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Mr. Luddite April 20th 14 03:36 AM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
Here's a game for you Harry.

It's a "hi res" Google satellite image of the 61 million square miles
of the Pacific Ocean.

I zoomed in close enough to draw a fairly wide, bright red line that is
605 feet long (all to scale) and saved it on the image. I then zoomed
back out to capture the full Pacific again and took a screen capture of it.

You mission, should you chose to accept it, is to find the red line.
You can save the picture and zoom away. It's there, guarantee it.
I know where it is, so I can zoom in and easily find it.

Can you?

http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/y...ch/Pacific.jpg



Wayne.B April 20th 14 04:20 AM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On Sat, 19 Apr 2014 23:12:50 -0400, wrote:

On Sat, 19 Apr 2014 22:36:37 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

Here's a game for you Harry.

It's a "hi res" Google satellite image of the 61 million square miles
of the Pacific Ocean.

I zoomed in close enough to draw a fairly wide, bright red line that is
605 feet long (all to scale) and saved it on the image. I then zoomed
back out to capture the full Pacific again and took a screen capture of it.

You mission, should you chose to accept it, is to find the red line.
You can save the picture and zoom away. It's there, guarantee it.
I know where it is, so I can zoom in and easily find it.

Can you?

http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/y...ch/Pacific.jpg


I bet the computers at DIA would pluck it out in a second or two. The
reason they didn't see the jet was they did not have the algorithm in
there to look for random debris.


===

And it's entirely possible, even likely, that there was no satellite
in the right position at the right time. Satellites are not all that
useful for real time tracking of fast moving targets.

Mr. Luddite April 20th 14 04:43 AM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/19/2014 11:20 PM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Sat, 19 Apr 2014 23:12:50 -0400, wrote:

On Sat, 19 Apr 2014 22:36:37 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

Here's a game for you Harry.

It's a "hi res" Google satellite image of the 61 million square miles
of the Pacific Ocean.

I zoomed in close enough to draw a fairly wide, bright red line that is
605 feet long (all to scale) and saved it on the image. I then zoomed
back out to capture the full Pacific again and took a screen capture of it.

You mission, should you chose to accept it, is to find the red line.
You can save the picture and zoom away. It's there, guarantee it.
I know where it is, so I can zoom in and easily find it.

Can you?

http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/y...ch/Pacific.jpg


I bet the computers at DIA would pluck it out in a second or two. The
reason they didn't see the jet was they did not have the algorithm in
there to look for random debris.


===

And it's entirely possible, even likely, that there was no satellite
in the right position at the right time. Satellites are not all that
useful for real time tracking of fast moving targets.


That's the point I am trying to make. "Spy" satellites have optics that
can resolve dimples on a golf ball but you have to know where the golf
ball is to zoom in on it. Land targets are one thing because they don't
move and the GPS coordinates are known. A ship at sea would be very
difficult to find unless you had a good idea where to look and could
limit the search to a highly zoomed area. Oceans are big.



KC April 20th 14 05:24 AM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/19/2014 11:20 PM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Sat, 19 Apr 2014 23:12:50 -0400, wrote:

On Sat, 19 Apr 2014 22:36:37 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

Here's a game for you Harry.

It's a "hi res" Google satellite image of the 61 million square miles
of the Pacific Ocean.

I zoomed in close enough to draw a fairly wide, bright red line that is
605 feet long (all to scale) and saved it on the image. I then zoomed
back out to capture the full Pacific again and took a screen capture of it.

You mission, should you chose to accept it, is to find the red line.
You can save the picture and zoom away. It's there, guarantee it.
I know where it is, so I can zoom in and easily find it.

Can you?

http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/y...ch/Pacific.jpg


I bet the computers at DIA would pluck it out in a second or two. The
reason they didn't see the jet was they did not have the algorithm in
there to look for random debris.


===

And it's entirely possible, even likely, that there was no satellite
in the right position at the right time. Satellites are not all that
useful for real time tracking of fast moving targets.


And just as possible the plane isn't even in the Southern Hemisphere....
There is not one spec of evidence we have been made aware of that
suggests the plane made it down there. Something is still fishy about
the whole thing.

F*O*A*D April 20th 14 01:13 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/19/14, 10:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
Here's a game for you Harry.

It's a "hi res" Google satellite image of the 61 million square miles
of the Pacific Ocean.

I zoomed in close enough to draw a fairly wide, bright red line that is
605 feet long (all to scale) and saved it on the image. I then zoomed
back out to capture the full Pacific again and took a screen capture of it.

You mission, should you chose to accept it, is to find the red line.
You can save the picture and zoom away. It's there, guarantee it.
I know where it is, so I can zoom in and easily find it.

Can you?

http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/y...ch/Pacific.jpg



I don't know...can I?

The photo is hardly "hi res."

There are aspects to locating this ship you haven't really considered.

It's a large ship, and it is powered by fossil fuel. A lot of fossil
fuel. Refueling these ships at sea is a very risky business, though it
can be done. It is going to have to make port for fuel, for supplies,
and sometimes for maintenance. The number of places you can "park" a
600-foot warship are limited. The ship will be seen arriving and
departing. Ports of call many times are announced. Once its location is
known, it can be tracked by the usual methods, including by submarine
and by aircraft and by satellite. The Navy's PR department says the
powerplant heat bloom is minimized, as is the ship's wake and
disturbance on the ocean surface. Maybe not as well as the Navy would
like, eh? Military PR is the very definition of self-serving.

Now, of course, very few if any of the third world countries we make war
on have the assets to do this. But some of those countries have sponsors
or are client states of major countries that do have modern ships,
planes, submarines, satellites. It doesn't take much effort to
"communicate" the location of an enemy's assets. I'm confident the
Russians would not be displeased if some ******** of a country sucking
on Moscow's teat managed to put a hole through the hull of the Zumwalt.

On another note, isn't it wonderful that I pose these "provocative"
issues here? It gives the boys something to discuss besides Herring's
tiptoeing through the tulips, Tim's Remembrance of Posts Past*, W'hine's
telling us just how big and fancy his boat is, Bert's regurgitation of
his fondness for John Birch Society bull****,
Ingersoll's schizophrenia, CalifBill's own brand of right-wing insanity,
FlaJim's junior high school insults, and so forth and so on.

As always, have nice day! :)


* Full apologies to Marcel Proust and his À la recherche du temps perdu...

H*a*r*r*o*l*d April 20th 14 02:03 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/2014 8:13 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/19/14, 10:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
Here's a game for you Harry.

It's a "hi res" Google satellite image of the 61 million square miles
of the Pacific Ocean.

I zoomed in close enough to draw a fairly wide, bright red line that is
605 feet long (all to scale) and saved it on the image. I then zoomed
back out to capture the full Pacific again and took a screen capture
of it.

You mission, should you chose to accept it, is to find the red line.
You can save the picture and zoom away. It's there, guarantee it.
I know where it is, so I can zoom in and easily find it.

Can you?

http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/y...ch/Pacific.jpg



I don't know...can I?

The photo is hardly "hi res."

There are aspects to locating this ship you haven't really considered.

It's a large ship, and it is powered by fossil fuel. A lot of fossil
fuel. Refueling these ships at sea is a very risky business, though it
can be done. It is going to have to make port for fuel, for supplies,
and sometimes for maintenance. The number of places you can "park" a
600-foot warship are limited. The ship will be seen arriving and
departing. Ports of call many times are announced. Once its location is
known, it can be tracked by the usual methods, including by submarine
and by aircraft and by satellite. The Navy's PR department says the
powerplant heat bloom is minimized, as is the ship's wake and
disturbance on the ocean surface. Maybe not as well as the Navy would
like, eh? Military PR is the very definition of self-serving.

Now, of course, very few if any of the third world countries we make war
on have the assets to do this. But some of those countries have sponsors
or are client states of major countries that do have modern ships,
planes, submarines, satellites. It doesn't take much effort to
"communicate" the location of an enemy's assets. I'm confident the
Russians would not be displeased if some ******** of a country sucking
on Moscow's teat managed to put a hole through the hull of the Zumwalt.

On another note, isn't it wonderful that I pose these "provocative"
issues here? It gives the boys something to discuss besides Herring's
tiptoeing through the tulips, Tim's Remembrance of Posts Past*, W'hine's
telling us just how big and fancy his boat is, Bert's regurgitation of
his fondness for John Birch Society bull****,
Ingersoll's schizophrenia, CalifBill's own brand of right-wing insanity,
FlaJim's junior high school insults, and so forth and so on.

As always, have nice day! :)


* Full apologies to Marcel Proust and his À la recherche du temps perdu...


Your issues are about as provocative as a dog lifting his leg to pee.

Wayne.B April 20th 14 02:10 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On Sun, 20 Apr 2014 08:13:23 -0400, F*O*A*D wrote:

On another note, isn't it wonderful that I pose these "provocative"
issues here? It gives the boys something to discuss besides Herring's
tiptoeing through the tulips, Tim's Remembrance of Posts Past*, W'hine's
telling us just how big and fancy his boat is, Bert's regurgitation of
his fondness for John Birch Society bull****,
Ingersoll's schizophrenia, CalifBill's own brand of right-wing insanity,
FlaJim's junior high school insults, and so forth and so on.


===

Harry, have I told you recently that you're an asshole?

Have a nice Easter.

Mr. Luddite April 20th 14 02:30 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/2014 9:03 AM, H*a*r*r*o*l*d wrote:
On 4/20/2014 8:13 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/19/14, 10:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
Here's a game for you Harry.

It's a "hi res" Google satellite image of the 61 million square miles
of the Pacific Ocean.

I zoomed in close enough to draw a fairly wide, bright red line that is
605 feet long (all to scale) and saved it on the image. I then zoomed
back out to capture the full Pacific again and took a screen capture
of it.

You mission, should you chose to accept it, is to find the red line.
You can save the picture and zoom away. It's there, guarantee it.
I know where it is, so I can zoom in and easily find it.

Can you?

http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/y...ch/Pacific.jpg



I don't know...can I?

The photo is hardly "hi res."

There are aspects to locating this ship you haven't really considered.

It's a large ship, and it is powered by fossil fuel. A lot of fossil
fuel. Refueling these ships at sea is a very risky business, though it
can be done. It is going to have to make port for fuel, for supplies,
and sometimes for maintenance. The number of places you can "park" a
600-foot warship are limited. The ship will be seen arriving and
departing. Ports of call many times are announced. Once its location is
known, it can be tracked by the usual methods, including by submarine
and by aircraft and by satellite. The Navy's PR department says the
powerplant heat bloom is minimized, as is the ship's wake and
disturbance on the ocean surface. Maybe not as well as the Navy would
like, eh? Military PR is the very definition of self-serving.

Now, of course, very few if any of the third world countries we make war
on have the assets to do this. But some of those countries have sponsors
or are client states of major countries that do have modern ships,
planes, submarines, satellites. It doesn't take much effort to
"communicate" the location of an enemy's assets. I'm confident the
Russians would not be displeased if some ******** of a country sucking
on Moscow's teat managed to put a hole through the hull of the Zumwalt.

On another note, isn't it wonderful that I pose these "provocative"
issues here? It gives the boys something to discuss besides Herring's
tiptoeing through the tulips, Tim's Remembrance of Posts Past*, W'hine's
telling us just how big and fancy his boat is, Bert's regurgitation of
his fondness for John Birch Society bull****,
Ingersoll's schizophrenia, CalifBill's own brand of right-wing insanity,
FlaJim's junior high school insults, and so forth and so on.

As always, have nice day! :)


* Full apologies to Marcel Proust and his À la recherche du temps
perdu...


Your issues are about as provocative as a dog lifting his leg to pee.



He also hasn't a clue what he's talking about. Navy ships have been
refueling at sea every day since they ran on coal or bunker oil. Since
the mid 1970's the newer frigates and DLGs are powered with gas turbines
which are also refueled at sea on a regular basis. "Oilers" aren't
Oilers anymore.

In today's Navy the Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyers
perform the roles of several former ship classes including destroyers
and cruisers. The expensive to build cruiser class ship has gone the
way of the WWII battleship. The DLGs have more firepower, are armored
(including kelvar), have Aegis Combat Systems and sophisticated,
Electronic Countermeasure Systems that are constantly being improved
upon. They have become the backbone of US Navy warships along with
carriers and submarines. They are efficient, fast and cheaper to build
and maintain.

The USS Zumwald is just another potential step in the evolution of
destroyer technology and capabilities. It may or may not become the
"go-to" design of the future but in order to determine that, designs,
CAD drawings and schematics have to be turned into hardware for testing.

But, back to the ancient Navy ... the one we were in ... here's what
being on a destroyer was like back when I was on a couple:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ih7ygOUz_Wg







F*O*A*D April 20th 14 03:03 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/14, 9:30 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 9:03 AM, H*a*r*r*o*l*d wrote:
On 4/20/2014 8:13 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/19/14, 10:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
Here's a game for you Harry.

It's a "hi res" Google satellite image of the 61 million square miles
of the Pacific Ocean.

I zoomed in close enough to draw a fairly wide, bright red line that is
605 feet long (all to scale) and saved it on the image. I then
zoomed
back out to capture the full Pacific again and took a screen capture
of it.

You mission, should you chose to accept it, is to find the red line.
You can save the picture and zoom away. It's there, guarantee it.
I know where it is, so I can zoom in and easily find it.

Can you?

http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/y...ch/Pacific.jpg



I don't know...can I?

The photo is hardly "hi res."

There are aspects to locating this ship you haven't really considered.

It's a large ship, and it is powered by fossil fuel. A lot of fossil
fuel. Refueling these ships at sea is a very risky business, though it
can be done. It is going to have to make port for fuel, for supplies,
and sometimes for maintenance. The number of places you can "park" a
600-foot warship are limited. The ship will be seen arriving and
departing. Ports of call many times are announced. Once its location is
known, it can be tracked by the usual methods, including by submarine
and by aircraft and by satellite. The Navy's PR department says the
powerplant heat bloom is minimized, as is the ship's wake and
disturbance on the ocean surface. Maybe not as well as the Navy would
like, eh? Military PR is the very definition of self-serving.

Now, of course, very few if any of the third world countries we make war
on have the assets to do this. But some of those countries have sponsors
or are client states of major countries that do have modern ships,
planes, submarines, satellites. It doesn't take much effort to
"communicate" the location of an enemy's assets. I'm confident the
Russians would not be displeased if some ******** of a country sucking
on Moscow's teat managed to put a hole through the hull of the Zumwalt.

On another note, isn't it wonderful that I pose these "provocative"
issues here? It gives the boys something to discuss besides Herring's
tiptoeing through the tulips, Tim's Remembrance of Posts Past*, W'hine's
telling us just how big and fancy his boat is, Bert's regurgitation of
his fondness for John Birch Society bull****,
Ingersoll's schizophrenia, CalifBill's own brand of right-wing insanity,
FlaJim's junior high school insults, and so forth and so on.

As always, have nice day! :)


* Full apologies to Marcel Proust and his À la recherche du temps
perdu...


Your issues are about as provocative as a dog lifting his leg to pee.



He also hasn't a clue what he's talking about. Navy ships have been
refueling at sea every day since they ran on coal or bunker oil. Since
the mid 1970's the newer frigates and DLGs are powered with gas turbines
which are also refueled at sea on a regular basis. "Oilers" aren't
Oilers anymore.

In today's Navy the Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyers
perform the roles of several former ship classes including destroyers
and cruisers. The expensive to build cruiser class ship has gone the
way of the WWII battleship. The DLGs have more firepower, are armored
(including kelvar), have Aegis Combat Systems and sophisticated,
Electronic Countermeasure Systems that are constantly being improved
upon. They have become the backbone of US Navy warships along with
carriers and submarines. They are efficient, fast and cheaper to build
and maintain.

The USS Zumwald is just another potential step in the evolution of
destroyer technology and capabilities. It may or may not become the
"go-to" design of the future but in order to determine that, designs,
CAD drawings and schematics have to be turned into hardware for testing.

But, back to the ancient Navy ... the one we were in ... here's what
being on a destroyer was like back when I was on a couple:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ih7ygOUz_Wg




Thanks for the Navy PR and for missing the point.

The point wasn't that the ship had to make port to refuel. Refueling was
just an example. The point was that the ship had to make port for any
number of reasons, and that when it did, it would be impossible for the
ship to be "stealthy" because its presence would be known and could be
communicated, and it could be watched while in port and when leaving
port. It's not difficult watching nuclear submarines making and leaving
port, and they are a hell of a lot stealthier than the Zumwalt, and even
they can be tracked.

Any large warship at sea can be found and damaged or sunk. You can't
hide a military surface ship two football fields long at sea. The
Zumwalt is only 200 feet shorter than the Bismarck, and it was spotted
and sunk.

Perhaps the Navy can waste a hundred billion more dollars and come up
with a cloaking device.



H*a*r*r*o*l*d April 20th 14 03:49 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/2014 10:03 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 9:30 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 9:03 AM, H*a*r*r*o*l*d wrote:
On 4/20/2014 8:13 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/19/14, 10:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
Here's a game for you Harry.

It's a "hi res" Google satellite image of the 61 million square miles
of the Pacific Ocean.

I zoomed in close enough to draw a fairly wide, bright red line
that is
605 feet long (all to scale) and saved it on the image. I then
zoomed
back out to capture the full Pacific again and took a screen capture
of it.

You mission, should you chose to accept it, is to find the red line.
You can save the picture and zoom away. It's there, guarantee it.
I know where it is, so I can zoom in and easily find it.

Can you?

http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/y...ch/Pacific.jpg



I don't know...can I?

The photo is hardly "hi res."

There are aspects to locating this ship you haven't really considered.

It's a large ship, and it is powered by fossil fuel. A lot of fossil
fuel. Refueling these ships at sea is a very risky business, though it
can be done. It is going to have to make port for fuel, for supplies,
and sometimes for maintenance. The number of places you can "park" a
600-foot warship are limited. The ship will be seen arriving and
departing. Ports of call many times are announced. Once its location is
known, it can be tracked by the usual methods, including by submarine
and by aircraft and by satellite. The Navy's PR department says the
powerplant heat bloom is minimized, as is the ship's wake and
disturbance on the ocean surface. Maybe not as well as the Navy would
like, eh? Military PR is the very definition of self-serving.

Now, of course, very few if any of the third world countries we make
war
on have the assets to do this. But some of those countries have
sponsors
or are client states of major countries that do have modern ships,
planes, submarines, satellites. It doesn't take much effort to
"communicate" the location of an enemy's assets. I'm confident the
Russians would not be displeased if some ******** of a country sucking
on Moscow's teat managed to put a hole through the hull of the Zumwalt.

On another note, isn't it wonderful that I pose these "provocative"
issues here? It gives the boys something to discuss besides Herring's
tiptoeing through the tulips, Tim's Remembrance of Posts Past*,
W'hine's
telling us just how big and fancy his boat is, Bert's regurgitation of
his fondness for John Birch Society bull****,
Ingersoll's schizophrenia, CalifBill's own brand of right-wing
insanity,
FlaJim's junior high school insults, and so forth and so on.

As always, have nice day! :)


* Full apologies to Marcel Proust and his À la recherche du temps
perdu...

Your issues are about as provocative as a dog lifting his leg to pee.



He also hasn't a clue what he's talking about. Navy ships have been
refueling at sea every day since they ran on coal or bunker oil. Since
the mid 1970's the newer frigates and DLGs are powered with gas turbines
which are also refueled at sea on a regular basis. "Oilers" aren't
Oilers anymore.

In today's Navy the Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyers
perform the roles of several former ship classes including destroyers
and cruisers. The expensive to build cruiser class ship has gone the
way of the WWII battleship. The DLGs have more firepower, are armored
(including kelvar), have Aegis Combat Systems and sophisticated,
Electronic Countermeasure Systems that are constantly being improved
upon. They have become the backbone of US Navy warships along with
carriers and submarines. They are efficient, fast and cheaper to build
and maintain.

The USS Zumwald is just another potential step in the evolution of
destroyer technology and capabilities. It may or may not become the
"go-to" design of the future but in order to determine that, designs,
CAD drawings and schematics have to be turned into hardware for testing.

But, back to the ancient Navy ... the one we were in ... here's what
being on a destroyer was like back when I was on a couple:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ih7ygOUz_Wg




Thanks for the Navy PR and for missing the point.


I hope you enjoyed the video. I sure did.

Mr. Luddite April 20th 14 03:54 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/2014 10:03 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 9:30 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 9:03 AM, H*a*r*r*o*l*d wrote:
On 4/20/2014 8:13 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/19/14, 10:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
Here's a game for you Harry.

It's a "hi res" Google satellite image of the 61 million square miles
of the Pacific Ocean.

I zoomed in close enough to draw a fairly wide, bright red line
that is
605 feet long (all to scale) and saved it on the image. I then
zoomed
back out to capture the full Pacific again and took a screen capture
of it.

You mission, should you chose to accept it, is to find the red line.
You can save the picture and zoom away. It's there, guarantee it.
I know where it is, so I can zoom in and easily find it.

Can you?

http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/y...ch/Pacific.jpg



I don't know...can I?

The photo is hardly "hi res."

There are aspects to locating this ship you haven't really considered.

It's a large ship, and it is powered by fossil fuel. A lot of fossil
fuel. Refueling these ships at sea is a very risky business, though it
can be done. It is going to have to make port for fuel, for supplies,
and sometimes for maintenance. The number of places you can "park" a
600-foot warship are limited. The ship will be seen arriving and
departing. Ports of call many times are announced. Once its location is
known, it can be tracked by the usual methods, including by submarine
and by aircraft and by satellite. The Navy's PR department says the
powerplant heat bloom is minimized, as is the ship's wake and
disturbance on the ocean surface. Maybe not as well as the Navy would
like, eh? Military PR is the very definition of self-serving.

Now, of course, very few if any of the third world countries we make
war
on have the assets to do this. But some of those countries have
sponsors
or are client states of major countries that do have modern ships,
planes, submarines, satellites. It doesn't take much effort to
"communicate" the location of an enemy's assets. I'm confident the
Russians would not be displeased if some ******** of a country sucking
on Moscow's teat managed to put a hole through the hull of the Zumwalt.

On another note, isn't it wonderful that I pose these "provocative"
issues here? It gives the boys something to discuss besides Herring's
tiptoeing through the tulips, Tim's Remembrance of Posts Past*,
W'hine's
telling us just how big and fancy his boat is, Bert's regurgitation of
his fondness for John Birch Society bull****,
Ingersoll's schizophrenia, CalifBill's own brand of right-wing
insanity,
FlaJim's junior high school insults, and so forth and so on.

As always, have nice day! :)


* Full apologies to Marcel Proust and his À la recherche du temps
perdu...

Your issues are about as provocative as a dog lifting his leg to pee.



He also hasn't a clue what he's talking about. Navy ships have been
refueling at sea every day since they ran on coal or bunker oil. Since
the mid 1970's the newer frigates and DLGs are powered with gas turbines
which are also refueled at sea on a regular basis. "Oilers" aren't
Oilers anymore.

In today's Navy the Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyers
perform the roles of several former ship classes including destroyers
and cruisers. The expensive to build cruiser class ship has gone the
way of the WWII battleship. The DLGs have more firepower, are armored
(including kelvar), have Aegis Combat Systems and sophisticated,
Electronic Countermeasure Systems that are constantly being improved
upon. They have become the backbone of US Navy warships along with
carriers and submarines. They are efficient, fast and cheaper to build
and maintain.

The USS Zumwald is just another potential step in the evolution of
destroyer technology and capabilities. It may or may not become the
"go-to" design of the future but in order to determine that, designs,
CAD drawings and schematics have to be turned into hardware for testing.

But, back to the ancient Navy ... the one we were in ... here's what
being on a destroyer was like back when I was on a couple:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ih7ygOUz_Wg




Thanks for the Navy PR and for missing the point.

The point wasn't that the ship had to make port to refuel. Refueling was
just an example. The point was that the ship had to make port for any
number of reasons, and that when it did, it would be impossible for the
ship to be "stealthy" because its presence would be known and could be
communicated, and it could be watched while in port and when leaving
port. It's not difficult watching nuclear submarines making and leaving
port, and they are a hell of a lot stealthier than the Zumwalt, and even
they can be tracked.

Any large warship at sea can be found and damaged or sunk. You can't
hide a military surface ship two football fields long at sea. The
Zumwalt is only 200 feet shorter than the Bismarck, and it was spotted
and sunk.

Perhaps the Navy can waste a hundred billion more dollars and come up
with a cloaking device.




OMG. The *Bismarck?*

What type of electronic countermeasures did the Bismarck have?

You're note about refueling ... you said, "risky, but it *can* be done.
Not only *can* it be done, it is done everyday. There's actually
significant risk refueling in port. This is JP5 kerosene type fuel they
are using.

Pull your head out of the dark ages man.



F*O*A*D April 20th 14 04:06 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/14, 10:54 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 10:03 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 9:30 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 9:03 AM, H*a*r*r*o*l*d wrote:
On 4/20/2014 8:13 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/19/14, 10:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
Here's a game for you Harry.

It's a "hi res" Google satellite image of the 61 million square
miles
of the Pacific Ocean.

I zoomed in close enough to draw a fairly wide, bright red line
that is
605 feet long (all to scale) and saved it on the image. I then
zoomed
back out to capture the full Pacific again and took a screen capture
of it.

You mission, should you chose to accept it, is to find the red line.
You can save the picture and zoom away. It's there, guarantee it.
I know where it is, so I can zoom in and easily find it.

Can you?

http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/y...ch/Pacific.jpg



I don't know...can I?

The photo is hardly "hi res."

There are aspects to locating this ship you haven't really considered.

It's a large ship, and it is powered by fossil fuel. A lot of fossil
fuel. Refueling these ships at sea is a very risky business, though it
can be done. It is going to have to make port for fuel, for supplies,
and sometimes for maintenance. The number of places you can "park" a
600-foot warship are limited. The ship will be seen arriving and
departing. Ports of call many times are announced. Once its
location is
known, it can be tracked by the usual methods, including by submarine
and by aircraft and by satellite. The Navy's PR department says the
powerplant heat bloom is minimized, as is the ship's wake and
disturbance on the ocean surface. Maybe not as well as the Navy would
like, eh? Military PR is the very definition of self-serving.

Now, of course, very few if any of the third world countries we make
war
on have the assets to do this. But some of those countries have
sponsors
or are client states of major countries that do have modern ships,
planes, submarines, satellites. It doesn't take much effort to
"communicate" the location of an enemy's assets. I'm confident the
Russians would not be displeased if some ******** of a country sucking
on Moscow's teat managed to put a hole through the hull of the
Zumwalt.

On another note, isn't it wonderful that I pose these "provocative"
issues here? It gives the boys something to discuss besides Herring's
tiptoeing through the tulips, Tim's Remembrance of Posts Past*,
W'hine's
telling us just how big and fancy his boat is, Bert's regurgitation of
his fondness for John Birch Society bull****,
Ingersoll's schizophrenia, CalifBill's own brand of right-wing
insanity,
FlaJim's junior high school insults, and so forth and so on.

As always, have nice day! :)


* Full apologies to Marcel Proust and his À la recherche du temps
perdu...

Your issues are about as provocative as a dog lifting his leg to pee.


He also hasn't a clue what he's talking about. Navy ships have been
refueling at sea every day since they ran on coal or bunker oil. Since
the mid 1970's the newer frigates and DLGs are powered with gas turbines
which are also refueled at sea on a regular basis. "Oilers" aren't
Oilers anymore.

In today's Navy the Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyers
perform the roles of several former ship classes including destroyers
and cruisers. The expensive to build cruiser class ship has gone the
way of the WWII battleship. The DLGs have more firepower, are armored
(including kelvar), have Aegis Combat Systems and sophisticated,
Electronic Countermeasure Systems that are constantly being improved
upon. They have become the backbone of US Navy warships along with
carriers and submarines. They are efficient, fast and cheaper to build
and maintain.

The USS Zumwald is just another potential step in the evolution of
destroyer technology and capabilities. It may or may not become the
"go-to" design of the future but in order to determine that, designs,
CAD drawings and schematics have to be turned into hardware for testing.

But, back to the ancient Navy ... the one we were in ... here's what
being on a destroyer was like back when I was on a couple:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ih7ygOUz_Wg




Thanks for the Navy PR and for missing the point.

The point wasn't that the ship had to make port to refuel. Refueling was
just an example. The point was that the ship had to make port for any
number of reasons, and that when it did, it would be impossible for the
ship to be "stealthy" because its presence would be known and could be
communicated, and it could be watched while in port and when leaving
port. It's not difficult watching nuclear submarines making and leaving
port, and they are a hell of a lot stealthier than the Zumwalt, and even
they can be tracked.

Any large warship at sea can be found and damaged or sunk. You can't
hide a military surface ship two football fields long at sea. The
Zumwalt is only 200 feet shorter than the Bismarck, and it was spotted
and sunk.

Perhaps the Navy can waste a hundred billion more dollars and come up
with a cloaking device.




OMG. The *Bismarck?*

What type of electronic countermeasures did the Bismarck have?

You're note about refueling ... you said, "risky, but it *can* be done.
Not only *can* it be done, it is done everyday. There's actually
significant risk refueling in port. This is JP5 kerosene type fuel they
are using.

Pull your head out of the dark ages man.




You're *still* hung up on *refueling* in port. These ships make port for
many reasons.

And "electronic countermeasures" wouldn't have prevented the Bismarck
from being spotted. It was seen visually, not electronically. You know,
*big* ship, distinct profile, not easy to hide from visual and other
sorts of observation. It is the height of arrogance for the Navy to
believe a huge surface ship is just going to disappear while at sea.



H*a*r*r*o*l*d April 20th 14 04:14 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/2014 10:54 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 10:03 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 9:30 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 9:03 AM, H*a*r*r*o*l*d wrote:
On 4/20/2014 8:13 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/19/14, 10:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
Here's a game for you Harry.

It's a "hi res" Google satellite image of the 61 million square
miles
of the Pacific Ocean.

I zoomed in close enough to draw a fairly wide, bright red line
that is
605 feet long (all to scale) and saved it on the image. I then
zoomed
back out to capture the full Pacific again and took a screen capture
of it.

You mission, should you chose to accept it, is to find the red line.
You can save the picture and zoom away. It's there, guarantee it.
I know where it is, so I can zoom in and easily find it.

Can you?

http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/y...ch/Pacific.jpg



I don't know...can I?

The photo is hardly "hi res."

There are aspects to locating this ship you haven't really considered.

It's a large ship, and it is powered by fossil fuel. A lot of fossil
fuel. Refueling these ships at sea is a very risky business, though it
can be done. It is going to have to make port for fuel, for supplies,
and sometimes for maintenance. The number of places you can "park" a
600-foot warship are limited. The ship will be seen arriving and
departing. Ports of call many times are announced. Once its
location is
known, it can be tracked by the usual methods, including by submarine
and by aircraft and by satellite. The Navy's PR department says the
powerplant heat bloom is minimized, as is the ship's wake and
disturbance on the ocean surface. Maybe not as well as the Navy would
like, eh? Military PR is the very definition of self-serving.

Now, of course, very few if any of the third world countries we make
war
on have the assets to do this. But some of those countries have
sponsors
or are client states of major countries that do have modern ships,
planes, submarines, satellites. It doesn't take much effort to
"communicate" the location of an enemy's assets. I'm confident the
Russians would not be displeased if some ******** of a country sucking
on Moscow's teat managed to put a hole through the hull of the
Zumwalt.

On another note, isn't it wonderful that I pose these "provocative"
issues here? It gives the boys something to discuss besides Herring's
tiptoeing through the tulips, Tim's Remembrance of Posts Past*,
W'hine's
telling us just how big and fancy his boat is, Bert's regurgitation of
his fondness for John Birch Society bull****,
Ingersoll's schizophrenia, CalifBill's own brand of right-wing
insanity,
FlaJim's junior high school insults, and so forth and so on.

As always, have nice day! :)


* Full apologies to Marcel Proust and his À la recherche du temps
perdu...

Your issues are about as provocative as a dog lifting his leg to pee.


He also hasn't a clue what he's talking about. Navy ships have been
refueling at sea every day since they ran on coal or bunker oil. Since
the mid 1970's the newer frigates and DLGs are powered with gas turbines
which are also refueled at sea on a regular basis. "Oilers" aren't
Oilers anymore.

In today's Navy the Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyers
perform the roles of several former ship classes including destroyers
and cruisers. The expensive to build cruiser class ship has gone the
way of the WWII battleship. The DLGs have more firepower, are armored
(including kelvar), have Aegis Combat Systems and sophisticated,
Electronic Countermeasure Systems that are constantly being improved
upon. They have become the backbone of US Navy warships along with
carriers and submarines. They are efficient, fast and cheaper to build
and maintain.

The USS Zumwald is just another potential step in the evolution of
destroyer technology and capabilities. It may or may not become the
"go-to" design of the future but in order to determine that, designs,
CAD drawings and schematics have to be turned into hardware for testing.

But, back to the ancient Navy ... the one we were in ... here's what
being on a destroyer was like back when I was on a couple:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ih7ygOUz_Wg




Thanks for the Navy PR and for missing the point.

The point wasn't that the ship had to make port to refuel. Refueling was
just an example. The point was that the ship had to make port for any
number of reasons, and that when it did, it would be impossible for the
ship to be "stealthy" because its presence would be known and could be
communicated, and it could be watched while in port and when leaving
port. It's not difficult watching nuclear submarines making and leaving
port, and they are a hell of a lot stealthier than the Zumwalt, and even
they can be tracked.

Any large warship at sea can be found and damaged or sunk. You can't
hide a military surface ship two football fields long at sea. The
Zumwalt is only 200 feet shorter than the Bismarck, and it was spotted
and sunk.

Perhaps the Navy can waste a hundred billion more dollars and come up
with a cloaking device.




OMG. The *Bismarck?*

What type of electronic countermeasures did the Bismarck have?

You're note about refueling ... you said, "risky, but it *can* be done.
Not only *can* it be done, it is done everyday. There's actually
significant risk refueling in port. This is JP5 kerosene type fuel they
are using.

Pull your head out of the dark ages man.


I was hi lined off a Can during a refueling once, and of course the
required payment for such a thrill ride was a trip to the bitter end of
the hi line.

Mr. Luddite April 20th 14 04:17 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/2014 11:06 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 10:54 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 10:03 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 9:30 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 9:03 AM, H*a*r*r*o*l*d wrote:
On 4/20/2014 8:13 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/19/14, 10:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
Here's a game for you Harry.

It's a "hi res" Google satellite image of the 61 million square
miles
of the Pacific Ocean.

I zoomed in close enough to draw a fairly wide, bright red line
that is
605 feet long (all to scale) and saved it on the image. I then
zoomed
back out to capture the full Pacific again and took a screen capture
of it.

You mission, should you chose to accept it, is to find the red line.
You can save the picture and zoom away. It's there, guarantee it.
I know where it is, so I can zoom in and easily find it.

Can you?

http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/y...ch/Pacific.jpg



I don't know...can I?

The photo is hardly "hi res."

There are aspects to locating this ship you haven't really
considered.

It's a large ship, and it is powered by fossil fuel. A lot of fossil
fuel. Refueling these ships at sea is a very risky business,
though it
can be done. It is going to have to make port for fuel, for supplies,
and sometimes for maintenance. The number of places you can "park" a
600-foot warship are limited. The ship will be seen arriving and
departing. Ports of call many times are announced. Once its
location is
known, it can be tracked by the usual methods, including by submarine
and by aircraft and by satellite. The Navy's PR department says the
powerplant heat bloom is minimized, as is the ship's wake and
disturbance on the ocean surface. Maybe not as well as the Navy would
like, eh? Military PR is the very definition of self-serving.

Now, of course, very few if any of the third world countries we make
war
on have the assets to do this. But some of those countries have
sponsors
or are client states of major countries that do have modern ships,
planes, submarines, satellites. It doesn't take much effort to
"communicate" the location of an enemy's assets. I'm confident the
Russians would not be displeased if some ******** of a country
sucking
on Moscow's teat managed to put a hole through the hull of the
Zumwalt.

On another note, isn't it wonderful that I pose these "provocative"
issues here? It gives the boys something to discuss besides Herring's
tiptoeing through the tulips, Tim's Remembrance of Posts Past*,
W'hine's
telling us just how big and fancy his boat is, Bert's
regurgitation of
his fondness for John Birch Society bull****,
Ingersoll's schizophrenia, CalifBill's own brand of right-wing
insanity,
FlaJim's junior high school insults, and so forth and so on.

As always, have nice day! :)


* Full apologies to Marcel Proust and his À la recherche du temps
perdu...

Your issues are about as provocative as a dog lifting his leg to pee.


He also hasn't a clue what he's talking about. Navy ships have been
refueling at sea every day since they ran on coal or bunker oil. Since
the mid 1970's the newer frigates and DLGs are powered with gas
turbines
which are also refueled at sea on a regular basis. "Oilers" aren't
Oilers anymore.

In today's Navy the Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyers
perform the roles of several former ship classes including destroyers
and cruisers. The expensive to build cruiser class ship has gone the
way of the WWII battleship. The DLGs have more firepower, are armored
(including kelvar), have Aegis Combat Systems and sophisticated,
Electronic Countermeasure Systems that are constantly being improved
upon. They have become the backbone of US Navy warships along with
carriers and submarines. They are efficient, fast and cheaper to build
and maintain.

The USS Zumwald is just another potential step in the evolution of
destroyer technology and capabilities. It may or may not become the
"go-to" design of the future but in order to determine that, designs,
CAD drawings and schematics have to be turned into hardware for
testing.

But, back to the ancient Navy ... the one we were in ... here's what
being on a destroyer was like back when I was on a couple:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ih7ygOUz_Wg




Thanks for the Navy PR and for missing the point.

The point wasn't that the ship had to make port to refuel. Refueling was
just an example. The point was that the ship had to make port for any
number of reasons, and that when it did, it would be impossible for the
ship to be "stealthy" because its presence would be known and could be
communicated, and it could be watched while in port and when leaving
port. It's not difficult watching nuclear submarines making and leaving
port, and they are a hell of a lot stealthier than the Zumwalt, and even
they can be tracked.

Any large warship at sea can be found and damaged or sunk. You can't
hide a military surface ship two football fields long at sea. The
Zumwalt is only 200 feet shorter than the Bismarck, and it was spotted
and sunk.

Perhaps the Navy can waste a hundred billion more dollars and come up
with a cloaking device.




OMG. The *Bismarck?*

What type of electronic countermeasures did the Bismarck have?

You're note about refueling ... you said, "risky, but it *can* be done.
Not only *can* it be done, it is done everyday. There's actually
significant risk refueling in port. This is JP5 kerosene type fuel they
are using.

Pull your head out of the dark ages man.




You're *still* hung up on *refueling* in port. These ships make port for
many reasons.

And "electronic countermeasures" wouldn't have prevented the Bismarck
from being spotted. It was seen visually, not electronically. You know,
*big* ship, distinct profile, not easy to hide from visual and other
sorts of observation. It is the height of arrogance for the Navy to
believe a huge surface ship is just going to disappear while at sea.




Harry, that's not what electronic countermeasures are for. Good grief.
They are not a cloaking device. You must be reading the "Philadelphia
Experiment" (a hoax).

BTW .. don't know if you watched the video I linked to but you may find
this interesting . Or maybe not.

The part that shows refueling at sea reflects a tradition in the Navy
that not many are aware of. The guy in the hardhat giving the orders is
called the "Oil King". The Oil King is selected based on capability and
experience and not on rate or rank. In the video he happens to be a
lowly 2nd class Petty Officer (E-5) but during the refueling evolution
he is in total and complete command, second only to the Commanding
Officer in terms of responsibility. It's one of the rare instances
where a junior enlisted can bark out orders to those who out- rank him,
including commissioned officers.

H*a*r*r*o*l*d April 20th 14 04:20 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/2014 11:06 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 10:54 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 10:03 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 9:30 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 9:03 AM, H*a*r*r*o*l*d wrote:
On 4/20/2014 8:13 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/19/14, 10:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
Here's a game for you Harry.

It's a "hi res" Google satellite image of the 61 million square
miles
of the Pacific Ocean.

I zoomed in close enough to draw a fairly wide, bright red line
that is
605 feet long (all to scale) and saved it on the image. I then
zoomed
back out to capture the full Pacific again and took a screen capture
of it.

You mission, should you chose to accept it, is to find the red line.
You can save the picture and zoom away. It's there, guarantee it.
I know where it is, so I can zoom in and easily find it.

Can you?

http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/y...ch/Pacific.jpg



I don't know...can I?

The photo is hardly "hi res."

There are aspects to locating this ship you haven't really
considered.

It's a large ship, and it is powered by fossil fuel. A lot of fossil
fuel. Refueling these ships at sea is a very risky business,
though it
can be done. It is going to have to make port for fuel, for supplies,
and sometimes for maintenance. The number of places you can "park" a
600-foot warship are limited. The ship will be seen arriving and
departing. Ports of call many times are announced. Once its
location is
known, it can be tracked by the usual methods, including by submarine
and by aircraft and by satellite. The Navy's PR department says the
powerplant heat bloom is minimized, as is the ship's wake and
disturbance on the ocean surface. Maybe not as well as the Navy would
like, eh? Military PR is the very definition of self-serving.

Now, of course, very few if any of the third world countries we make
war
on have the assets to do this. But some of those countries have
sponsors
or are client states of major countries that do have modern ships,
planes, submarines, satellites. It doesn't take much effort to
"communicate" the location of an enemy's assets. I'm confident the
Russians would not be displeased if some ******** of a country
sucking
on Moscow's teat managed to put a hole through the hull of the
Zumwalt.

On another note, isn't it wonderful that I pose these "provocative"
issues here? It gives the boys something to discuss besides Herring's
tiptoeing through the tulips, Tim's Remembrance of Posts Past*,
W'hine's
telling us just how big and fancy his boat is, Bert's
regurgitation of
his fondness for John Birch Society bull****,
Ingersoll's schizophrenia, CalifBill's own brand of right-wing
insanity,
FlaJim's junior high school insults, and so forth and so on.

As always, have nice day! :)


* Full apologies to Marcel Proust and his À la recherche du temps
perdu...

Your issues are about as provocative as a dog lifting his leg to pee.


He also hasn't a clue what he's talking about. Navy ships have been
refueling at sea every day since they ran on coal or bunker oil. Since
the mid 1970's the newer frigates and DLGs are powered with gas
turbines
which are also refueled at sea on a regular basis. "Oilers" aren't
Oilers anymore.

In today's Navy the Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyers
perform the roles of several former ship classes including destroyers
and cruisers. The expensive to build cruiser class ship has gone the
way of the WWII battleship. The DLGs have more firepower, are armored
(including kelvar), have Aegis Combat Systems and sophisticated,
Electronic Countermeasure Systems that are constantly being improved
upon. They have become the backbone of US Navy warships along with
carriers and submarines. They are efficient, fast and cheaper to build
and maintain.

The USS Zumwald is just another potential step in the evolution of
destroyer technology and capabilities. It may or may not become the
"go-to" design of the future but in order to determine that, designs,
CAD drawings and schematics have to be turned into hardware for
testing.

But, back to the ancient Navy ... the one we were in ... here's what
being on a destroyer was like back when I was on a couple:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ih7ygOUz_Wg




Thanks for the Navy PR and for missing the point.

The point wasn't that the ship had to make port to refuel. Refueling was
just an example. The point was that the ship had to make port for any
number of reasons, and that when it did, it would be impossible for the
ship to be "stealthy" because its presence would be known and could be
communicated, and it could be watched while in port and when leaving
port. It's not difficult watching nuclear submarines making and leaving
port, and they are a hell of a lot stealthier than the Zumwalt, and even
they can be tracked.

Any large warship at sea can be found and damaged or sunk. You can't
hide a military surface ship two football fields long at sea. The
Zumwalt is only 200 feet shorter than the Bismarck, and it was spotted
and sunk.

Perhaps the Navy can waste a hundred billion more dollars and come up
with a cloaking device.




OMG. The *Bismarck?*

What type of electronic countermeasures did the Bismarck have?

You're note about refueling ... you said, "risky, but it *can* be done.
Not only *can* it be done, it is done everyday. There's actually
significant risk refueling in port. This is JP5 kerosene type fuel they
are using.

Pull your head out of the dark ages man.




You're *still* hung up on *refueling* in port. These ships make port for
many reasons.

And "electronic countermeasures" wouldn't have prevented the Bismarck
from being spotted. It was seen visually, not electronically. You know,
*big* ship, distinct profile, not easy to hide from visual and other
sorts of observation. It is the height of arrogance for the Navy to
believe a huge surface ship is just going to disappear while at sea.


You are arguing with someone who knows a tad more about countermeasures
than you do. If I were you, I'd be wondering if he was toying with you.
Just sayin!

H*a*r*r*o*l*d April 20th 14 04:23 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/2014 11:17 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 11:06 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 10:54 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 10:03 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 9:30 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 9:03 AM, H*a*r*r*o*l*d wrote:
On 4/20/2014 8:13 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/19/14, 10:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
Here's a game for you Harry.

It's a "hi res" Google satellite image of the 61 million square
miles
of the Pacific Ocean.

I zoomed in close enough to draw a fairly wide, bright red line
that is
605 feet long (all to scale) and saved it on the image. I then
zoomed
back out to capture the full Pacific again and took a screen
capture
of it.

You mission, should you chose to accept it, is to find the red
line.
You can save the picture and zoom away. It's there, guarantee it.
I know where it is, so I can zoom in and easily find it.

Can you?

http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/y...ch/Pacific.jpg



I don't know...can I?

The photo is hardly "hi res."

There are aspects to locating this ship you haven't really
considered.

It's a large ship, and it is powered by fossil fuel. A lot of fossil
fuel. Refueling these ships at sea is a very risky business,
though it
can be done. It is going to have to make port for fuel, for
supplies,
and sometimes for maintenance. The number of places you can "park" a
600-foot warship are limited. The ship will be seen arriving and
departing. Ports of call many times are announced. Once its
location is
known, it can be tracked by the usual methods, including by
submarine
and by aircraft and by satellite. The Navy's PR department says the
powerplant heat bloom is minimized, as is the ship's wake and
disturbance on the ocean surface. Maybe not as well as the Navy
would
like, eh? Military PR is the very definition of self-serving.

Now, of course, very few if any of the third world countries we make
war
on have the assets to do this. But some of those countries have
sponsors
or are client states of major countries that do have modern ships,
planes, submarines, satellites. It doesn't take much effort to
"communicate" the location of an enemy's assets. I'm confident the
Russians would not be displeased if some ******** of a country
sucking
on Moscow's teat managed to put a hole through the hull of the
Zumwalt.

On another note, isn't it wonderful that I pose these "provocative"
issues here? It gives the boys something to discuss besides
Herring's
tiptoeing through the tulips, Tim's Remembrance of Posts Past*,
W'hine's
telling us just how big and fancy his boat is, Bert's
regurgitation of
his fondness for John Birch Society bull****,
Ingersoll's schizophrenia, CalifBill's own brand of right-wing
insanity,
FlaJim's junior high school insults, and so forth and so on.

As always, have nice day! :)


* Full apologies to Marcel Proust and his À la recherche du temps
perdu...

Your issues are about as provocative as a dog lifting his leg to pee.


He also hasn't a clue what he's talking about. Navy ships have been
refueling at sea every day since they ran on coal or bunker oil.
Since
the mid 1970's the newer frigates and DLGs are powered with gas
turbines
which are also refueled at sea on a regular basis. "Oilers" aren't
Oilers anymore.

In today's Navy the Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyers
perform the roles of several former ship classes including destroyers
and cruisers. The expensive to build cruiser class ship has gone the
way of the WWII battleship. The DLGs have more firepower, are
armored
(including kelvar), have Aegis Combat Systems and sophisticated,
Electronic Countermeasure Systems that are constantly being improved
upon. They have become the backbone of US Navy warships along with
carriers and submarines. They are efficient, fast and cheaper to
build
and maintain.

The USS Zumwald is just another potential step in the evolution of
destroyer technology and capabilities. It may or may not become the
"go-to" design of the future but in order to determine that, designs,
CAD drawings and schematics have to be turned into hardware for
testing.

But, back to the ancient Navy ... the one we were in ... here's what
being on a destroyer was like back when I was on a couple:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ih7ygOUz_Wg




Thanks for the Navy PR and for missing the point.

The point wasn't that the ship had to make port to refuel. Refueling
was
just an example. The point was that the ship had to make port for any
number of reasons, and that when it did, it would be impossible for the
ship to be "stealthy" because its presence would be known and could be
communicated, and it could be watched while in port and when leaving
port. It's not difficult watching nuclear submarines making and leaving
port, and they are a hell of a lot stealthier than the Zumwalt, and
even
they can be tracked.

Any large warship at sea can be found and damaged or sunk. You can't
hide a military surface ship two football fields long at sea. The
Zumwalt is only 200 feet shorter than the Bismarck, and it was spotted
and sunk.

Perhaps the Navy can waste a hundred billion more dollars and come up
with a cloaking device.




OMG. The *Bismarck?*

What type of electronic countermeasures did the Bismarck have?

You're note about refueling ... you said, "risky, but it *can* be done.
Not only *can* it be done, it is done everyday. There's actually
significant risk refueling in port. This is JP5 kerosene type fuel they
are using.

Pull your head out of the dark ages man.




You're *still* hung up on *refueling* in port. These ships make port for
many reasons.

And "electronic countermeasures" wouldn't have prevented the Bismarck
from being spotted. It was seen visually, not electronically. You know,
*big* ship, distinct profile, not easy to hide from visual and other
sorts of observation. It is the height of arrogance for the Navy to
believe a huge surface ship is just going to disappear while at sea.




Harry, that's not what electronic countermeasures are for. Good grief.
They are not a cloaking device. You must be reading the "Philadelphia
Experiment" (a hoax).

BTW .. don't know if you watched the video I linked to but you may find
this interesting . Or maybe not.

The part that shows refueling at sea reflects a tradition in the Navy
that not many are aware of. The guy in the hardhat giving the orders is
called the "Oil King". The Oil King is selected based on capability and
experience and not on rate or rank. In the video he happens to be a
lowly 2nd class Petty Officer (E-5) but during the refueling evolution
he is in total and complete command, second only to the Commanding
Officer in terms of responsibility. It's one of the rare instances
where a junior enlisted can bark out orders to those who out- rank him,
including commissioned officers.


Heavens to mergatroids. Should we be getting our sailor unionized.

Mr. Luddite April 20th 14 04:24 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/2014 11:14 AM, H*a*r*r*o*l*d wrote:
On 4/20/2014 10:54 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 10:03 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 9:30 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 9:03 AM, H*a*r*r*o*l*d wrote:
On 4/20/2014 8:13 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/19/14, 10:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
Here's a game for you Harry.

It's a "hi res" Google satellite image of the 61 million square
miles
of the Pacific Ocean.

I zoomed in close enough to draw a fairly wide, bright red line
that is
605 feet long (all to scale) and saved it on the image. I then
zoomed
back out to capture the full Pacific again and took a screen capture
of it.

You mission, should you chose to accept it, is to find the red line.
You can save the picture and zoom away. It's there, guarantee it.
I know where it is, so I can zoom in and easily find it.

Can you?

http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/y...ch/Pacific.jpg



I don't know...can I?

The photo is hardly "hi res."

There are aspects to locating this ship you haven't really
considered.

It's a large ship, and it is powered by fossil fuel. A lot of fossil
fuel. Refueling these ships at sea is a very risky business,
though it
can be done. It is going to have to make port for fuel, for supplies,
and sometimes for maintenance. The number of places you can "park" a
600-foot warship are limited. The ship will be seen arriving and
departing. Ports of call many times are announced. Once its
location is
known, it can be tracked by the usual methods, including by submarine
and by aircraft and by satellite. The Navy's PR department says the
powerplant heat bloom is minimized, as is the ship's wake and
disturbance on the ocean surface. Maybe not as well as the Navy would
like, eh? Military PR is the very definition of self-serving.

Now, of course, very few if any of the third world countries we make
war
on have the assets to do this. But some of those countries have
sponsors
or are client states of major countries that do have modern ships,
planes, submarines, satellites. It doesn't take much effort to
"communicate" the location of an enemy's assets. I'm confident the
Russians would not be displeased if some ******** of a country
sucking
on Moscow's teat managed to put a hole through the hull of the
Zumwalt.

On another note, isn't it wonderful that I pose these "provocative"
issues here? It gives the boys something to discuss besides Herring's
tiptoeing through the tulips, Tim's Remembrance of Posts Past*,
W'hine's
telling us just how big and fancy his boat is, Bert's
regurgitation of
his fondness for John Birch Society bull****,
Ingersoll's schizophrenia, CalifBill's own brand of right-wing
insanity,
FlaJim's junior high school insults, and so forth and so on.

As always, have nice day! :)


* Full apologies to Marcel Proust and his À la recherche du temps
perdu...

Your issues are about as provocative as a dog lifting his leg to pee.


He also hasn't a clue what he's talking about. Navy ships have been
refueling at sea every day since they ran on coal or bunker oil. Since
the mid 1970's the newer frigates and DLGs are powered with gas
turbines
which are also refueled at sea on a regular basis. "Oilers" aren't
Oilers anymore.

In today's Navy the Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyers
perform the roles of several former ship classes including destroyers
and cruisers. The expensive to build cruiser class ship has gone the
way of the WWII battleship. The DLGs have more firepower, are armored
(including kelvar), have Aegis Combat Systems and sophisticated,
Electronic Countermeasure Systems that are constantly being improved
upon. They have become the backbone of US Navy warships along with
carriers and submarines. They are efficient, fast and cheaper to build
and maintain.

The USS Zumwald is just another potential step in the evolution of
destroyer technology and capabilities. It may or may not become the
"go-to" design of the future but in order to determine that, designs,
CAD drawings and schematics have to be turned into hardware for
testing.

But, back to the ancient Navy ... the one we were in ... here's what
being on a destroyer was like back when I was on a couple:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ih7ygOUz_Wg




Thanks for the Navy PR and for missing the point.

The point wasn't that the ship had to make port to refuel. Refueling was
just an example. The point was that the ship had to make port for any
number of reasons, and that when it did, it would be impossible for the
ship to be "stealthy" because its presence would be known and could be
communicated, and it could be watched while in port and when leaving
port. It's not difficult watching nuclear submarines making and leaving
port, and they are a hell of a lot stealthier than the Zumwalt, and even
they can be tracked.

Any large warship at sea can be found and damaged or sunk. You can't
hide a military surface ship two football fields long at sea. The
Zumwalt is only 200 feet shorter than the Bismarck, and it was spotted
and sunk.

Perhaps the Navy can waste a hundred billion more dollars and come up
with a cloaking device.




OMG. The *Bismarck?*

What type of electronic countermeasures did the Bismarck have?

You're note about refueling ... you said, "risky, but it *can* be done.
Not only *can* it be done, it is done everyday. There's actually
significant risk refueling in port. This is JP5 kerosene type fuel they
are using.

Pull your head out of the dark ages man.


I was hi lined off a Can during a refueling once, and of course the
required payment for such a thrill ride was a trip to the bitter end of
the hi line.



This was actually taken on a "Dependent's Cruise" off the coast of
Italy. The CO's wife is being hi-lined from one ship to ours.
Bring back memories?

http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/yy303/Eisboch/img017.jpg

F*O*A*D April 20th 14 04:26 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/14, 11:17 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 11:06 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 10:54 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 10:03 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 9:30 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 9:03 AM, H*a*r*r*o*l*d wrote:
On 4/20/2014 8:13 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/19/14, 10:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
Here's a game for you Harry.

It's a "hi res" Google satellite image of the 61 million square
miles
of the Pacific Ocean.

I zoomed in close enough to draw a fairly wide, bright red line
that is
605 feet long (all to scale) and saved it on the image. I then
zoomed
back out to capture the full Pacific again and took a screen
capture
of it.

You mission, should you chose to accept it, is to find the red
line.
You can save the picture and zoom away. It's there, guarantee it.
I know where it is, so I can zoom in and easily find it.

Can you?

http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/y...ch/Pacific.jpg



I don't know...can I?

The photo is hardly "hi res."

There are aspects to locating this ship you haven't really
considered.

It's a large ship, and it is powered by fossil fuel. A lot of fossil
fuel. Refueling these ships at sea is a very risky business,
though it
can be done. It is going to have to make port for fuel, for
supplies,
and sometimes for maintenance. The number of places you can "park" a
600-foot warship are limited. The ship will be seen arriving and
departing. Ports of call many times are announced. Once its
location is
known, it can be tracked by the usual methods, including by
submarine
and by aircraft and by satellite. The Navy's PR department says the
powerplant heat bloom is minimized, as is the ship's wake and
disturbance on the ocean surface. Maybe not as well as the Navy
would
like, eh? Military PR is the very definition of self-serving.

Now, of course, very few if any of the third world countries we make
war
on have the assets to do this. But some of those countries have
sponsors
or are client states of major countries that do have modern ships,
planes, submarines, satellites. It doesn't take much effort to
"communicate" the location of an enemy's assets. I'm confident the
Russians would not be displeased if some ******** of a country
sucking
on Moscow's teat managed to put a hole through the hull of the
Zumwalt.

On another note, isn't it wonderful that I pose these "provocative"
issues here? It gives the boys something to discuss besides
Herring's
tiptoeing through the tulips, Tim's Remembrance of Posts Past*,
W'hine's
telling us just how big and fancy his boat is, Bert's
regurgitation of
his fondness for John Birch Society bull****,
Ingersoll's schizophrenia, CalifBill's own brand of right-wing
insanity,
FlaJim's junior high school insults, and so forth and so on.

As always, have nice day! :)


* Full apologies to Marcel Proust and his À la recherche du temps
perdu...

Your issues are about as provocative as a dog lifting his leg to pee.


He also hasn't a clue what he's talking about. Navy ships have been
refueling at sea every day since they ran on coal or bunker oil.
Since
the mid 1970's the newer frigates and DLGs are powered with gas
turbines
which are also refueled at sea on a regular basis. "Oilers" aren't
Oilers anymore.

In today's Navy the Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyers
perform the roles of several former ship classes including destroyers
and cruisers. The expensive to build cruiser class ship has gone the
way of the WWII battleship. The DLGs have more firepower, are
armored
(including kelvar), have Aegis Combat Systems and sophisticated,
Electronic Countermeasure Systems that are constantly being improved
upon. They have become the backbone of US Navy warships along with
carriers and submarines. They are efficient, fast and cheaper to
build
and maintain.

The USS Zumwald is just another potential step in the evolution of
destroyer technology and capabilities. It may or may not become the
"go-to" design of the future but in order to determine that, designs,
CAD drawings and schematics have to be turned into hardware for
testing.

But, back to the ancient Navy ... the one we were in ... here's what
being on a destroyer was like back when I was on a couple:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ih7ygOUz_Wg




Thanks for the Navy PR and for missing the point.

The point wasn't that the ship had to make port to refuel. Refueling
was
just an example. The point was that the ship had to make port for any
number of reasons, and that when it did, it would be impossible for the
ship to be "stealthy" because its presence would be known and could be
communicated, and it could be watched while in port and when leaving
port. It's not difficult watching nuclear submarines making and leaving
port, and they are a hell of a lot stealthier than the Zumwalt, and
even
they can be tracked.

Any large warship at sea can be found and damaged or sunk. You can't
hide a military surface ship two football fields long at sea. The
Zumwalt is only 200 feet shorter than the Bismarck, and it was spotted
and sunk.

Perhaps the Navy can waste a hundred billion more dollars and come up
with a cloaking device.




OMG. The *Bismarck?*

What type of electronic countermeasures did the Bismarck have?

You're note about refueling ... you said, "risky, but it *can* be done.
Not only *can* it be done, it is done everyday. There's actually
significant risk refueling in port. This is JP5 kerosene type fuel they
are using.

Pull your head out of the dark ages man.




You're *still* hung up on *refueling* in port. These ships make port for
many reasons.

And "electronic countermeasures" wouldn't have prevented the Bismarck
from being spotted. It was seen visually, not electronically. You know,
*big* ship, distinct profile, not easy to hide from visual and other
sorts of observation. It is the height of arrogance for the Navy to
believe a huge surface ship is just going to disappear while at sea.




Harry, that's not what electronic countermeasures are for. Good grief.
They are not a cloaking device. You must be reading the "Philadelphia
Experiment" (a hoax).

BTW .. don't know if you watched the video I linked to but you may find
this interesting . Or maybe not.

The part that shows refueling at sea reflects a tradition in the Navy
that not many are aware of. The guy in the hardhat giving the orders is
called the "Oil King". The Oil King is selected based on capability and
experience and not on rate or rank. In the video he happens to be a
lowly 2nd class Petty Officer (E-5) but during the refueling evolution
he is in total and complete command, second only to the Commanding
Officer in terms of responsibility. It's one of the rare instances
where a junior enlisted can bark out orders to those who out- rank him,
including commissioned officers.



Still the fueling bit...sheesh.

Oh, and the cloaking device is a reference to Startrek.

Mr. Luddite April 20th 14 04:34 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/2014 11:14 AM, H*a*r*r*o*l*d wrote:


I was hi lined off a Can during a refueling once, and of course the
required payment for such a thrill ride was a trip to the bitter end of
the hi line.



Here's another pic taken on the Dependent's Cruise. Much younger
versions of a couple you know.

Mrs.E. was about 8 months along with our Italian born daughter.
I don't think she was enjoying the cruise much. The stack gas coming
out behind us used to make *me* nauseous.

http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/yy303/Eisboch/img016.jpg

Mr. Luddite April 20th 14 04:37 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/2014 11:26 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 11:17 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 11:06 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 10:54 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 10:03 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 9:30 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 9:03 AM, H*a*r*r*o*l*d wrote:
On 4/20/2014 8:13 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/19/14, 10:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
Here's a game for you Harry.

It's a "hi res" Google satellite image of the 61 million square
miles
of the Pacific Ocean.

I zoomed in close enough to draw a fairly wide, bright red line
that is
605 feet long (all to scale) and saved it on the image. I then
zoomed
back out to capture the full Pacific again and took a screen
capture
of it.

You mission, should you chose to accept it, is to find the red
line.
You can save the picture and zoom away. It's there, guarantee
it.
I know where it is, so I can zoom in and easily find it.

Can you?

http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/y...ch/Pacific.jpg



I don't know...can I?

The photo is hardly "hi res."

There are aspects to locating this ship you haven't really
considered.

It's a large ship, and it is powered by fossil fuel. A lot of
fossil
fuel. Refueling these ships at sea is a very risky business,
though it
can be done. It is going to have to make port for fuel, for
supplies,
and sometimes for maintenance. The number of places you can
"park" a
600-foot warship are limited. The ship will be seen arriving and
departing. Ports of call many times are announced. Once its
location is
known, it can be tracked by the usual methods, including by
submarine
and by aircraft and by satellite. The Navy's PR department says the
powerplant heat bloom is minimized, as is the ship's wake and
disturbance on the ocean surface. Maybe not as well as the Navy
would
like, eh? Military PR is the very definition of self-serving.

Now, of course, very few if any of the third world countries we
make
war
on have the assets to do this. But some of those countries have
sponsors
or are client states of major countries that do have modern ships,
planes, submarines, satellites. It doesn't take much effort to
"communicate" the location of an enemy's assets. I'm confident the
Russians would not be displeased if some ******** of a country
sucking
on Moscow's teat managed to put a hole through the hull of the
Zumwalt.

On another note, isn't it wonderful that I pose these "provocative"
issues here? It gives the boys something to discuss besides
Herring's
tiptoeing through the tulips, Tim's Remembrance of Posts Past*,
W'hine's
telling us just how big and fancy his boat is, Bert's
regurgitation of
his fondness for John Birch Society bull****,
Ingersoll's schizophrenia, CalifBill's own brand of right-wing
insanity,
FlaJim's junior high school insults, and so forth and so on.

As always, have nice day! :)


* Full apologies to Marcel Proust and his À la recherche du temps
perdu...

Your issues are about as provocative as a dog lifting his leg to
pee.


He also hasn't a clue what he's talking about. Navy ships have been
refueling at sea every day since they ran on coal or bunker oil.
Since
the mid 1970's the newer frigates and DLGs are powered with gas
turbines
which are also refueled at sea on a regular basis. "Oilers" aren't
Oilers anymore.

In today's Navy the Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyers
perform the roles of several former ship classes including destroyers
and cruisers. The expensive to build cruiser class ship has gone the
way of the WWII battleship. The DLGs have more firepower, are
armored
(including kelvar), have Aegis Combat Systems and sophisticated,
Electronic Countermeasure Systems that are constantly being improved
upon. They have become the backbone of US Navy warships along with
carriers and submarines. They are efficient, fast and cheaper to
build
and maintain.

The USS Zumwald is just another potential step in the evolution of
destroyer technology and capabilities. It may or may not become the
"go-to" design of the future but in order to determine that, designs,
CAD drawings and schematics have to be turned into hardware for
testing.

But, back to the ancient Navy ... the one we were in ... here's what
being on a destroyer was like back when I was on a couple:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ih7ygOUz_Wg




Thanks for the Navy PR and for missing the point.

The point wasn't that the ship had to make port to refuel. Refueling
was
just an example. The point was that the ship had to make port for any
number of reasons, and that when it did, it would be impossible for
the
ship to be "stealthy" because its presence would be known and could be
communicated, and it could be watched while in port and when leaving
port. It's not difficult watching nuclear submarines making and
leaving
port, and they are a hell of a lot stealthier than the Zumwalt, and
even
they can be tracked.

Any large warship at sea can be found and damaged or sunk. You can't
hide a military surface ship two football fields long at sea. The
Zumwalt is only 200 feet shorter than the Bismarck, and it was spotted
and sunk.

Perhaps the Navy can waste a hundred billion more dollars and come up
with a cloaking device.




OMG. The *Bismarck?*

What type of electronic countermeasures did the Bismarck have?

You're note about refueling ... you said, "risky, but it *can* be
done.
Not only *can* it be done, it is done everyday. There's actually
significant risk refueling in port. This is JP5 kerosene type fuel
they
are using.

Pull your head out of the dark ages man.




You're *still* hung up on *refueling* in port. These ships make port for
many reasons.

And "electronic countermeasures" wouldn't have prevented the Bismarck
from being spotted. It was seen visually, not electronically. You know,
*big* ship, distinct profile, not easy to hide from visual and other
sorts of observation. It is the height of arrogance for the Navy to
believe a huge surface ship is just going to disappear while at sea.




Harry, that's not what electronic countermeasures are for. Good grief.
They are not a cloaking device. You must be reading the "Philadelphia
Experiment" (a hoax).

BTW .. don't know if you watched the video I linked to but you may find
this interesting . Or maybe not.

The part that shows refueling at sea reflects a tradition in the Navy
that not many are aware of. The guy in the hardhat giving the orders is
called the "Oil King". The Oil King is selected based on capability and
experience and not on rate or rank. In the video he happens to be a
lowly 2nd class Petty Officer (E-5) but during the refueling evolution
he is in total and complete command, second only to the Commanding
Officer in terms of responsibility. It's one of the rare instances
where a junior enlisted can bark out orders to those who out- rank him,
including commissioned officers.



Still the fueling bit...sheesh.

Oh, and the cloaking device is a reference to Startrek.


You read too many books and watch too many movies.



F*O*A*D April 20th 14 04:46 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/14, 11:37 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 11:26 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:


Still the fueling bit...sheesh.

Oh, and the cloaking device is a reference to Startrek.


You read too many books and watch too many movies.



Yeah, I definitely read too many books. That's probably why I think the
idea of a "stealth" ship the length of two football fields is bull****.

Most of the movies I watch have little to do with warfare, per se.

H*a*r*r*o*l*d April 20th 14 04:47 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/2014 11:24 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 11:14 AM, H*a*r*r*o*l*d wrote:
On 4/20/2014 10:54 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 10:03 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 9:30 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 9:03 AM, H*a*r*r*o*l*d wrote:
On 4/20/2014 8:13 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/19/14, 10:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
Here's a game for you Harry.

It's a "hi res" Google satellite image of the 61 million square
miles
of the Pacific Ocean.

I zoomed in close enough to draw a fairly wide, bright red line
that is
605 feet long (all to scale) and saved it on the image. I then
zoomed
back out to capture the full Pacific again and took a screen
capture
of it.

You mission, should you chose to accept it, is to find the red
line.
You can save the picture and zoom away. It's there, guarantee it.
I know where it is, so I can zoom in and easily find it.

Can you?

http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/y...ch/Pacific.jpg



I don't know...can I?

The photo is hardly "hi res."

There are aspects to locating this ship you haven't really
considered.

It's a large ship, and it is powered by fossil fuel. A lot of fossil
fuel. Refueling these ships at sea is a very risky business,
though it
can be done. It is going to have to make port for fuel, for
supplies,
and sometimes for maintenance. The number of places you can "park" a
600-foot warship are limited. The ship will be seen arriving and
departing. Ports of call many times are announced. Once its
location is
known, it can be tracked by the usual methods, including by
submarine
and by aircraft and by satellite. The Navy's PR department says the
powerplant heat bloom is minimized, as is the ship's wake and
disturbance on the ocean surface. Maybe not as well as the Navy
would
like, eh? Military PR is the very definition of self-serving.

Now, of course, very few if any of the third world countries we make
war
on have the assets to do this. But some of those countries have
sponsors
or are client states of major countries that do have modern ships,
planes, submarines, satellites. It doesn't take much effort to
"communicate" the location of an enemy's assets. I'm confident the
Russians would not be displeased if some ******** of a country
sucking
on Moscow's teat managed to put a hole through the hull of the
Zumwalt.

On another note, isn't it wonderful that I pose these "provocative"
issues here? It gives the boys something to discuss besides
Herring's
tiptoeing through the tulips, Tim's Remembrance of Posts Past*,
W'hine's
telling us just how big and fancy his boat is, Bert's
regurgitation of
his fondness for John Birch Society bull****,
Ingersoll's schizophrenia, CalifBill's own brand of right-wing
insanity,
FlaJim's junior high school insults, and so forth and so on.

As always, have nice day! :)


* Full apologies to Marcel Proust and his À la recherche du temps
perdu...

Your issues are about as provocative as a dog lifting his leg to pee.


He also hasn't a clue what he's talking about. Navy ships have been
refueling at sea every day since they ran on coal or bunker oil.
Since
the mid 1970's the newer frigates and DLGs are powered with gas
turbines
which are also refueled at sea on a regular basis. "Oilers" aren't
Oilers anymore.

In today's Navy the Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyers
perform the roles of several former ship classes including destroyers
and cruisers. The expensive to build cruiser class ship has gone the
way of the WWII battleship. The DLGs have more firepower, are
armored
(including kelvar), have Aegis Combat Systems and sophisticated,
Electronic Countermeasure Systems that are constantly being improved
upon. They have become the backbone of US Navy warships along with
carriers and submarines. They are efficient, fast and cheaper to
build
and maintain.

The USS Zumwald is just another potential step in the evolution of
destroyer technology and capabilities. It may or may not become the
"go-to" design of the future but in order to determine that, designs,
CAD drawings and schematics have to be turned into hardware for
testing.

But, back to the ancient Navy ... the one we were in ... here's what
being on a destroyer was like back when I was on a couple:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ih7ygOUz_Wg




Thanks for the Navy PR and for missing the point.

The point wasn't that the ship had to make port to refuel. Refueling
was
just an example. The point was that the ship had to make port for any
number of reasons, and that when it did, it would be impossible for the
ship to be "stealthy" because its presence would be known and could be
communicated, and it could be watched while in port and when leaving
port. It's not difficult watching nuclear submarines making and leaving
port, and they are a hell of a lot stealthier than the Zumwalt, and
even
they can be tracked.

Any large warship at sea can be found and damaged or sunk. You can't
hide a military surface ship two football fields long at sea. The
Zumwalt is only 200 feet shorter than the Bismarck, and it was spotted
and sunk.

Perhaps the Navy can waste a hundred billion more dollars and come up
with a cloaking device.




OMG. The *Bismarck?*

What type of electronic countermeasures did the Bismarck have?

You're note about refueling ... you said, "risky, but it *can* be done.
Not only *can* it be done, it is done everyday. There's actually
significant risk refueling in port. This is JP5 kerosene type fuel they
are using.

Pull your head out of the dark ages man.


I was hi lined off a Can during a refueling once, and of course the
required payment for such a thrill ride was a trip to the bitter end of
the hi line.



This was actually taken on a "Dependent's Cruise" off the coast of
Italy. The CO's wife is being hi-lined from one ship to ours.
Bring back memories?

http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/yy303/Eisboch/img017.jpg


Yes, but I don't remember the orange protective floatation curtains.
That must be something reserved for dignitaries.

H*a*r*r*o*l*d April 20th 14 04:49 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/2014 11:26 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 11:17 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 11:06 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 10:54 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 10:03 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 9:30 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 9:03 AM, H*a*r*r*o*l*d wrote:
On 4/20/2014 8:13 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/19/14, 10:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
Here's a game for you Harry.

It's a "hi res" Google satellite image of the 61 million square
miles
of the Pacific Ocean.

I zoomed in close enough to draw a fairly wide, bright red line
that is
605 feet long (all to scale) and saved it on the image. I then
zoomed
back out to capture the full Pacific again and took a screen
capture
of it.

You mission, should you chose to accept it, is to find the red
line.
You can save the picture and zoom away. It's there, guarantee
it.
I know where it is, so I can zoom in and easily find it.

Can you?

http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/y...ch/Pacific.jpg



I don't know...can I?

The photo is hardly "hi res."

There are aspects to locating this ship you haven't really
considered.

It's a large ship, and it is powered by fossil fuel. A lot of
fossil
fuel. Refueling these ships at sea is a very risky business,
though it
can be done. It is going to have to make port for fuel, for
supplies,
and sometimes for maintenance. The number of places you can
"park" a
600-foot warship are limited. The ship will be seen arriving and
departing. Ports of call many times are announced. Once its
location is
known, it can be tracked by the usual methods, including by
submarine
and by aircraft and by satellite. The Navy's PR department says the
powerplant heat bloom is minimized, as is the ship's wake and
disturbance on the ocean surface. Maybe not as well as the Navy
would
like, eh? Military PR is the very definition of self-serving.

Now, of course, very few if any of the third world countries we
make
war
on have the assets to do this. But some of those countries have
sponsors
or are client states of major countries that do have modern ships,
planes, submarines, satellites. It doesn't take much effort to
"communicate" the location of an enemy's assets. I'm confident the
Russians would not be displeased if some ******** of a country
sucking
on Moscow's teat managed to put a hole through the hull of the
Zumwalt.

On another note, isn't it wonderful that I pose these "provocative"
issues here? It gives the boys something to discuss besides
Herring's
tiptoeing through the tulips, Tim's Remembrance of Posts Past*,
W'hine's
telling us just how big and fancy his boat is, Bert's
regurgitation of
his fondness for John Birch Society bull****,
Ingersoll's schizophrenia, CalifBill's own brand of right-wing
insanity,
FlaJim's junior high school insults, and so forth and so on.

As always, have nice day! :)


* Full apologies to Marcel Proust and his À la recherche du temps
perdu...

Your issues are about as provocative as a dog lifting his leg to
pee.


He also hasn't a clue what he's talking about. Navy ships have been
refueling at sea every day since they ran on coal or bunker oil.
Since
the mid 1970's the newer frigates and DLGs are powered with gas
turbines
which are also refueled at sea on a regular basis. "Oilers" aren't
Oilers anymore.

In today's Navy the Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyers
perform the roles of several former ship classes including destroyers
and cruisers. The expensive to build cruiser class ship has gone the
way of the WWII battleship. The DLGs have more firepower, are
armored
(including kelvar), have Aegis Combat Systems and sophisticated,
Electronic Countermeasure Systems that are constantly being improved
upon. They have become the backbone of US Navy warships along with
carriers and submarines. They are efficient, fast and cheaper to
build
and maintain.

The USS Zumwald is just another potential step in the evolution of
destroyer technology and capabilities. It may or may not become the
"go-to" design of the future but in order to determine that, designs,
CAD drawings and schematics have to be turned into hardware for
testing.

But, back to the ancient Navy ... the one we were in ... here's what
being on a destroyer was like back when I was on a couple:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ih7ygOUz_Wg




Thanks for the Navy PR and for missing the point.

The point wasn't that the ship had to make port to refuel. Refueling
was
just an example. The point was that the ship had to make port for any
number of reasons, and that when it did, it would be impossible for
the
ship to be "stealthy" because its presence would be known and could be
communicated, and it could be watched while in port and when leaving
port. It's not difficult watching nuclear submarines making and
leaving
port, and they are a hell of a lot stealthier than the Zumwalt, and
even
they can be tracked.

Any large warship at sea can be found and damaged or sunk. You can't
hide a military surface ship two football fields long at sea. The
Zumwalt is only 200 feet shorter than the Bismarck, and it was spotted
and sunk.

Perhaps the Navy can waste a hundred billion more dollars and come up
with a cloaking device.




OMG. The *Bismarck?*

What type of electronic countermeasures did the Bismarck have?

You're note about refueling ... you said, "risky, but it *can* be
done.
Not only *can* it be done, it is done everyday. There's actually
significant risk refueling in port. This is JP5 kerosene type fuel
they
are using.

Pull your head out of the dark ages man.




You're *still* hung up on *refueling* in port. These ships make port for
many reasons.

And "electronic countermeasures" wouldn't have prevented the Bismarck
from being spotted. It was seen visually, not electronically. You know,
*big* ship, distinct profile, not easy to hide from visual and other
sorts of observation. It is the height of arrogance for the Navy to
believe a huge surface ship is just going to disappear while at sea.




Harry, that's not what electronic countermeasures are for. Good grief.
They are not a cloaking device. You must be reading the "Philadelphia
Experiment" (a hoax).

BTW .. don't know if you watched the video I linked to but you may find
this interesting . Or maybe not.

The part that shows refueling at sea reflects a tradition in the Navy
that not many are aware of. The guy in the hardhat giving the orders is
called the "Oil King". The Oil King is selected based on capability and
experience and not on rate or rank. In the video he happens to be a
lowly 2nd class Petty Officer (E-5) but during the refueling evolution
he is in total and complete command, second only to the Commanding
Officer in terms of responsibility. It's one of the rare instances
where a junior enlisted can bark out orders to those who out- rank him,
including commissioned officers.



Still the fueling bit...sheesh.

Oh, and the cloaking device is a reference to Startrek.


He's just filling you in on some of the details since you weren't privy
to them in your line of work.

H*a*r*r*o*l*d April 20th 14 04:52 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/2014 11:46 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 11:37 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 11:26 AM, F*O*A*D wrote:


Still the fueling bit...sheesh.

Oh, and the cloaking device is a reference to Startrek.


You read too many books and watch too many movies.



Yeah, I definitely read too many books. That's probably why I think the
idea of a "stealth" ship the length of two football fields is bull****.

Most of the movies I watch have little to do with warfare, per se.


What do you mean "per se", arsehole?

Boating All Out April 20th 14 05:04 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
In article ,
says...


The USS Zumwald is just another potential step in the evolution of
destroyer technology and capabilities. It may or may not become the
"go-to" design of the future but in order to determine that, designs,
CAD drawings and schematics have to be turned into hardware for testing.


It shouldn't even be called a Destroyer. It's a Cruiser.
It's 600 feet long.
What next, 300 foot "patrol boats?"
Got a feeling that hull shape won't work well.


F*O*A*D April 20th 14 05:12 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/14, 12:04 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 20 Apr 2014 10:03:06 -0400, F*O*A*D wrote:

Any large warship at sea can be found and damaged or sunk. You can't
hide a military surface ship two football fields long at sea. The
Zumwalt is only 200 feet shorter than the Bismarck, and it was spotted
and sunk.


When was the last US warship "found and sunk"?



The U.S.S. Cole was "found" and seriously damaged in an attack in Yemen.
It didn't sink, but it was rendered useless.

Are you trying to say it can't happen?

Mr. Luddite April 20th 14 05:51 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/2014 12:12 PM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 12:04 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 20 Apr 2014 10:03:06 -0400, F*O*A*D wrote:

Any large warship at sea can be found and damaged or sunk. You can't
hide a military surface ship two football fields long at sea. The
Zumwalt is only 200 feet shorter than the Bismarck, and it was spotted
and sunk.


When was the last US warship "found and sunk"?



The U.S.S. Cole was "found" and seriously damaged in an attack in Yemen.
It didn't sink, but it was rendered useless.

Are you trying to say it can't happen?



It was "found" tied up to a pier, powered down. Good grief.



Mr. Luddite April 20th 14 07:30 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/2014 1:15 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 20 Apr 2014 11:26:44 -0400, F*O*A*D wrote:




Still the fueling bit...sheesh.

Oh, and the cloaking device is a reference to Startrek.


I don't know why you are so hung up on the stealth.

In most cases we would make a big deal about the ship being there.
You usually want people to see your "big stick" in hopes you won't
have to use it.
If it does become necessary, this is certainly a big stick with far
more firepower than the Bismark at 100 times the range.

I do tend to agree a but that this "stealth" thing is just the
"Chlorophyll" of the 21st century. (a 50s reference for you kids).

Being stealthy is just an edge, not a panacea. In a war, having an
edge is a good thing tho. If you can see them from farther away than
they can see you, it is a lot easier to kill them. This ship is far
from defenseless against just about anything..



No ship is totally immune to attack but modern naval vessels aren't as
easy to hit as Harry would like to think. Just because they are big
doesn't make them more vulnerable. In addition, "big" is relative. A
1,100 foot aircraft carrier may look big at the dock or beside a smaller
destroyer but in the middle of the Atlantic or Pacific, the size
difference really doesn't matter. They are both tiny specks in a huge
ocean.

The whole idea behind ships like the Zumwalt is that it combines several
state-of-the-art technologies that allows it to engage and likely
destroy a threat that is over the horizon, 100 miles away. Anti-ship
missiles can be deadly but they rely on some form of guidance system to
direct them to the target. The more difficult to be seen or detected,
the less likelihood of being hit. In addition, ships today have very
sophisticated electronic countermeasure systems that can redirect
incoming missiles.

Mr. Luddite April 20th 14 07:54 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/2014 1:54 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 20 Apr 2014 12:51:30 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 4/20/2014 12:12 PM, F*O*A*D wrote:


The U.S.S. Cole was "found" and seriously damaged in an attack in Yemen.
It didn't sink, but it was rendered useless.

Are you trying to say it can't happen?



It was "found" tied up to a pier, powered down. Good grief.


That was a serious intelligence and security failure that should have
been blamed on everyone from the captain to the CnC.

What were the rules of engagement and were on they on any kind of
alert status at all?
Aden was far from a friendly port, even in those days.



The Cole was under a "High Threat Level" and in "Condition Bravo"
except few knew it. The Rules of Engagement at the time was still not
to open fire unless fired upon.

That changed.



Mr. Luddite April 20th 14 08:01 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/2014 2:45 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 20 Apr 2014 14:30:48 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 4/20/2014 1:15 PM,
wrote:
On Sun, 20 Apr 2014 11:26:44 -0400, F*O*A*D wrote:




Still the fueling bit...sheesh.

Oh, and the cloaking device is a reference to Startrek.

I don't know why you are so hung up on the stealth.

In most cases we would make a big deal about the ship being there.
You usually want people to see your "big stick" in hopes you won't
have to use it.
If it does become necessary, this is certainly a big stick with far
more firepower than the Bismark at 100 times the range.

I do tend to agree a but that this "stealth" thing is just the
"Chlorophyll" of the 21st century. (a 50s reference for you kids).

Being stealthy is just an edge, not a panacea. In a war, having an
edge is a good thing tho. If you can see them from farther away than
they can see you, it is a lot easier to kill them. This ship is far
from defenseless against just about anything..



No ship is totally immune to attack but modern naval vessels aren't as
easy to hit as Harry would like to think. Just because they are big
doesn't make them more vulnerable. In addition, "big" is relative. A
1,100 foot aircraft carrier may look big at the dock or beside a smaller
destroyer but in the middle of the Atlantic or Pacific, the size
difference really doesn't matter. They are both tiny specks in a huge
ocean.

The whole idea behind ships like the Zumwalt is that it combines several
state-of-the-art technologies that allows it to engage and likely
destroy a threat that is over the horizon, 100 miles away. Anti-ship
missiles can be deadly but they rely on some form of guidance system to
direct them to the target. The more difficult to be seen or detected,
the less likelihood of being hit. In addition, ships today have very
sophisticated electronic countermeasure systems that can redirect
incoming missiles.



I always wondered how that stealth works when they turn on the radar.


Google up "frequency agility radar" of which there are many types and
modes.



Mr. Luddite April 20th 14 09:11 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/2014 3:23 PM, BAR wrote:
In article , says...

On 4/19/14, 10:36 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
Here's a game for you Harry.

It's a "hi res" Google satellite image of the 61 million square miles
of the Pacific Ocean.

I zoomed in close enough to draw a fairly wide, bright red line that is
605 feet long (all to scale) and saved it on the image. I then zoomed
back out to capture the full Pacific again and took a screen capture of it.

You mission, should you chose to accept it, is to find the red line.
You can save the picture and zoom away. It's there, guarantee it.
I know where it is, so I can zoom in and easily find it.

Can you?

http://i802.photobucket.com/albums/y...ch/Pacific.jpg



I don't know...can I?

The photo is hardly "hi res."

There are aspects to locating this ship you haven't really considered.

It's a large ship, and it is powered by fossil fuel. A lot of fossil
fuel. Refueling these ships at sea is a very risky business, though it
can be done. It is going to have to make port for fuel, for supplies,
and sometimes for maintenance. The number of places you can "park" a
600-foot warship are limited. The ship will be seen arriving and
departing. Ports of call many times are announced. Once its location is
known, it can be tracked by the usual methods, including by submarine
and by aircraft and by satellite. The Navy's PR department says the
powerplant heat bloom is minimized, as is the ship's wake and
disturbance on the ocean surface. Maybe not as well as the Navy would
like, eh? Military PR is the very definition of self-serving.

Now, of course, very few if any of the third world countries we make war
on have the assets to do this. But some of those countries have sponsors
or are client states of major countries that do have modern ships,
planes, submarines, satellites. It doesn't take much effort to
"communicate" the location of an enemy's assets. I'm confident the
Russians would not be displeased if some ******** of a country sucking
on Moscow's teat managed to put a hole through the hull of the Zumwalt.

On another note, isn't it wonderful that I pose these "provocative"
issues here? It gives the boys something to discuss besides Herring's
tiptoeing through the tulips, Tim's Remembrance of Posts Past*, W'hine's
telling us just how big and fancy his boat is, Bert's regurgitation of
his fondness for John Birch Society bull****,
Ingersoll's schizophrenia, CalifBill's own brand of right-wing insanity,
FlaJim's junior high school insults, and so forth and so on.

As always, have nice day! :)


* Full apologies to Marcel Proust and his À la recherche du temps perdu...


Warships can stay out to sea for years, anything they need can be
delivered by an oiler or a helicopter.


They could but they don't. Crew would go nuts. Even nuke subs limit
their patrols to six months max.

Longest "at sea" period I had was 41 days and that felt like years.
Channel fever gets turned up a few notches.




F*O*A*D April 20th 14 10:12 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/14, 3:01 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 2:45 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 20 Apr 2014 14:30:48 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 4/20/2014 1:15 PM,
wrote:
On Sun, 20 Apr 2014 11:26:44 -0400, F*O*A*D wrote:




Still the fueling bit...sheesh.

Oh, and the cloaking device is a reference to Startrek.

I don't know why you are so hung up on the stealth.

In most cases we would make a big deal about the ship being there.
You usually want people to see your "big stick" in hopes you won't
have to use it.
If it does become necessary, this is certainly a big stick with far
more firepower than the Bismark at 100 times the range.

I do tend to agree a but that this "stealth" thing is just the
"Chlorophyll" of the 21st century. (a 50s reference for you kids).

Being stealthy is just an edge, not a panacea. In a war, having an
edge is a good thing tho. If you can see them from farther away than
they can see you, it is a lot easier to kill them. This ship is far
from defenseless against just about anything..



No ship is totally immune to attack but modern naval vessels aren't as
easy to hit as Harry would like to think. Just because they are big
doesn't make them more vulnerable. In addition, "big" is relative. A
1,100 foot aircraft carrier may look big at the dock or beside a smaller
destroyer but in the middle of the Atlantic or Pacific, the size
difference really doesn't matter. They are both tiny specks in a huge
ocean.

The whole idea behind ships like the Zumwalt is that it combines several
state-of-the-art technologies that allows it to engage and likely
destroy a threat that is over the horizon, 100 miles away. Anti-ship
missiles can be deadly but they rely on some form of guidance system to
direct them to the target. The more difficult to be seen or detected,
the less likelihood of being hit. In addition, ships today have very
sophisticated electronic countermeasure systems that can redirect
incoming missiles.



I always wondered how that stealth works when they turn on the radar.


Google up "frequency agility radar" of which there are many types and
modes.



I don't know what it is, but I'm sure W'hine has it on his boat.

Mr. Luddite April 20th 14 10:33 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/2014 5:12 PM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 3:01 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 2:45 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 20 Apr 2014 14:30:48 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 4/20/2014 1:15 PM,
wrote:
On Sun, 20 Apr 2014 11:26:44 -0400, F*O*A*D wrote:




Still the fueling bit...sheesh.

Oh, and the cloaking device is a reference to Startrek.

I don't know why you are so hung up on the stealth.

In most cases we would make a big deal about the ship being there.
You usually want people to see your "big stick" in hopes you won't
have to use it.
If it does become necessary, this is certainly a big stick with far
more firepower than the Bismark at 100 times the range.

I do tend to agree a but that this "stealth" thing is just the
"Chlorophyll" of the 21st century. (a 50s reference for you kids).

Being stealthy is just an edge, not a panacea. In a war, having an
edge is a good thing tho. If you can see them from farther away than
they can see you, it is a lot easier to kill them. This ship is far
from defenseless against just about anything..



No ship is totally immune to attack but modern naval vessels aren't as
easy to hit as Harry would like to think. Just because they are big
doesn't make them more vulnerable. In addition, "big" is relative. A
1,100 foot aircraft carrier may look big at the dock or beside a
smaller
destroyer but in the middle of the Atlantic or Pacific, the size
difference really doesn't matter. They are both tiny specks in a huge
ocean.

The whole idea behind ships like the Zumwalt is that it combines
several
state-of-the-art technologies that allows it to engage and likely
destroy a threat that is over the horizon, 100 miles away. Anti-ship
missiles can be deadly but they rely on some form of guidance system to
direct them to the target. The more difficult to be seen or detected,
the less likelihood of being hit. In addition, ships today have very
sophisticated electronic countermeasure systems that can redirect
incoming missiles.


I always wondered how that stealth works when they turn on the radar.


Google up "frequency agility radar" of which there are many types and
modes.



I don't know what it is, but I'm sure W'hine has it on his boat.



Another misconception is the belief that ship based radar or any other
electromagnetic radiation is even required to acquire, designate and
guide a missile or other weapon to a target. It used to be so but not
anymore.



F*O*A*D April 20th 14 10:47 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/14, 5:33 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 5:12 PM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 3:01 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:



Google up "frequency agility radar" of which there are many types and
modes.



I don't know what it is, but I'm sure W'hine has it on his boat.



Another misconception is the belief that ship based radar or any other
electromagnetic radiation is even required to acquire, designate and
guide a missile or other weapon to a target. It used to be so but not
anymore.



I'll keep that in mind with my next order of boat missiles. I did order
a bunch of .38 Special FMJs for my new six shooter, but I doubt they'd
be adequate to take down a mighty stealth dory.

Mr. Luddite April 20th 14 10:54 PM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/2014 5:47 PM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 5:33 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 5:12 PM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 3:01 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:



Google up "frequency agility radar" of which there are many types and
modes.



I don't know what it is, but I'm sure W'hine has it on his boat.



Another misconception is the belief that ship based radar or any other
electromagnetic radiation is even required to acquire, designate and
guide a missile or other weapon to a target. It used to be so but not
anymore.



I'll keep that in mind with my next order of boat missiles. I did order
a bunch of .38 Special FMJs for my new six shooter, but I doubt they'd
be adequate to take down a mighty stealth dory.



Hey, this discussion has been closer to being on-topic than discussing
whether Jesus had a mortal Jewish father.



[email protected] April 21st 14 12:36 AM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On Sunday, April 20, 2014 1:23:16 PM UTC-4, wrote:
On Sun, 20 Apr 2014 12:12:22 -0400, F*O*A*D wrote:



On 4/20/14, 12:04 PM, wrote:


On Sun, 20 Apr 2014 10:03:06 -0400, F*O*A*D wrote:




Any large warship at sea can be found and damaged or sunk. You can't


hide a military surface ship two football fields long at sea. The


Zumwalt is only 200 feet shorter than the Bismarck, and it was spotted


and sunk.




When was the last US warship "found and sunk"?








The U.S.S. Cole was "found" and seriously damaged in an attack in Yemen.


It didn't sink, but it was rendered useless.




Are you trying to say it can't happen?




It was not sunk and in relative terms, there was not even that big a

loss of life. Compared to WWII ships that were damaged and sailed

away, it was just a flesh wound.



That incident was just because we were lax in our security levels. A

small boat charging a warship like that in a hostile port these days

would be blown out of the water.

I bet you would even be engaged if you did it in the US (probably

simply arrested but they might shoot)

You go first ;-)


One of the girls on our boat on the river cruise down to Charleston took a couple of pictures of the sub base as we were passing by, against my warnings. We were boarded by the navy police in the RIB with the .50 caliber that is stationed on the river 24/7. The guy didn't have much of a sense of humor, but after he watched her delete the pics from her camera (from a vantage point that gave him a good look down the front of her skimpy black bikini), he let us go.

On another trip, we were passing by an unmarked blue and white cargo ship that was being loaded in the harbor. Got too close, and a couple of coasties in RIBs chased us away. As we swung out and passed by, we could see military trucks being loaded.

They seem to take security fairly seriously.

H*a*r*r*o*l*d April 21st 14 01:20 AM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/2014 5:12 PM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 3:01 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 2:45 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 20 Apr 2014 14:30:48 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 4/20/2014 1:15 PM,
wrote:
On Sun, 20 Apr 2014 11:26:44 -0400, F*O*A*D wrote:




Still the fueling bit...sheesh.

Oh, and the cloaking device is a reference to Startrek.

I don't know why you are so hung up on the stealth.

In most cases we would make a big deal about the ship being there.
You usually want people to see your "big stick" in hopes you won't
have to use it.
If it does become necessary, this is certainly a big stick with far
more firepower than the Bismark at 100 times the range.

I do tend to agree a but that this "stealth" thing is just the
"Chlorophyll" of the 21st century. (a 50s reference for you kids).

Being stealthy is just an edge, not a panacea. In a war, having an
edge is a good thing tho. If you can see them from farther away than
they can see you, it is a lot easier to kill them. This ship is far
from defenseless against just about anything..



No ship is totally immune to attack but modern naval vessels aren't as
easy to hit as Harry would like to think. Just because they are big
doesn't make them more vulnerable. In addition, "big" is relative. A
1,100 foot aircraft carrier may look big at the dock or beside a
smaller
destroyer but in the middle of the Atlantic or Pacific, the size
difference really doesn't matter. They are both tiny specks in a huge
ocean.

The whole idea behind ships like the Zumwalt is that it combines
several
state-of-the-art technologies that allows it to engage and likely
destroy a threat that is over the horizon, 100 miles away. Anti-ship
missiles can be deadly but they rely on some form of guidance system to
direct them to the target. The more difficult to be seen or detected,
the less likelihood of being hit. In addition, ships today have very
sophisticated electronic countermeasure systems that can redirect
incoming missiles.


I always wondered how that stealth works when they turn on the radar.


Google up "frequency agility radar" of which there are many types and
modes.



I don't know what it is, but I'm sure W'hine has it on his boat.

I'm sure Wayne's boat has numerous long range capabilities that your
typical twin Volvo pseudo trawler can't duplicate.

H*a*r*r*o*l*d April 21st 14 01:23 AM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/2014 5:47 PM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 5:33 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 5:12 PM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 3:01 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:



Google up "frequency agility radar" of which there are many types and
modes.



I don't know what it is, but I'm sure W'hine has it on his boat.



Another misconception is the belief that ship based radar or any other
electromagnetic radiation is even required to acquire, designate and
guide a missile or other weapon to a target. It used to be so but not
anymore.



I'll keep that in mind with my next order of boat missiles. I did order
a bunch of .38 Special FMJs for my new six shooter, but I doubt they'd
be adequate to take down a mighty stealth dory.


Which ruger six shooter did you order and why. I'm still interested in
the Smith 7 shooter.

H*a*r*r*o*l*d April 21st 14 01:24 AM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/2014 5:54 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 5:47 PM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 5:33 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 4/20/2014 5:12 PM, F*O*A*D wrote:
On 4/20/14, 3:01 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:



Google up "frequency agility radar" of which there are many types and
modes.



I don't know what it is, but I'm sure W'hine has it on his boat.


Another misconception is the belief that ship based radar or any other
electromagnetic radiation is even required to acquire, designate and
guide a missile or other weapon to a target. It used to be so but not
anymore.



I'll keep that in mind with my next order of boat missiles. I did order
a bunch of .38 Special FMJs for my new six shooter, but I doubt they'd
be adequate to take down a mighty stealth dory.



Hey, this discussion has been closer to being on-topic than discussing
whether Jesus had a mortal Jewish father.


Don't push it ;-)

Mr. Luddite April 21st 14 01:41 AM

USS Zumwalt Hunting (for Harry)
 
On 4/20/2014 8:27 PM, BAR wrote:
In article ,
says...

On Sun, 20 Apr 2014 14:30:48 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 4/20/2014 1:15 PM,
wrote:
On Sun, 20 Apr 2014 11:26:44 -0400, F*O*A*D wrote:




Still the fueling bit...sheesh.

Oh, and the cloaking device is a reference to Startrek.

I don't know why you are so hung up on the stealth.

In most cases we would make a big deal about the ship being there.
You usually want people to see your "big stick" in hopes you won't
have to use it.
If it does become necessary, this is certainly a big stick with far
more firepower than the Bismark at 100 times the range.

I do tend to agree a but that this "stealth" thing is just the
"Chlorophyll" of the 21st century. (a 50s reference for you kids).

Being stealthy is just an edge, not a panacea. In a war, having an
edge is a good thing tho. If you can see them from farther away than
they can see you, it is a lot easier to kill them. This ship is far
from defenseless against just about anything..



No ship is totally immune to attack but modern naval vessels aren't as
easy to hit as Harry would like to think. Just because they are big
doesn't make them more vulnerable. In addition, "big" is relative. A
1,100 foot aircraft carrier may look big at the dock or beside a smaller
destroyer but in the middle of the Atlantic or Pacific, the size
difference really doesn't matter. They are both tiny specks in a huge
ocean.

The whole idea behind ships like the Zumwalt is that it combines several
state-of-the-art technologies that allows it to engage and likely
destroy a threat that is over the horizon, 100 miles away. Anti-ship
missiles can be deadly but they rely on some form of guidance system to
direct them to the target. The more difficult to be seen or detected,
the less likelihood of being hit. In addition, ships today have very
sophisticated electronic countermeasure systems that can redirect
incoming missiles.



I always wondered how that stealth works when they turn on the radar.



You mean when they turn on the look at me switch.


You guys are really behind the times. It was realized early on that
radar and ship mounted radar guided munitions had the serious
disadvantage of providing an electronic "return" guidance path to the
point of origin.

Modern ships don't provide that guidance and in many cases ship based
radar isn't used at all in the delivery of missiles and munitions.





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