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Old 05-25-07, 07:30 AM   #1
pocatellodave
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Default I find it hard to believe!

The depths of the different seas and oceans.I was given the mission to insert agent into Singapore,and by the time I offloaded the raft,I had nearly surfaced the boat several times for lack of water under keel.Pesky airplane kept coming back,so it was a nerve racking task.I learned early on,in shallow water,simply don't try nothing fancy!I could only imagine the sphincters tightning when the skipper said"Gents are patrol area is the sea of Japan!!"I'm thinking you could probably see subs from the air quite easily,even when they were submerged at them shallow depths.
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Old 05-25-07, 07:43 AM   #2
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Did you attempt to go in at night time to avoid the aircraft? That is what I do. If have to submerge until dark then I do. Head in, drop the goods and head out.

I'm sure the crews got uptight at the thought of the Sea of Japan but I tell you what, the new Skippers (Morton, O'Kane later on) were super aggressive and truly wanted to bring the fight to the enemy. These two did and did it very well. Usually their aggressiveness and confidence trickled down to the crew. Specifically Morton and the USS Wahoo. At one point, the Japanese thought they had a wolfpack in that certain part of the world.....it was just Wahoo doing her thing.....gun action and torpedo sinkings.
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Old 05-25-07, 08:29 AM   #3
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[quote=AVGWarhawk]Did you attempt to go in at night time to avoid the aircraft? That is what I do. If have to submerge until dark then I do. Head in, drop the goods and head out.

I agree - night time is the best for agent insertion, unless of course if he's wearing bermuda shorts carrying a crate of beer and a new fangled wireless then drop him off in daylight, which come to think it from what I here this is all AVG's crew seem to do - party hard:rotfl:.By the way, did he ever get his onboard ice cream machine fixed:hmm:
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Old 05-25-07, 08:37 AM   #4
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[quote=Kant Schwimm]
Quote:
Originally Posted by AVGWarhawk
Did you attempt to go in at night time to avoid the aircraft? That is what I do. If have to submerge until dark then I do. Head in, drop the goods and head out.

I agree - night time is the best for agent insertion, unless of course if he's wearing bermuda shorts carrying a crate of beer and a new fangled wireless then drop him off in daylight, which come to think it from what I here this is all AVG's crew seem to do - party hard:rotfl:.By the way, did he ever get his onboard ice cream machine fixed:hmm:
Ice cream maker is working and we installed the Kegmeister! Cold beer on tap 24/7....burp
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Old 05-25-07, 08:59 AM   #5
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[quote=AVGWarhawk]
Quote:
Originally Posted by Kant Schwimm
Quote:
Originally Posted by AVGWarhawk
Did you attempt to go in at night time to avoid the aircraft? That is what I do. If have to submerge until dark then I do. Head in, drop the goods and head out.

I agree - night time is the best for agent insertion, unless of course if he's wearing bermuda shorts carrying a crate of beer and a new fangled wireless then drop him off in daylight, which come to think it from what I here this is all AVG's crew seem to do - party hard:rotfl:.By the way, did he ever get his onboard ice cream machine fixed:hmm:
Ice cream maker is working and we installed the Kegmeister! Cold beer on tap 24/7....burp


Capt AVG

Whilst we have to admit that your crew has the highest morale and is always eager to get back on patrol, here at Fleet HQ we cant help but wonder that if maybe you stocked up with torpedo's instead of beer you may just help the war effort.

Fleet Admiral Ernest J. King
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Old 05-25-07, 09:12 AM   #6
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[quote=Kant Schwimm]
Quote:
Originally Posted by AVGWarhawk
Quote:
Originally Posted by Kant Schwimm
Quote:
Originally Posted by AVGWarhawk
Did you attempt to go in at night time to avoid the aircraft? That is what I do. If have to submerge until dark then I do. Head in, drop the goods and head out.

I agree - night time is the best for agent insertion, unless of course if he's wearing bermuda shorts carrying a crate of beer and a new fangled wireless then drop him off in daylight, which come to think it from what I here this is all AVG's crew seem to do - party hard:rotfl:.By the way, did he ever get his onboard ice cream machine fixed:hmm:
Ice cream maker is working and we installed the Kegmeister! Cold beer on tap 24/7....burp
Capt AVG

Whilst we have to admit that your crew has the highest morale and is always eager to get back on patrol, here at Fleet HQ we cant help but wonder that if maybe you stocked up with torpedo's instead of beer you may just help the war effort.

Fleet Admiral Ernest J. King

We are helping....we are keeping the beer away from the other fighting men so they stay sober and fight!
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Old 05-25-07, 09:49 AM   #7
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Quote:
Originally Posted by AVGWarhawk
Did you attempt to go in at night time to avoid the aircraft? That is what I do. If have to submerge until dark then I do. Head in, drop the goods and head out.

I'm sure the crews got uptight at the thought of the Sea of Japan but I tell you what, the new Skippers (Morton, O'Kane later on) were super aggressive and truly wanted to bring the fight to the enemy. These two did and did it very well. Usually their aggressiveness and confidence trickled down to the crew. Specifically Morton and the USS Wahoo. At one point, the Japanese thought they had a wolfpack in that certain part of the world.....it was just Wahoo doing her thing.....gun action and torpedo sinkings.
O'Kane actually put Tangs bow aground while going after a freighter on Tangs fourth patrol. Now that's aggressive!
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Old 05-25-07, 11:33 AM   #8
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It's easy to lose sight of the fact that a submarine (and the sim) is supposed to operate on the premise of 'stealth'.

The problem with shallow water is the sub is too visible. No stealth.

Shallow water + darkeness = stealth.

Go in at night.

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Old 05-25-07, 11:41 AM   #9
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Quote:
Originally Posted by daft
Quote:
Originally Posted by AVGWarhawk
Did you attempt to go in at night time to avoid the aircraft? That is what I do. If have to submerge until dark then I do. Head in, drop the goods and head out.

I'm sure the crews got uptight at the thought of the Sea of Japan but I tell you what, the new Skippers (Morton, O'Kane later on) were super aggressive and truly wanted to bring the fight to the enemy. These two did and did it very well. Usually their aggressiveness and confidence trickled down to the crew. Specifically Morton and the USS Wahoo. At one point, the Japanese thought they had a wolfpack in that certain part of the world.....it was just Wahoo doing her thing.....gun action and torpedo sinkings.
O'Kane actually put Tangs bow aground while going after a freighter on Tangs fourth patrol. Now that's aggressive!
I'm currently reading 'Unrestricted Warfare' The book as far in as I read has O'Kane/Morton patrols. These two guys for whatever forces were put together and became sinking machines. Sometimes Mortons ideas to bring the fight to enemy were so outlandish that O'Kane had to talk Morton out of some of the crazy ideas. But, it was aggressive guys like this that took chances and lived by the skin of their teeth that go the job done. I'm guessing it was the youthful aggressivness and big sub that they were instructed to go sink ships. Just think of yourself at that age being told to go blow things up and here is the sub to do it with. You have our blessing! Have fun and come back soon!
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Old 05-25-07, 02:04 PM   #10
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Quote:
Originally Posted by AVGWarhawk
I'm currently reading 'Unrestricted Warfare' The book as far in as I read has O'Kane/Morton patrols. These two guys for whatever forces were put together and became sinking machines. Sometimes Mortons ideas to bring the fight to enemy were so outlandish that O'Kane had to talk Morton out of some of the crazy ideas. But, it was aggressive guys like this that took chances and lived by the skin of their teeth that go the job done. I'm guessing it was the youthful aggressivness and big sub that they were instructed to go sink ships. Just think of yourself at that age being told to go blow things up and here is the sub to do it with. You have our blessing! Have fun and come back soon!
Indeed, I think O'Kane is the most aggressive submarine officer I've ever read about. I seem to remember one of the Wahoo officers (could have been Grider, but I'm not sure) describing him as potentially unstable though. I tried finding what he meant, but other than his sometimes overly aggressive tactics (Morton actually had to temper O'Kane at one time in Wahoo, reminding him that Morton was in charge and that O'Kane could practice whatever tactics he deemed fit once he got his own command), I drew a blank. They were indeed a perfect match though and O'Kane's admiration of Mush really shines through in both his books.
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Old 05-25-07, 02:37 PM   #11
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Quote:
Originally Posted by daft
Quote:
Originally Posted by AVGWarhawk
I'm currently reading 'Unrestricted Warfare' The book as far in as I read has O'Kane/Morton patrols. These two guys for whatever forces were put together and became sinking machines. Sometimes Mortons ideas to bring the fight to enemy were so outlandish that O'Kane had to talk Morton out of some of the crazy ideas. But, it was aggressive guys like this that took chances and lived by the skin of their teeth that go the job done. I'm guessing it was the youthful aggressivness and big sub that they were instructed to go sink ships. Just think of yourself at that age being told to go blow things up and here is the sub to do it with. You have our blessing! Have fun and come back soon!
Indeed, I think O'Kane is the most aggressive submarine officer I've ever read about. I seem to remember one of the Wahoo officers (could have been Grider, but I'm not sure) describing him as potentially unstable though. I tried finding what he meant, but other than his sometimes overly aggressive tactics (Morton actually had to temper O'Kane at one time in Wahoo, reminding him that Morton was in charge and that O'Kane could practice whatever tactics he deemed fit once he got his own command), I drew a blank. They were indeed a perfect match though and O'Kane's admiration of Mush really shines through in both his books.
Out of the bunch I think Morton was a little unstable but it was a good mix that kept them in check. Notice it all went to hell when O'Kane is given Tang. Mortons voice of reason was now gone. Very interesting story between two personalities here.

Personally, I'm a Fyfe/USS Batfish fan. Talk about a cool character with another sub out in the dark, not just one time but three in three nights. He sunk them all, very cool when you matching fire with fire. Definitely one Skipper I would like to meet! That took a large set of kahunas to track three Japanese submarines in total darkness just using the radar that had to be turned off and on repeatedly so the Japanese would not pick up the Batfish. True, thrilling stuff there!!!
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Old 05-25-07, 09:11 AM   #12
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Default Sea of Japan off limits

For a considerable part of the war, subs were forbidden to move into the Sea of Japan. Not sure if that was due to losses or because it was considered too risky. Only at the end stages, when shipping was scarce, did ships frequently visit the Sea of Japan.

And another tip: before you launch your spy into his dingy, ensure you're lying still. The rackett you hear when your sub colides against that rubber dingy....man!



p.s.: same strategy also applies when 'visiting' harbours. Sail into them at night. submerge and lie still in deeper parts until it becomes night again. Airplanes do not fly at night. Destroyers in later years of the war can spot you on radar (yep, their's apparently does work )
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Old 05-25-07, 11:41 AM   #13
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pocatellodave
The depths of the different seas and oceans.I was given the mission to insert agent into Singapore,and by the time I offloaded the raft,I had nearly surfaced the boat several times for lack of water under keel.Pesky airplane kept coming back,so it was a nerve racking task.I learned early on,in shallow water,simply don't try nothing fancy!I could only imagine the sphincters tightning when the skipper said"Gents are patrol area is the sea of Japan!!"I'm thinking you could probably see subs from the air quite easily,even when they were submerged at them shallow depths.
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I had this one the other day. I was doing pretty good, staying submerged during the day, until I ran into a convoy.

Here I am able to only submerge to 75 feet and trying to manouvere through this thing. Got by the lead escort, but one of the flankers just had to go right by me at about 100 yards. One of the crew farted and he was on me like stink on sh!t.

Needless to say, you don't have a lot of time from DC drop until detonation in 100 feet of water. The ol' Gar is still on the bottom, RIP.
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Old 05-25-07, 02:52 PM   #14
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I think what did Morton in at the end wasn't just the lack of O'Kane,but also the lack of some of his other experienced Officers and enlisted men. There was no one left on the boat with the guts to tell him "You can't do that it's too risky".

The one thing I always liked about Morton was that he listened to his Chiefs and his Elisted men as well as his Officers.

I think Morton and O'Kane were the perfect compliment to each other. They drove each other to excel,but they also kept each other from overly rash actions. Though the Wewak harbor incident was bordeline nuts.
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Old 05-25-07, 02:57 PM   #15
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Quote:
I think Morton and O'Kane were the perfect compliment to each other. They drove each other to excel,but they also kept each other from overly rash actions. Though the Wewak harbor incident was bordeline nuts.
Agree on all points "Sink the Sunza B*tches"....Morton.

Hit'em Harder....I have to read up on this skipper also!
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