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Submarines, Car Engines, and Displacement
On Sat, 10 Jan 2004 01:44:51 +0000, James Johnson wrote:
If you do an emergency blow from test depth, the forward third of the boat will come completely out of the water when the boat reaches the surface. For those few seconds I think that would be a 'zero' reading. I think we have all seen pictures of that, quite impressive. I've always wondered what it would be like inside at the time. It must be a rather rough ride? |
Submarines, Car Engines, and Displacement
yes, a sub can read zero ! talking to my dad who worked on subs, actually
the gauge can be re-calibrated thus zero can be read. at any point they wish, when the bottom of the hull is still 20feet below the surface. Most of you, do not even know, nuclear bombs are also placed in special torpedoes, of which it would not take more than two to take out Cuba !!! "James Johnson" wrote in message ... On 07 Jan 2004 08:04:48 GMT, (Gould 0738) wrote: Fascinating. What does the depth indicator say when the sub is surfaced? Obviously it would not be zero. That would depend on how far it surfaced. Did it blow all ballast or is it just barely surfaced? Steve If you do an emergency blow from test depth, the forward third of the boat will come completely out of the water when the boat reaches the surface. For those few seconds I think that would be a 'zero' reading. JJ It can't blow enough ballast to put the keel on the surface. My point is merely that if the depth is measured between the surface and the keel, (and I have no reason to doubt that it is) there could never be a "zero" reading. James Johnson remove the "dot" from after sail in email address to reply |
Submarines, Car Engines, and Displacement
"Joseph Stachyra" wrote (snip ) Most of you, do not even know, nuclear bombs are also placed in special torpedoes, of which it would not take more than two to take out Cuba !!! Please, don't even think that about Cuba. It is a beautiful country and I am going boating there, in February, for my annual winter vaction!!!! Jim Carter "The Boat" Bayfield |
Submarines, Car Engines, and Displacement
Jim Carter wrote:
"Joseph Stachyra" wrote (snip ) Most of you, do not even know, nuclear bombs are also placed in special torpedoes, of which it would not take more than two to take out Cuba !!! Please, don't even think that about Cuba. It is a beautiful country and I am going boating there, in February, for my annual winter vaction!!!! Jim Carter "The Boat" Bayfield Good grief. Cuba. Why are we still at war with Cuba? If there is a dumber American foreign policy than what we've done with Cuba for the last half-century, I'm unaware of it. Even today, Bush is kissing the ass of the PRC and horrific dictatorships all over the world, but is kicking Cuba in the ass. Ker-ripes. -- Email sent to is never read. |
Submarines, Car Engines, and Displacement
On Sat, 10 Jan 2004 16:03:06 GMT, "Joseph Stachyra"
wrote: yes, a sub can read zero ! talking to my dad who worked on subs, actually the gauge can be re-calibrated thus zero can be read. at any point they wish, when the bottom of the hull is still 20feet below the surface. Most of you, do not even know, nuclear bombs are also placed in special torpedoes, of which it would not take more than two to take out Cuba !!! There are also nuclear bombs on depth charges, of which it would not take more than one to take out a submarine.:) Steve |
Submarines, Car Engines, and Displacement
On Sat, 10 Jan 2004 11:26:24 -0500, Harry Krause
wrote: Jim Carter wrote: "Joseph Stachyra" wrote (snip ) Most of you, do not even know, nuclear bombs are also placed in special torpedoes, of which it would not take more than two to take out Cuba !!! Please, don't even think that about Cuba. It is a beautiful country and I am going boating there, in February, for my annual winter vaction!!!! Jim Carter "The Boat" Bayfield Good grief. Cuba. Why are we still at war with Cuba? If there is a dumber American foreign policy than what we've done with Cuba for the last half-century, I'm unaware of it. We're at war with Cuba? That I was unaware of. Even today, Bush is kissing the ass of the PRC and horrific dictatorships all over the world, but is kicking Cuba in the ass. We just need to strip the Cuban exiles in this country of their right to vote and then we can all visit Cuba and spend our money there legally. Steve |
Submarines, Car Engines, and Displacement
Steven Shelikoff wrote:
On Sat, 10 Jan 2004 11:26:24 -0500, Harry Krause wrote: Jim Carter wrote: "Joseph Stachyra" wrote (snip ) Most of you, do not even know, nuclear bombs are also placed in special torpedoes, of which it would not take more than two to take out Cuba !!! Please, don't even think that about Cuba. It is a beautiful country and I am going boating there, in February, for my annual winter vaction!!!! Jim Carter "The Boat" Bayfield Good grief. Cuba. Why are we still at war with Cuba? If there is a dumber American foreign policy than what we've done with Cuba for the last half-century, I'm unaware of it. We're at war with Cuba? That I was unaware of. Don't be so literal, Steve. It doesn't become you. Even today, Bush is kissing the ass of the PRC and horrific dictatorships all over the world, but is kicking Cuba in the ass. We just need to strip the Cuban exiles in this country of their right to vote and then we can all visit Cuba and spend our money there legally. Steve Well, we do need to ensure that after Castro, the exiles don't go back and try to assert some "rights" they think they have. -- Email sent to is never read. |
Submarines, Car Engines, and Displacement
On Fri, 09 Jan 2004 23:01:53 -0500, thunder wrote:
On Sat, 10 Jan 2004 01:44:51 +0000, James Johnson wrote: If you do an emergency blow from test depth, the forward third of the boat will come completely out of the water when the boat reaches the surface. For those few seconds I think that would be a 'zero' reading. I think we have all seen pictures of that, quite impressive. I've always wondered what it would be like inside at the time. It must be a rather Everything is rattling, shaking and vibrating on the way up. When you break the surface it suddenly gets a lot quieter, and the fall back down is surprisingly gentle compared to the ride up. JJ rough ride? James Johnson remove the "dot" from after sail in email address to reply |
Submarines, Car Engines, and Displacement
On Sat, 10 Jan 2004 16:21:30 GMT, "Jim Carter" wrote: "Joseph Stachyra" wrote (snip ) Most of you, do not even know, nuclear bombs are also placed in special torpedoes, of which it would not take more than two to take out Cuba !!! I don't think the Mark45 has been deployed in decades. They were not very practical, for even at maximum range and the boat pointed either directly towards or directly away from the target there was a surprisingly large chance that you would not survive the shock waves. Cruise missiles made them obsolete. JJ Please, don't even think that about Cuba. It is a beautiful country and I am going boating there, in February, for my annual winter vaction!!!! Jim Carter "The Boat" Bayfield James Johnson remove the "dot" from after sail in email address to reply |
Submarines, Car Engines, and Displacement
snip
Well, we do need to ensure that after Castro, the exiles don't go back and try to assert some "rights" they think they have. I heard from someone who had been to Cuba often that the Cubans aren't going to have somebody in power who fled to the US and missed the "Hard Times" under Castro. Maybe it was on one of the boat groups, now that I think about it. Mark E. Williams |
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