Endless Moutains
Posts: 106
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>>>>> LOL Somehow you got me mixed up with someone else..lol No Harm ![]() Im NOT a former Reactor Operator...lol I was a Torpedoman 1985-2005 USS BOSTON SSN 703 USS SUNFISH SSN 649 USS PASADENA SSN 752 Diving Officer Qualified on all 3 Contact Coordinator on 649 & 752 Punched holes in Every major ocean. As a Torpedoman We were a test platform on Boston, launching over 700 torpedos. Hard life, damn well worth it. ❤️
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A Submarine Simulation should "simulate" Historical Reality as best as possible! No Excuse, because whatsoever your trying to simulate, is documented..somewhere! |
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#20 | |
Fastest Gun Around
Join Date: Aug 2019
Location: Agua Fira, New Mexico
Posts: 2,368
Downloads: 528
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Am I seeing a recurring theme here?
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There are no secrets to success. It is the result of preparation, hard work, and learning from failure. — Colin Powell I'm not very active on the forums anymore. If you have a question, please DM me and I'll respond ASAP! |
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#21 |
GLOBAL MODDING TERRORIST
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Follow your dreams. I did.
I became a ParaTrooper in the 82nd AirbBorne. Kind of strange for a high level modder of subsims right? ![]() |
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#22 |
Grey Wolf
![]() Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 979
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I highly advise going the officer route via the quickest parh, given the chance.
If you are going as strictly a WEPS, I'm thinking nowadays you'll have to do it by enlisting into a source rate, make chief (well, board-eligible E-6) and get the nod to be commissioned as a 626x Ordnance (Submarine) LDO on an SSBN. This'll take probably 7+ years to even get your foot in the door. If you intend to serve on a fast attack, unless you want to be a 'chop, I think now it has to generally be as an unrestricted line officer - and every submarine ULO goes to nuclear power school. Are ya good at calculus and physics? Can you draw a single line diagram of piping or circuitry and identify the functions of all the components? Are ya good at cramming info into your head at a rapid pace? Can you handle 20-25 hrs of study outside of 8 hrs of class Monday-Friday? Get through power school and prototype and then its off to SOBC. Only then do you get your first assignment as a DivO. You'll then spend your first assignment qualifying all your watchstations culminating in OOD and getting your gold fish. The most important part of this education is learning from the chief or LPO who is the guy who is really running your division while protecting you from yourself... After your first sea duty, you'll alternate sea and shore duty - going to advanced schools, serving as a Dept Head, the obligatory joint and staff assignments until you get assigned as a PCO. Pass, and you'll get your own boat. A college buddy of mine was an enlisted nuke electrician's mate. Went to captain's mast and reduced from E-4 to E-3 while still in the training pipeline. Got through training and assigned to various boats, eventually making chief before being picked up for Nuclear Enlisted Commissioning Program. He's now the CO of a west coast SSN. His second sea duty assignment after commissioning (and going through nuke school all over again as an officer) was as the WEPS on an SSN. If you *really* want to serve as a submarine officer, just go to college first - USNA, ROTC, OCS - doesn't matter. It's *far* easier to go that route than competing for a much smaller number of officer program slots as an enlisted. In fact, the NUPOC program will *pay you* as an E-6 or E-7 while you are going to college. They only downside is if you don't make it through and commission, they send you to boot camp for assignment as a non-designated E-3... |
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#23 | |
Ocean Warrior
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OK, I think you may have some mis-conceptions. If your unit has "career days", be a pain and try to get a submarine officer to attend. ![]() Buy them lunch, do what you have to in order to get a one-to-one sit-down meeting. I'm not 100% certain (I left the Navy in 1993), but being an officer on a US sub means that you graduated from "Nuc School" (aka Prototype). Getting to Nuc school as an officer can be tricky. Off the top of my head, you'll want to have good grades and at least a BS in Mechanical Engineering with a heavy concentration in Physics and Thermodynamics. This is the tricky part, the Navy prefers to train their Nucs their own way. You don't have to have a BS/ME but you DO need an outstanding GPA. Understand that I'm not talking about "party on Thursday-to-Sunday" college. This is a very narrow pathway that looks a lot like a wire over a canyon. ![]() Aside from being the Permanent Supply Officer, this is the only path I know of to getting gold Dolphins. Most of the junior (NUC trained) officers I knew didn't even want a shot at being the Captain, they wanted to be the ENG more than anything. There's some twisted logic behind this and it takes a long time to understand it. ![]() Just a quick disclaimer. I enlisted about six months after I earned a BS/EE and AS/EET degrees. I enlisted mostly because the civilian industry went into a severe downturn and I needed to get the experience for when things got better. I had asked about OCS when I enlisted and my recruiter said it was better (in his view) if I went enlisted first and let a CO nominate me for OCS. This turned out to be really good advice, by the time the skipper of my first boat asked me if I wanted to go, I already knew that I didn't and I was lucky there was another guy in the crew who wanted it more. It still took a lot of diplomacy to turn down "the old man" without having him go ballistic. ![]() Service Academy vs ROTC/NROTC- The Service Academies don't train future lieutenants, they train future Admirals and Generals. ![]() You should also understand the difference between Line Officer and Staff Officer. To you, it could make a lot of difference. To the Navy, it makes NO difference and they will assign you where they need you to be. This is known as "needs of the government" and its a double-edged blade. You can use it to your benefit but it can just as easily knock your legs out from under you. Just to cut it short for now, there are other folks on this forum who have old uniforms and poopie suits hanging in their closet. You want their opinions as well. ![]() |
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#24 | |
Ocean Warrior
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![]() If your CO asks you, "Where would like to go in the military?". Think about this first but say "It doesn't matter. They could send me to Korea and I hate Mongolian Beef, Kimchi, and Garlic. Where ever I'm needed is what's important." ![]() There's always going to be an element of sacrifice to military service. A lot of things can happen that are outside your influence. That was why I suggested that you keep an open mind for a while. ![]() |
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#25 | |
Grey Wolf
![]() Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 979
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Never put down your first duty choice as your first choice or it'll be guaranteed you won't get it 😂 |
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#26 |
Ocean Warrior
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I thought Rule#1 was "Don't be a ****".
![]() I grew up in northern Maine and I knew a guy in High School who joined the Air Force and put down "Loring AFB" as his first choice, which was where he wound up. Talk about "seeing the world". ![]() His folks could drive up for a visit every Friday afternoon and make it back home in time for dinner. ![]() Last edited by ET2SN; 04-22-21 at 04:12 PM. |
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#27 | |||
Fastest Gun Around
Join Date: Aug 2019
Location: Agua Fira, New Mexico
Posts: 2,368
Downloads: 528
Uploads: 5
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Thanks for explaining it though. I guess it isn't all that simple as I thought it to be, lol. Quote:
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I will keep my mind open for a while, there is probably something else that I will find some new interest in later.
__________________
There are no secrets to success. It is the result of preparation, hard work, and learning from failure. — Colin Powell I'm not very active on the forums anymore. If you have a question, please DM me and I'll respond ASAP! |
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#28 |
Ocean Warrior
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Well, that's the other side of the coin. Don't sign up for a twenty year career that you're going to hate.
![]() I don't know if its still available, but there was the "Two Years Minimums" enlistment. Two years from bootcamp to transition back to the civilian world. For some folks it made a lot of sense. They did the minimum time to get the post-service bennies. Or some basic job experience. Or some really basic training for free (plus the crappy pay check). If you're really serious, let me repeat this- Knock off the "I, I, I,..." stuff. Think instead of serving your country. You'll still meet people who understand that and will look out for you. Try to make that feeling genuine. ![]() If you want to join just to impress someone in the family or to have something to talk about during Thanksgiving, please reconsider. Those people you want to impress won't be there at 2AM on a crappy duty day when the ship is due to pull out at 9 AM but the generators keep tripping off line. They won't be there when you're stuck on the surface in state 6 seas for the next 12 hours. They won't be there when the galley runs out of everything but canned ravioli, coffee, and stale ice cream cones and you're two weeks away from a dock. If you do it, do it for YOU and do it for your country. ![]() |
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#29 | |
Grey Wolf
![]() Join Date: Sep 2011
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BTW, I think I'd be fine with the raviolis (midrats for the win) since it was hard to screw them up. Try butterscotch pudding for a week - for every meal. And boiling seawater for the salt. And we f'ing ran out of coffee! 2 and 3 brews on the same grounds... How the heck do you run out of coffee and then give the MS's (I think they're now called CS's) awards for maintaining crew morale?!?! Nothing like being somewhere you can't talk about and getting extended on station over and over again... Those 2am midwatches... Lots of heavy topics of discussion when you're bored out of your mind. Or those 4/4/4/8/8 vulcan deathwatch ORSE workups. Or the 3am reactor startup for an 8am underway. Or steaming at anchor in Samoa with enough chop that the oncoming section ( who are hungover from their 18 hrs ashore) are going to be puking into trash bags for the next 6 hrs. |
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#30 | |
Ocean Warrior
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![]() ORSE was one of those things that builds character. My best Navy bud was on a 594 out of San Diego and they dropped their ORSE something like 10 minutes after the team stepped off the brow. It might have been the trim pump hanging from a block and tackle or else it was wet pea green paint that got all over the khakis of the CDR who was inspecting it, but that marked the official start of FOUR WEEKS IN HELL for the crew. No kidding, the Navy didn't take that lightly. The barracks got locked and everyone got confined aboard to get ready for their make-up ORSE. The Navy even added the exclamation point of installing those yellow I beams between the hull and the pier, as if to say, "No, YOU folks are going NOWHERE!!!". I thought ORSE was pretty cool. We nailled ours on the Bremerton after she got paroled out of the shipyard. By that time I was a referee on the DC crew and I wound up in my full fireman's suit and OBA yakking with some of the ORSE Chiefs about practical training stuff and one them asks me to light off my candle and demonstrate how to wear an OBA. "Seriously? Really light it? Are you sure..." "Yep. Do it NOW". So I go thru the drill and light off the candle, check the seals, and set the timer before calling off the light-off time to crew's mess. "Outstanding". "OK, so what do I do with it, now? Its lit and it'll keep pumping out O2 for the next half hour..". I was hoping he'd let me hang out in the bridge until the damned thing cooled off but instead we send one of the nubs to grab a plastic bucket and fill it with fresh water. I drop the hot canister into the bucket and... Those canisters go off like 8 million Alka Seltzers in water. ![]() And, yeah, pre-underway hangovers. ![]() ![]() |
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