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![]() wrote in message ... All you Navy guys were sissies. The Coast Guard bounced around the same water in AVPs (311ft) "Secretary" cutters (327 ft) and the WPG (255ft). By the mid 60s the "weather patrols" were pretty much a navy operation anyway in white ships. I figued it was just a way to hide DoD expenses in the Treasury and later DoT budget. We were quietly transformed into ASW platforms. I was in the ordinance department and still never had a clue ablut our SONAR equipment and I was in charge of the ASW torpedos. They did assure me they could hear anything the ruskies had and I knew if they gave me good "prersets" I could kill them. The problem was they would kill us too. The DEs I served on were only 315' LOA. In 1970 several of these DEs were equipped with a then experimental system called "ITASS" (Interim Towed Array Surveillance System). It was a towed, passive sonar system similar in concept to an operational stationary system called "SOSUS" and consisted of an extremely sensitive hydrophone array towed behind the ship. With three ships operating reasonably close together (hundreds of miles) Soviet submarines were detected and located by triangulation. Over time each sub's (or surface vessel for that matter) unique characteristic sound was recorded and stored in a signature library in the system computer. Subsequent detection of the same ship or sub would also yield it's type and eventually, its identity by name. (As depicted in Tom Clancy's "Hunt for Red October"). The USS Van Voorhis was the first ship that had the experimental system retrofitted and my job was that of being was part of the ITASS project team that tweaked and peaked it to make it work. When the equipment was eventually transferred over to the USS Lester in Naples, Italy, I went along with the gear which is why I ended up on two of those DEs. Now-a-days almost all of the smaller Navy surface ships has a mature version of this system, now called "Tactical Towed Array Sonar. Subs also have a similar system. http://www.globalsecurity.org/milita.../an-sqr-19.htm To give you an idea of how sensitive this stuff is .... back in the 60s the stationary SOSUS grid in Bermuda could detect and identify a Soviet sub passing through the Straits of Gibraltar. Eisboch |
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