User Controls
Denmark is releasing the Leopards
-
2023-02-09 at 3:09 PM UTCWhen you go down to test depth you hear all kinds of sounds from the hull being compressed. You don't know how many bolts they glued on and probably this boat will have to go into dry dock to check everything.
This retard put peoples life in danger and will cost millions to make sure everything is right. -
2023-02-09 at 3:14 PM UTC
Originally posted by jerryb When you go down to test depth you hear all kinds of sounds from the hull being compressed. You don't know how many bolts they glued on and probably this boat will have to go into dry dock to check everything.
This retard put peoples life in danger and will cost millions to make sure everything is right.
this is nothing compared to that woman who faked submarine metal test results. -
2023-02-09 at 3:15 PM UTC
-
2023-02-09 at 3:20 PM UTCkek, or the woman who kept sabotaging the ISS because she wanted to go home
-
2023-02-09 at 3:22 PM UTCthis is why we need to replace organic women with synthetic women.
-
2023-11-20 at 12:29 PM UTC
Originally posted by aldra https://marineindustrynews.co.uk/88m-trident-submarine-fixed-superglue/
sounds like the contractor accidentally cracked boltheads, then didn't want to pay to replace the bolts so they just glued the heads back on
wouldn't be an immediate problem but imagine having to deal with coolant leaks or even a rupture out at sea
https://www.rt.com/news/587640-uk-nuclear-submarine-vanguard/According to a source who talked to The Sun, the depth indicator aboard the Royal Navy vessel had broken down. This led the commanders to believe that the submarine had stopped its descent, while it actually kept going deeper.
The vessel with 140 crew members aboard reportedly came close to reaching the “danger zone,” where it would have been crushed by the water pressure if not for the engineers who spotted the problem via a second gauge in the back of the sub, the report said.
depth guage failed this time, apparently the only redundancy was a second one on the other end of the submarine -
2023-11-20 at 12:33 PM UTCtheyre supposed to know their depth without having to refer to the depth meter.
depth meters are just there for refference. -
2023-11-20 at 12:35 PM UTC
Originally posted by vindicktive vinny theyre supposed to know their depth without having to refer to the depth meter.
depth meters are just there for refference.
everything's computerised, it sounds like the depth meter failed during descent so the submarine kept descending to a dangerous depth, at some point engineers realised and manually halted it. -
2023-11-20 at 12:42 PM UTC
Originally posted by aldra https://www.rt.com/news/587640-uk-nuclear-submarine-vanguard/
depth guage failed this time, apparently the only redundancy was a second one on the other end of the submarinecivilian staff at defence contractor…
That's the dilemma right there. Typical civilian union workers.
They have all kinds of slang derogatory terminology for those useless slags...the nicest of which is 'yard birds' -
2023-11-20 at 12:42 PM UTCarent they suppose to maintain awareness of their depth at all time, like if you dive at the rate of x meters per minute and in y minute you are supposed to be in z meters undersea.
or if you want to be in z depth then you dive at the rate of x meter per minute/second for y minutes.
something like this ? -
2023-11-20 at 12:45 PM UTC
Originally posted by vindicktive vinny arent they suppose to maintain awareness of their depth at all time, like if you dive at the rate of x meters per minute and in y minute you are supposed to be in z meters undersea.
or if you want to be in z depth then you dive at the rate of x meter per minute/second for y minutes.
something like this ?
I don't know how non-US subs works but there are countless layers of redundancy to every critical system. On the sub I was on there were multiple stations that used multiple sensors to determine depth.
Hell...even the sonar guy could give a general idea of depth from the crap on the ocean floor reflecting the sound -
2023-11-20 at 12:51 PM UTC
Originally posted by infinityshock I don't know how non-US subs works but there are countless layers of redundancy to every critical system. On the sub I was on there were multiple stations that used multiple sensors to determine depth.
Hell…even the sonar guy could give a general idea of depth from the crap on the ocean floor reflecting the sound
but do they have redundancies for affirmative action hirees. -
2023-11-20 at 1:22 PM UTCalso lol@ the original topic, leopard 1s didn't do much of anything and they destroyed the first batch of (Finnish?) Leopard 2s by running them full-speed into a minefield
-
2023-11-20 at 1:22 PM UTC
-
2023-11-20 at 2:13 PM UTC
-
2023-11-20 at 2:15 PM UTC
Originally posted by aldra also lol@ the original topic, leopard 1s didn't do much of anything and they destroyed the first batch of (Finnish?) Leopard 2s by running them full-speed into a minefield
not their fault tho.
who would have thought all those mine sweepers would get blown up by mines first.
superior western mine sweepers. -
2023-11-20 at 2:50 PM UTC