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"Terry Rago" wrote in message news:eKTKb.766800$Tr4.2203780@attbi_s03...
"Gould 0738" wrote in message ... 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 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. There is never a "Zero" reading, when on the surface it is mid to high 30's depending on the type of sub. Also for safety sake we never surface a little bit, when we surface all ballast is blown. Terry Airplane altimeters read zero only if the airplane is taxying into the ocean. Or flying deep in Death Valley or the Dead Sea Valley. Zero isn't necessary for operators of subs or airplanes or anything else. I can see that depth to keel would be safest, with reference to depth charts. In aviation we use maps with obstruction and terrain altitudes on them. This complete surfacing of subs: Is this due to the neutral lateral stability at certain waterlines? I read about that somewhere, some book that referred to the danger of submerging in really rough seas and the danger of rollover. Dan |