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Old 01-30-08, 01:33 PM   #1
Fish
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Ships cemetery.

69°13'25.31"N 33°20'46.46"O
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Old 01-30-08, 01:43 PM   #2
sonar732
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Fish
Ships cemetery.

69°13'25.31"N 33°20'46.46"O
Too bad the images aren't clear enough for a positive identification.
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Old 01-30-08, 01:54 PM   #3
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You want to see a ship's graveyard, just punch in "Navy Yard City" or "Bremerton" - the USS Long Beach hulk is still moored there and visible in Google Earth (not to mention 11 or so nuke subs waiting to be scrapped).

P.S. also "Mulberry Point, James River" will show the James river ghost fleet all rafted up in several lots.
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Old 01-30-08, 02:03 PM   #4
sonar732
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Quote:
Originally Posted by seafarer
You want to see a ship's graveyard, just punch in "Navy Yard City" or "Bremerton" - the USS Long Beach hulk is still moored there and visible in Google Earth (not to mention 11 or so nuke subs waiting to be scrapped).

P.S. also "Mulberry Point, James River" will show the James river ghost fleet all rafted up in several lots.
I like the one to the North East of San Fran.
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Old 01-30-08, 02:09 PM   #5
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I was on a couple of boomers, east and west coast.

I figured this would be a popular topic and now I have some more sites to look tonight when I get home. Thanks and keep them coming!

It just amazes me that there are so many ships just left to rot when that steel and material could be used for many other things, not to mention clear up some obvious eyesores
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Old 01-30-08, 02:15 PM   #6
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Has anyone else been on the WWII submarine located next to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland? I have tons of pictures of it.
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Old 01-30-08, 02:29 PM   #7
sonar732
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Urspankd
I was on a couple of boomers, east and west coast.
What was your rate, time served, and boats? Might've crossed paths in Bangor.
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Old 01-30-08, 02:44 PM   #8
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Quote:
Originally Posted by sonar732
Quote:
Originally Posted by Urspankd
I was on a couple of boomers, east and west coast.
What was your rate, time served, and boats? Might've crossed paths in Bangor.
(MT) Missile Tech, 1998-2007, USS Florida SSBN/SSGN 728, USS West Virginia,
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Old 01-30-08, 04:31 PM   #9
sonar732
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Urspankd
Quote:
Originally Posted by sonar732
Quote:
Originally Posted by Urspankd
I was on a couple of boomers, east and west coast.
What was your rate, time served, and boats? Might've crossed paths in Bangor.
(MT) Missile Tech, 1998-2007, USS Florida SSBN/SSGN 728, USS West Virginia,
Ok...after my time. Congrats on getting out and becoming a civi at the yard!
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Old 01-31-08, 12:08 AM   #10
geetrue
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Urspankd
Quote:
Originally Posted by sonar732
Quote:
Originally Posted by Urspankd
I was on a couple of boomers, east and west coast.
What was your rate, time served, and boats? Might've crossed paths in Bangor.
(MT) Missile Tech, 1998-2007, USS Florida SSBN/SSGN 728, USS West Virginia,
STS 2 (SS) USS Salmon SS-573, USS Ethan Allen SSBN 608 (B), USS Sam Houston SSBN 609 (B) 1963-71

Welcome aboard mate ...

Did you see one of those grave yard boats use to be a SSBN with the missle deck cut out up in Bangor?

I think that was mine ... they sunk the Salmon though off of Long Island ... good-by best boat and crew I've ever known.
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Old 01-30-08, 02:30 PM   #11
seafarer
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Urspankd
I was on a couple of boomers, east and west coast.

I figured this would be a popular topic and now I have some more sites to look tonight when I get home. Thanks and keep them coming!

It just amazes me that there are so many ships just left to rot when that steel and material could be used for many other things, not to mention clear up some obvious eyesores
It all depends on supply and demand. There is a glut of recycled steel in the world, and a limited number of breaker yards. Plus, scrapping ships can be very expensive. Most of the main countries that do it these days manage to make a profit by simply ignoring the environmental effects (pictures of the waters and shoreline around some yards Bangladesh are just horrid). In the Persian gulf, excess super tankers are rafted up - it was cheap to make them so they got churned out, but it's very expensive to break them up, so unless the profit for the recycled material is very large, it's cheaper to let them rot somewhere.

Of course, a lot of naval ships in the US are kept for parts. That's mainly why ships like the USS Constellation are still floating at Bremerton - her parts are helping to keep the USS Kitty Hawk running. The James R. Ghost fleet is a big political issue here in Virginia. Many of the ships are in really bad shape, leaking and falling apart. But the cost of scrapping them is high, even just towing them to a foreign country for scrapping is expensive (and some now are deemed to be unfit for such a voyage without a lot of work beforehand). It's turning into a nice political mess.
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My Father's ship, HMCS Waskesiu (K330),
sank U257 on 02/24/1944

running SHIII-1.4 with GWX2.1 and SHIV-1.5 with TMO/RSRDC/PE3.3 under MS Vista Home Premium 32-bit SP1
ACER AMD Athlon 64x2 4800+, 4GB DDR2 RAM, 400GB SATA HD
Antec TruePower Trio 650watt PSU
BFG GeForce 8800GT/OC 512MB VRAM, Samsung 216BW widescreen (1680x1050) LCD
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Old 01-30-08, 02:39 PM   #12
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if someone could get 20-30 people, we can actually "borrow" a battleship or a cruiser.. how hard is it to get these ships seaworthy :hmm::hmm:??
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Old 01-30-08, 02:42 PM   #13
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Quote:
Originally Posted by elite_hunter_sh3
if someone could get 20-30 people, we can actually "borrow" a battleship or a cruiser.. how hard is it to get these ships seaworthy :hmm::hmm:??
would be quite the journey, but somehow seems like a real political mess as stated above
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Old 01-30-08, 02:41 PM   #14
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This site has pictures of the breaking yards at Chittagong, Bangladesh (you can see ships on the beach in Google Earth, but it's poor quality). Fairly wretched looking place, IMO, but it's one of the largest ship breaking yards in the world. Cheap labour makes it profitable, and virtually zero environmental laws.
__________________
My Father's ship, HMCS Waskesiu (K330),
sank U257 on 02/24/1944

running SHIII-1.4 with GWX2.1 and SHIV-1.5 with TMO/RSRDC/PE3.3 under MS Vista Home Premium 32-bit SP1
ACER AMD Athlon 64x2 4800+, 4GB DDR2 RAM, 400GB SATA HD
Antec TruePower Trio 650watt PSU
BFG GeForce 8800GT/OC 512MB VRAM, Samsung 216BW widescreen (1680x1050) LCD
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Old 01-30-08, 02:17 PM   #15
Urspankd
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Quote:
Originally Posted by seafarer
You want to see a ship's graveyard, just punch in "Navy Yard City" or "Bremerton" - the USS Long Beach hulk is still moored there and visible in Google Earth (not to mention 11 or so nuke subs waiting to be scrapped).
No need to look at google earth for this one. I see them everyday!
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