½is ½a a q q and 3rd party is a a ⅓for the and century 12111111½12111111 12111111 the other is the kitty 2of2211½the11112¹andIhave½isIIq PhantomPhantomPhantoma2😂😂¹⁴4³ats@sygdesignworks
@@silvervortex2441 the world is make by peace and happiness. And never from slavery and weakness. It's from Yahweh and giving only too he's son Yoshua. Amen
My former brother in law was part of that crew of this Sub. Its been DECADES since my sister divorced him but he was only about 5'4 tall but a great athlete. The tests he took to be part of the crew was no joke from what he told me of this one particular mock event of the Sub flooding while trying to fix the leak of a cramp low area. He said he simply stay calmed and held his breathe until the bubbles come out as I assume a sign to lower the water. Most of the crew are short.
Navy basic training involves sailors in a mock up flooding ship with water coming in EVERYWHERE... by the time you get it stopped you are waist deep in water.
My grandfather helped design those ohio class subs. Those were his babies! retired from ELECTRIC BOAT and then died from cancer due to asbestos from working on subs in the yard at a young age. RIP Gramp the Vamp! Hell of a man!
I was always very interested into low frequency radio, total amateur though. I always wonder what the receive only antenna on a sub might look like, I only know the terrestrial stations for that are super sized.
@@chrisw.5138 There are several types but one of the main ones used is a very long buoyant cable that floats on the surface and is towed behind the submarine.
Having served on an Ohio class submarine, there are quite a number of errors in the layout of the spaces depicted in the video. Without going into too much detail I can safely say that there is no large medical space in the front of the sub.
Agreed ... Hull is made from HY100 Steel covered with Anechoic tiles. Nobody ever mentions types of countermeasures, mine deployment, and other types of weapons.
Since you were a submariner, could you tell where are the bow and stern thrusters located?What are the curved shaped tanks in the launch tube area used for? My guess is they are for emergency blow. possibly to launch missiles, but I thought the missiles were launched using a type of explosive like an airbag in a car. In a big tube next to the silo on the 3rd floor.
@@terryakuna66 As I mentioned, there are quite a few errors in the layout, plus some information is classified and I'm not able to discuss certain details.
@@rob46711 I guess I should assume the question about thrusters are classified. I understandI, my dad was an Electrical Test Director at Mare Island. He would go out with a boat for sea trials, or after an overhaul. I ask him' "how fast and how deep?" off and on my hole life. I even asked him when he was on ICU ready to check out. And he still said, "he can't, it's classified." Took it to his grave. He was a patriot. 20 yrs with USAF and then Mare Island. I recall seeing those curved tanks in a booklet showing piping schematics for Washington class. Curved "banana" tanks fore and aft to blow ballast. Anyway ... I been researching sub info for a few months now because I'm building one out of Lego "minifig scale" with full interior. it will be around 13 ft long. Images on my Facebook page. Ug, just typed my life story .. no wonder my fingers hurt.
yes these rooms are very generalized, The Conn is not layed out that way, iE ESM area, also the Navigation room where I worked behind the Conn is completely wrong in its layout, chart table, ESGM's SINS, Monitoring console, etc....and yes there is no medical room in the bow, Conn hatch does not go to the top of the sail. so many more.....but I see the effort that went into making this and well done. SSBN 733 Blue
I was on subs and say to people that submariners are perfect for a trip into space because we actually go to another world that we cannot survive in without the ship for long periods in this world, I once did a 127 day patrol during the Cold War, 100 days underwater....
I learned how to qualify on the S8G. It’s amazing what knowledge isn’t available to the public but I found the video a good general explanation for those who didn’t serve.
@@craigcooknf No. A small portion of the VLF wavelength will work for receiving. VLF is used for one-way communication only: reception by the submarine. VLF wavelengths are so long that transmitting VLF from a sub is not possible, nor do submarines have the high radio transmitting power necessary for VLF. Also, transmitting a VLF radio signal from a sub could give its position away.
Interesting, but some incorrect info here regarding radio communications. VLF (very low frequency) radio waves have extremely long wave lengths, not short.
We used to send newbies to the Storekeeper for "Deck softener" or a gallon of "bulkhead remover" or my favorite. "Go get me an "Eye Dee Ten Tee" aka I D I O T
Someone should edit these machine narrated scripts for pronunciation - I could feel the collective wince of sailors everywhere when it pronounced "bow" like a bow & arrow... it's pronounced like in Japan people bow to each other...why I don't know.... But the animation & 3D views are great - thank you!
Ohio class never had anechoic tiles. When this class was introduced, USA did not have this technology and when they received that from British, unlike on american SSNs, they never installed them on their SSBNs. I did not figured why. My theory is, that these tiles are effective against active sonar during fight and Ohio should never get itself into fight. And when you do not need to damp active sonar then anechoic tiles are burden (because if they peel off, they increase passive sound emission of submarine). VLF is one direction communication. From land to submarine. Submarine lacks antenna capable to transmit on that frequency. Sonar is used in active mode only in specific situation, like in battle. Otherwise active sonar always reveal position of submarine. Ohio class really do not use Mk54 torpedoes. No american submarine does. It will need special adapter to be able to fire 324mm torpedo from 533mm torpedo tube. Tomahawk with conventional warhead does not have range 2500 km. Roughly half of that value is correct. Higher value is for nuclear warhead, which weights 1/3rd of conventional one and spared room is replaced by fuel. PDX-57 does not store 2,6MW of energy, it would be just 722 Wh and this will be extremely poor energy density even for lead-acid battery. In fact, they store more than 10 kA-hours at 2.0V of nominal voltage, so at least 20 000 Wh at weigh roughly 953 kg it is energy density 21 Wh/kg, which is not bad for Pb battery but also not great (for example Kilo class is using Pb batteries with energy densities from 37 Wh/kg at rapid discharge to 52 Wh/kg at slow discharge). Whole Ohio class batteries capacity is 2,6 MWh (it has 130 PDX-57 cells which are producing via inverters stable 240VAC and 155VDC used on american submarines). Although I admire your 3D animation capabilities, I have to say, that layout and cutaway is more your imagination than reality.
Thanks for the info. There is little to no information about Ohio Class submarines online. Most of the info were taken from news websites and wikipidea. Thanks for watching.
@@sygdesignworks I know, Americans are extremely secretive about anything in their navy, despite fact, that those information foreign inteligence obtained either by humint or technical analysis long time ago. Some times in joke I am saying, that USN is kept secret even bowel movements of their petty officers. This is why I did not insult you or was not sarcastic towards you. My knowledge about american submarine classes was gathered during decade long searching, crosschecking, papers studies, discussion with former american submariners and soviet Rubin engineers and video scooping. There is no ultimate and all knowing publication, which would encompass them. So I understand, that not everybody have these information at disposal. You made mistakes, some of them I corrected and that is all. No hard feelings. I am glad, that you tried your best and result is not bad at all.
I served on the USS Enterprise CVAN-65, as a Nuclear Machinist Mate, so I'm familiar with the nuclear reactor section. What amazes me is how they get all the other stuff to fit! I felt crowded on the aircraft carrier!
On my boat, everyone wears a TLD. I am sure you know what they are. Did the nuc guys aboard a carrier have to wear them? The accumulated amount of radiation was kept in our service records. Once you accumulate so many rads over time, the Navy wouldn't let you serve on a nuclear vessel again. We had a couple of guys who wanted out of submarines. Over a 12 month period, we had 2 guys caught sleeping against the wall of the reactor compartment. They both got out of submarines. They were both court martialed. lol
I was stationed on one of the first 5 Ohios in 1984. The forward compartment layout is wrong. Medical is in the Missile Compartment starboard aft forward of the O2 generation machinery room. Torpedos are flushed out with a HP air driven turbine water pump that flushes the torpedo out of the tube.
@@maxfreedom1710 China gives not a single fuck about location of toilets on american submarine and their naval analysts know about american submarines more, than average american submariner does ;-)
I'm super excited about our new Columbia class submarines. The sonar will be super advanced high tech they will be able to hear the steam and bubbles in a reactor in an enemy submarine💯
I don’t think they told you everything. A lot of the information is classified. You forgot to mention what software you used to make the amazing video.
The entire sub you can see isn't actually pressurized. The outer, black hull you see is a free flood area of the sub for several reasons. The actual inner "pressure hull" is the smaller, pressurized zone used by the crew underneath all that. This area is sometimes called the "people tube" for this reason.
Actually the British have surpassed the US for decades. Their boats are FAR more advanced than ours. Their reactors are 2 generations ahead, we only just started using HPR when they were using 2nd generation HPRs in the 80s. Read "Running Critical" if you want to see just how far behind we were/are. The USN is the biggest bunch of conservative blockheads in the US military. They only adopt something new after they have had their asses handed to them in public at least once. They thought airplane were only good for recon until Mitchel sunk a battleship with one bomb. They insisted that Battleships were the Kings of the seas until aircraft carriers dominated in WWII.
The many inaccuracies in the video are at least somewhat understandable, given just how secret the Ohio’s still are, even almost 50 years after they were first commissioned. In fact, their operations are so classified that even many high ranking members of the Navy and command structure don’t know exactly where they all are at any given time. Pretty terrifying to think about.
Around 16:40, the batteries are said to deliver so many watts of energy. Strictly speaking, watts is a unit of power (energy/time), not energy. Also its a bit odd to express battery power, unless the duration of time over which that power is delivered is stated (i.e., total energy = power x total time delivered)
My solar battery setup uses so many batteries and each one is limited to100 amps. Knowing the volts, I can figure out the max power delivery by the LiPO4 batteries. But the real delivery limit is my inverter. Back on the old (now ancient by comparison) submarine we used MOTOR GENERATOR sets that delivered AC power which would power the Reactor Coolant Pumps etc. But as you pointed out, that has nothing to do with HOW LONG the batteries can supply that amount of power. You can get an idea of how long that is by making an estimate of the volume of the batteries that is possible and that will lead to HOW LONG they can power the essential loads needed. In most scenarios, the real limit is how long you need to get to PD (periscope depth) so you get a DG started. That will be the real op limit before you need to get the reactor restarted but on the old boat, the DG fuel tank was used as shielding for the reactor and that had plenty of fuel for a lot of hours. Running the DG at periscope depth or on the surface out in the open ocean is no fun as big waves close the intake when it goes underwater at PD and on the surface? Well it doesn't take long for even the 20 year vet chiefs to get sea sick as they aren't used to it either. The goal is to get the reactor restarted and get back to depth where everybody can relax.... I remember in the N Atlantic with a typical winter storm, huge waves sitting at PD getting beat up. One of the EOOWs took a simple instrument failure and screwed it up into a reactor trip. I'd give him shit even today for his screwup because I remember that night very well. I was new RC (reactor controls) div officer and that was frequently a first job for new officers.
Amps would have been the correct term to describe the energy available? As an accountant by trade, but have recently gotten interested into working on my own cars (since its so hard to find an honest mechanic you can afford these days) I've started delving into both the electrical systems of cars, and even stereo components. Electricity is pretty weird and so often taken for granted it's been interesting to learn how both AC and DC work. That almost everything that creates electricity (ex. alternator, computer) make AC current and then a rectifier is used to change it to DC. And how everything Tesla invented back in the 1880's is still being used today for power generation with little change to his design. What a brilliant mind. But I've Learned quite often its only a few dollars part that cause either your car or stereo to malfunction. It's just finding that cheap and often made in China part that is the challenge. lol. thanks for the comment. I just hate the idea of tossing something out when with a little effort you can cheaply fix it yourself, not add to the landfills, and save ya $$ to boot. take care.
Nice video. But a misconception about buoyancy. The main ballast tanks (MBT) are all at the forward and aft ends of the hull. Interior tanks are within the pressure hull are for trim purposes only. When the main ballast tanks are vented to sea (filled with water), the submarine attains neutral buoyancy, not negative buoyancy. The MBTs are never left partially empty - - they're either full of air for surface, or completely vented (filled with water) for submerged. As for negative buoyancy: That is something not desired, because if propulsion is lost, you sink. If anything, it's better to have very slight (very, very slight) positive buoyancy while submerged, and rely on the dive planes and forward momentum (speed) to keep the sub at the desired depth, even if just a few knots. Enlisted berthing: This is on the 3rd level (not second), on the same level as the galley (dining) and heads (restrooms). There's only one diesel generator, not two. There's also the lower section of rudder which is not shown.
When diving we used to put 8 oz Styrofoam dixie cups in a garment bag tied between the inner and outer hulls. When the boat surfaced, the cups would be crushed to the size of a hard thimble but was otherwise a an exactly proportioned miniature dixie cup. Of course, they were an exact, physical record of our dive depth and the higher ups collected them from us so as to keep our diving depth secret.
When I was a kid, I built a toy sub out of plastic foam, put in a fair amount of led snots for ballast and tried to achieve neutral buoyancy by adding very tiny chunks of led wire. I wanted to see my sub soared in the depth of my bath. It never happened. Floating sub always sunk .Neutral buoyancy is quite unstable state, could not be set for a more or less long time. The better accuracy of the math - the less speed sub needs to maintain “neutral”buoyancy.
From the design stage in the early 70's, to its launch in the early 80's, it was a very impressive machine but that was 50 years ago when computer technology was in its infancy. I'm not suggesting that up-grades were not periodically addressed but we've entered a totally new era. An era of global surveillance, satellite networks robotics and most of all, artificial intelligence that will allow for un-manned, coordinated, swarm attacks and that's just the beginning. The carrier task force and the fighter jets it carries are obsolete as it the 50 year old SR-77. The Chinese already have their own JPS network giving them the ability to locate anything on the globe perhaps even underwater. The Big Boys in arms development are already showing up in Washington with plans to counter these threats but as with EV cars, we can't compete. Chinese graduates 6 million engineering degrees per year and the US 80k and half of them are Asian students studying in the US.
Lots of lessons were learned from Thresher and I put the first sub with SUBSAFE into commission as a result of that accident. We were the first submarine since the accident to not be depth restricted. Nuclear submarines have always had diesel generator back up from the beginning. You just can't run them submerged without snorkeling or you would burn up all the air inside the hull in a few minutes.
Very informative. Frightening how the Trident II can carry 12 to 14 nuclear warheads. It looks like there could be at least 12 of them on one sub. That's insane firepower 😅
@sygdesignworks 87 megatons is nuts. I think submarines are the scariest weapons right behind nukes because they're everywhere & nowhere. Silent assasins!
If any of these subs launch their tridents, it's well past game over. Either the MM2 and bombers on alert got caught in the silos or at their bases, or not enough FAFO nukes survived post launch. Either way, it's back to the stone age.
@user-yq3fz9ch5q nah, the nuclear apocalypse is absolutely over blown. The scary part people want to avoid thinking about is that a nuclear war will absolutely fuck shit up, but it won't reboot society, many many of us will survive along with a battered infrastructure, the ugly truth is we will probably live and have to deal with the literal and figurative fallout.
Very nice the only problem is the information about the sonar, Submarines use two types Active and Passive You described their active sonar quite well but its not used all the time or hardly at all as it gives away your position to the enemy as well as tells you where it is. Passive sonar is using both the ships hull mounted hydrophones as well as the towed array which is a cable the sub will drop behind itself and is covered in hydrophones allowing the ship to listen behind its screw as well as grants the sub a better idea about what is around it.
Trident subs are not equipped with active sonar. Active is for tactical warfare. Tridents are strategic weapons, and run from any potential threat to retain their designed purpose - Nuclear deterrence
ALCON, if you served on either attack, or boomers, please refrain from violating opsec and your NDA. You may no longer serve, but those serving now need all the opsec they can get. Retired army, loose lips, sink ships, or in this case boats.
@@TheDogGoesWoof69 That's not the point. We've got an Air National Guardsman on charges of treason. Two US Navy Sailors who are CCP Nationals passing classified information about THEIR ships to the CCP for money. OPSEC is OPSEC, when it comes to military hardware and potential loss of lives because the enemy can find a weak spot in its defense. With a name ultra maga, I shouldn't have to explain this.🤦♂️
Nice. The listed designation of the Tomahawk's engine is out of date. Originally designated the F107-WR-14A6, then designated the F107-WR-103 by Williams then designated the F112-WR-100 by the USAF.
Point of correction The steam when cooled back to water does NOT return to the reactor (That water is a closed system that is highly radioactive) it returns to the steam generator where is will be heated to steam again and again.
I was a nuke electrician from 98 to 09 and after seeing all the mistakes he made up in the cone I was like, welp, the engine room sure ought to be interesting! lol Can't really hold it against him too much though, considering just how much more difficult it is for outsiders and civvies to get accurate info.
Ohio class submarines with the BQQ-6 Sonar system don't even have active sonar. All we had was an under ice transmitter for pinging ice above us. Tridents don't engage in ASW. We ran from all threats to remain hidden to end the world
Amazing !!!!
Wish i could subscribe a million times
Thank you very much! Your words motivate me :) Thanks for watching!
I subbed 48 seconds into it. hehe
@@clearjet Welcome to the channel.
½is ½a a q q and 3rd party is a a ⅓for the and century 12111111½12111111 12111111 the other is the kitty 2of2211½the11112¹andIhave½isIIq PhantomPhantomPhantoma2😂😂¹⁴4³ats@sygdesignworks
@@silvervortex2441 the world is make by peace and happiness. And never from slavery and weakness. It's from Yahweh and giving only too he's son Yoshua. Amen
My former brother in law was part of that crew of this Sub. Its been DECADES since my sister divorced him but he was only about 5'4 tall but a great athlete. The tests he took to be part of the crew was no joke from what he told me of this one particular mock event of the Sub flooding while trying to fix the leak of a cramp low area. He said he simply stay calmed and held his breathe until the bubbles come out as I assume a sign to lower the water. Most of the crew are short.
Navy basic training involves sailors in a mock up flooding ship with water coming in EVERYWHERE... by the time you get it stopped you are waist deep in water.
My grandfather helped design those ohio class subs. Those were his babies! retired from ELECTRIC BOAT and then died from cancer due to asbestos from working on subs in the yard at a young age. RIP Gramp the Vamp! Hell of a man!
I worked on the construction of all 18 of these magnificent ships!
Wow. Awesome! Thanks for watching!
Thank god and EB
those ships are boats!
@@mrdw1971 That's a hold over from WWII, modern subs are too big and heavy to be called boats.
I repaired and cut up the de-comissioned ones!
You forgot to show the kitchen (galley), which I would argue is the most important part of the Sub :)
At 15:55, I have shown the galley. Thanks for watching.
Food is fuel.
Low frequency means longer wavelengths, not shorter.
Yup. I forgot change that. Thanks for the correction.
I was always very interested into low frequency radio, total amateur though. I always wonder what the receive only antenna on a sub might look like, I only know the terrestrial stations for that are super sized.
@@chrisw.5138 There are several types but one of the main ones used is a very long buoyant cable that floats on the surface and is towed behind the submarine.
Having served on an Ohio class submarine, there are quite a number of errors in the layout of the spaces depicted in the video. Without going into too much detail I can safely say that there is no large medical space in the front of the sub.
Agreed ... Hull is made from HY100 Steel covered with Anechoic tiles. Nobody ever mentions types of countermeasures, mine deployment, and other types of weapons.
Since you were a submariner, could you tell where are the bow and stern thrusters located?What are the curved shaped tanks in the launch tube area used for? My guess is they are for emergency blow. possibly to launch missiles, but I thought the missiles were launched using a type of explosive like an airbag in a car. In a big tube next to the silo on the 3rd floor.
@@terryakuna66 As I mentioned, there are quite a few errors in the layout, plus some information is classified and I'm not able to discuss certain details.
@@rob46711 I guess I should assume the question about thrusters are classified. I understandI, my dad was an Electrical Test Director at Mare Island. He would go out with a boat for sea trials, or after an overhaul. I ask him' "how fast and how deep?" off and on my hole life. I even asked him when he was on ICU ready to check out. And he still said, "he can't, it's classified." Took it to his grave. He was a patriot. 20 yrs with USAF and then Mare Island. I recall seeing those curved tanks in a booklet showing piping schematics for Washington class. Curved "banana" tanks fore and aft to blow ballast. Anyway ... I been researching sub info for a few months now because I'm building one out of Lego "minifig scale" with full interior. it will be around 13 ft long. Images on my Facebook page. Ug, just typed my life story .. no wonder my fingers hurt.
yes these rooms are very generalized, The Conn is not layed out that way, iE ESM area, also the Navigation room where I worked behind the Conn is completely wrong in its layout, chart table, ESGM's SINS, Monitoring console, etc....and yes there is no medical room in the bow, Conn hatch does not go to the top of the sail. so many more.....but I see the effort that went into making this and well done. SSBN 733 Blue
4:44 the officer doing his paperwork 💀
;)
that's an inside joke 😂
Amazing machine that is .....basically a underwater spacecraft
I was on subs and say to people that submariners are perfect for a trip into space because we actually go to another world that we cannot survive in without the ship for long periods in this world, I once did a 127 day patrol during the Cold War, 100 days underwater....
@@FLY2KO yes exactly thanks for your service
I learned how to qualify on the S8G. It’s amazing what knowledge isn’t available to the public but I found the video a good general explanation for those who didn’t serve.
Thanks for watching!
yup... close, but not quite ;p which is as it should be :)
VLF (Very Low Frequency) communications uses LONG wavelengths, NOT Short.
So, the buoy mentioned carries out a wire a distance basically equivalent to the wavelength of the signal?
@@craigcooknf No. A small portion of the VLF wavelength will work for receiving. VLF is used for one-way communication only: reception by the submarine. VLF wavelengths are so long that transmitting VLF from a sub is not possible, nor do submarines have the high radio transmitting power necessary for VLF. Also, transmitting a VLF radio signal from a sub could give its position away.
This was well done. Thank you!
Glad you enjoyed it!
General Dynamics doing what they do best my friends
Interesting, but some incorrect info here regarding radio communications. VLF (very low frequency) radio waves have extremely long wave lengths, not short.
Nice graphics, pretty accurate too
Thanks for watching!
Ships don't have floors. They have decks. And naval ships don't have restrooms. They have heads.
And they don't have left and right. Starboard and port.
It’s probably the work of “Generic sounding voice” here maybe. Or maybe the knowledge isn’t known yet.
We used to send newbies to the Storekeeper for "Deck softener" or a gallon of "bulkhead remover" or my favorite. "Go get me an "Eye Dee Ten Tee" aka I D I O T
Many people seeing this probably don’t know that. I think they’re trying to be relatable to a wider audience. But now we know, thanks!
Someone should edit these machine narrated scripts for pronunciation - I could feel the collective wince of sailors everywhere when it pronounced "bow" like a bow & arrow... it's pronounced like in Japan people bow to each other...why I don't know....
But the animation & 3D views are great - thank you!
Thanks for watching!
@@sygdesignworks You're welcome! The comments were interesting - it's always great to hear about people's experiences.
I wish TH-cam had a button to filter out TTS (text to speech) vids.
Not bad. Just be careful about putting steam into a gas turbine. You will want to use a steam turbine for that.
Actual steam is a gas so he is correct. He did not say a gasoline turbine!
@@sotm6078 Google "Gas Turbine" and learn something
@@sotm6078 steam and gas turbines are very different!
Awesome 3D animation, send it to my wife uncle and gee it helped him understand how submarine works and it answers a lot of questions. Bravo 👏 👏 👏
Thanks for watching!
I worked at EB in 1976 and saw the first hull sections of the Ohio come together.
Awesome. Thanks for watching!
And now boat 826 is coming together. It's fantastic.
Ohio class never had anechoic tiles. When this class was introduced, USA did not have this technology and when they received that from British, unlike on american SSNs, they never installed them on their SSBNs. I did not figured why. My theory is, that these tiles are effective against active sonar during fight and Ohio should never get itself into fight. And when you do not need to damp active sonar then anechoic tiles are burden (because if they peel off, they increase passive sound emission of submarine).
VLF is one direction communication. From land to submarine. Submarine lacks antenna capable to transmit on that frequency.
Sonar is used in active mode only in specific situation, like in battle. Otherwise active sonar always reveal position of submarine.
Ohio class really do not use Mk54 torpedoes. No american submarine does. It will need special adapter to be able to fire 324mm torpedo from 533mm torpedo tube.
Tomahawk with conventional warhead does not have range 2500 km. Roughly half of that value is correct. Higher value is for nuclear warhead, which weights 1/3rd of conventional one and spared room is replaced by fuel.
PDX-57 does not store 2,6MW of energy, it would be just 722 Wh and this will be extremely poor energy density even for lead-acid battery. In fact, they store more than 10 kA-hours at 2.0V of nominal voltage, so at least 20 000 Wh at weigh roughly 953 kg it is energy density 21 Wh/kg, which is not bad for Pb battery but also not great (for example Kilo class is using Pb batteries with energy densities from 37 Wh/kg at rapid discharge to 52 Wh/kg at slow discharge).
Whole Ohio class batteries capacity is 2,6 MWh (it has 130 PDX-57 cells which are producing via inverters stable 240VAC and 155VDC used on american submarines).
Although I admire your 3D animation capabilities, I have to say, that layout and cutaway is more your imagination than reality.
Thanks for the info. There is little to no information about Ohio Class submarines online. Most of the info were taken from news websites and wikipidea. Thanks for watching.
@@sygdesignworks I know, Americans are extremely secretive about anything in their navy, despite fact, that those information foreign inteligence obtained either by humint or technical analysis long time ago.
Some times in joke I am saying, that USN is kept secret even bowel movements of their petty officers.
This is why I did not insult you or was not sarcastic towards you. My knowledge about american submarine classes was gathered during decade long searching, crosschecking, papers studies, discussion with former american submariners and soviet Rubin engineers and video scooping. There is no ultimate and all knowing publication, which would encompass them. So I understand, that not everybody have these information at disposal. You made mistakes, some of them I corrected and that is all. No hard feelings. I am glad, that you tried your best and result is not bad at all.
You're wrong. I was grand admiral brigadier general master chief supreme commander of alpha submarine force Charlie back in 92.
@@bobbyrayofthefamilysmith24 Yeah, and you opened largest bottle of vodka then. Till today, you did not get sober 😀
I'm assuming they have to change those batteries every three years? That sounds like a tough job changing those things.
Thank you for the good video..👍
Thanks for watching!
Thanks
Thanks for watching!
Awesome Program
Thanks for watching!
What an impressive complex machine!
Thanks for watching!
I would like to have seen Montana.
1 ping only.
Fantastic Video 🇺🇲👍
Glad you enjoyed it!
I served on the USS Enterprise CVAN-65, as a Nuclear Machinist Mate, so I'm familiar with the nuclear reactor section. What amazes me is how they get all the other stuff to fit! I felt crowded on the aircraft carrier!
On my boat, everyone wears a TLD. I am sure you know what they are. Did the nuc guys aboard a carrier have to wear them? The accumulated amount of radiation was kept in our service records. Once you accumulate so many rads over time, the Navy wouldn't let you serve on a nuclear vessel again. We had a couple of guys who wanted out of submarines. Over a 12 month period, we had 2 guys caught sleeping against the wall of the reactor compartment. They both got out of submarines. They were both court martialed. lol
Amazing video!
Thanks for watching!
Awsome video thank you for sharing this.
Glad you enjoyed it
I was stationed on one of the first 5 Ohios in 1984. The forward compartment layout is wrong. Medical is in the Missile Compartment starboard aft forward of the O2 generation machinery room. Torpedos are flushed out with a HP air driven turbine water pump that flushes the torpedo out of the tube.
I believe you are talking about the medical room at 16:55? Thanks for the correction.
china thanks you
@@maxfreedom1710 LOL
Opsec otter gonna get u
@@maxfreedom1710 China gives not a single fuck about location of toilets on american submarine and their naval analysts know about american submarines more, than average american submariner does ;-)
I'm super excited about our new Columbia class submarines. The sonar will be super advanced high tech they will be able to hear the steam and bubbles in a reactor in an enemy submarine💯
Amazinh animation! Very detailed!
Lets go build submarine?
Yeah! Let's build an SSBN type submarine in our backyard ;) Thanks for watching!
@@sygdesignworks 👍🏿
That was well made.
Thanks a lot!
just love your vidéo tanks merci beaucoup
Thanks a lot!
fantastic video, thank you so much
Glad you liked it!
I don’t think they told you everything. A lot of the information is classified. You forgot to mention what software you used to make the amazing video.
Well done
Thanks a lot!
The entire sub you can see isn't actually pressurized. The outer, black hull you see is a free flood area of the sub for several reasons. The actual inner "pressure hull" is the smaller, pressurized zone used by the crew underneath all that. This area is sometimes called the "people tube" for this reason.
That is only true for the fwd and aft part of the boat where the ballast tanks are located.
"People Tank" is the correct term. God Bless Submariners
Awesome. Thank you.
You're welcome!
Very good and professional presentation... congratulations...
Thank you! Cheers!
Unsurpassed engineering that is
reassuring. Thanks for keeping the peace.
Thanks for Watching!
Actually the British have surpassed the US for decades. Their boats are FAR more advanced than ours. Their reactors are 2 generations ahead, we only just started using HPR when they were using 2nd generation HPRs in the 80s. Read "Running Critical" if you want to see just how far behind we were/are. The USN is the biggest bunch of conservative blockheads in the US military. They only adopt something new after they have had their asses handed to them in public at least once. They thought airplane were only good for recon until Mitchel sunk a battleship with one bomb. They insisted that Battleships were the Kings of the seas until aircraft carriers dominated in WWII.
Estamos chegando lá
Love your work
Which software do you use
Thanks for watching. You can try Blender - it is a free 3D animation software.
@@sygdesignworks thank you
I got to be a rider on the OHIO 726 back in 1981, cool boat lots of room compared to the other boats I served on...
I was on ssbn 598 George Washington. We were 6000 tons. My goodness one third the size. Would sure like to see that
Thank you for your service.
way more interesting of a video tha. I expected! 🙏
Glad you liked it!
ОЧЕНЬ ИНТЕРЕСНО.
Outstanding!
Thanks a lot!
I love how the torpedoes play cat and mouse lol 😅😂
The many inaccuracies in the video are at least somewhat understandable, given just how secret the Ohio’s still are, even almost 50 years after they were first commissioned.
In fact, their operations are so classified that even many high ranking members of the Navy and command structure don’t know exactly where they all are at any given time. Pretty terrifying to think about.
Actually, a whole slew of Aussies now know, thanks to our loose-lipped former Braggart-in-Chief, Kadet Bonespurs.
Go to Google Earth. You can see 12 of them tied up along the pier in Bremerton, WA.
wow, didn't know all those boats sitting in the Dead Fleet waiting to be scrapped are OHIO Subs.
Those are decommissioned subs mostly fast attack subs.@@PCVMoldova
Not knowing being terrifying is the point. Boomers exist to give the other guy reasons to rethink attacking the US.
Around 16:40, the batteries are said to deliver so many watts of energy. Strictly speaking, watts is a unit of power (energy/time), not energy. Also its a bit odd to express battery power, unless the duration of time over which that power is delivered is stated (i.e., total energy = power x total time delivered)
My solar battery setup uses so many batteries and each one is limited to100 amps. Knowing the volts, I can figure out the max power delivery by the LiPO4 batteries. But the real delivery limit is my inverter. Back on the old (now ancient by comparison) submarine we used MOTOR GENERATOR sets that delivered AC power which would power the Reactor Coolant Pumps etc. But as you pointed out, that has nothing to do with HOW LONG the batteries can supply that amount of power. You can get an idea of how long that is by making an estimate of the volume of the batteries that is possible and that will lead to HOW LONG they can power the essential loads needed. In most scenarios, the real limit is how long you need to get to PD (periscope depth) so you get a DG started. That will be the real op limit before you need to get the reactor restarted but on the old boat, the DG fuel tank was used as shielding for the reactor and that had plenty of fuel for a lot of hours. Running the DG at periscope depth or on the surface out in the open ocean is no fun as big waves close the intake when it goes underwater at PD and on the surface? Well it doesn't take long for even the 20 year vet chiefs to get sea sick as they aren't used to it either. The goal is to get the reactor restarted and get back to depth where everybody can relax....
I remember in the N Atlantic with a typical winter storm, huge waves sitting at PD getting beat up. One of the EOOWs took a simple instrument failure and screwed it up into a reactor trip. I'd give him shit even today for his screwup because I remember that night very well. I was new RC (reactor controls) div officer and that was frequently a first job for new officers.
Amps would have been the correct term to describe the energy available? As an accountant by trade, but have recently gotten interested into working on my own cars (since its so hard to find an honest mechanic you can afford these days) I've started delving into both the electrical systems of cars, and even stereo components. Electricity is pretty weird and so often taken for granted it's been interesting to learn how both AC and DC work. That almost everything that creates electricity (ex. alternator, computer) make AC current and then a rectifier is used to change it to DC. And how everything Tesla invented back in the 1880's is still being used today for power generation with little change to his design. What a brilliant mind. But I've Learned quite often its only a few dollars part that cause either your car or stereo to malfunction. It's just finding that cheap and often made in China part that is the challenge. lol. thanks for the comment. I just hate the idea of tossing something out when with a little effort you can cheaply fix it yourself, not add to the landfills, and save ya $$ to boot. take care.
Amazing ship
Great video. I learned a lot here. :)
Thanks for watching!
you learned a lot of bullshit. this video is a comedy of errors.
Nice video. But a misconception about buoyancy. The main ballast tanks (MBT) are all at the forward and aft ends of the hull. Interior tanks are within the pressure hull are for trim purposes only. When the main ballast tanks are vented to sea (filled with water), the submarine attains neutral buoyancy, not negative buoyancy. The MBTs are never left partially empty - - they're either full of air for surface, or completely vented (filled with water) for submerged. As for negative buoyancy: That is something not desired, because if propulsion is lost, you sink. If anything, it's better to have very slight (very, very slight) positive buoyancy while submerged, and rely on the dive planes and forward momentum (speed) to keep the sub at the desired depth, even if just a few knots.
Enlisted berthing: This is on the 3rd level (not second), on the same level as the galley (dining) and heads (restrooms).
There's only one diesel generator, not two.
There's also the lower section of rudder which is not shown.
awesome.😊
Thank you!
Fantástico, gracias 👍
Thanks lot!
Nice vid, would have liked to have seen the Thrust Block and Bulkhead glands.
Thanks for watching!
All North Korean are very thankful for this video.
Well done. I do recommend a human instead of an artificial narrator though.
Thanks for watching!
Truly a super weapon, no defense.
Thanks for Watching!
When diving we used to put 8 oz Styrofoam dixie cups in a garment bag tied between the inner and outer hulls. When the boat surfaced, the cups would be crushed to the size of a hard thimble but was otherwise a an exactly proportioned miniature dixie cup. Of course, they were an exact, physical record of our dive depth and the higher ups collected them from us so as to keep our diving depth secret.
Wow! Thank you for your service.
amazing
Thanks for watching!
Very nice
Thanks a lot!
A reasonably correct video minus several inaccuracies.
Well done!
Thanks for watching!
Ecellent and very informative..
Thanks for watching!
Excellent explanation! Very detailed. Superb!
Thank you very much!
When I was a kid, I built a toy sub out of plastic foam, put in a fair amount of led snots for ballast and tried to achieve neutral buoyancy by adding very tiny chunks of led wire. I wanted to see my sub soared in the depth of my bath. It never happened. Floating sub always sunk .Neutral buoyancy is quite unstable state, could not be set for a more or less long time. The better accuracy of the math - the less speed sub needs to maintain “neutral”buoyancy.
I can't believe that the defense department is allowing this to be made.
Chill bro. This is publicly available information
From the design stage in the early 70's, to its launch in the early 80's, it was a very impressive machine but that was 50 years ago when computer technology was in its infancy. I'm not suggesting that up-grades were not periodically addressed but we've entered a totally new era. An era of global surveillance, satellite networks robotics and most of all, artificial intelligence that will allow for un-manned, coordinated, swarm attacks and that's just the beginning.
The carrier task force and the fighter jets it carries are obsolete as it the 50 year old SR-77. The Chinese already have their own JPS network giving them the ability to locate anything on the globe perhaps even underwater. The Big Boys in arms development are already showing up in Washington with plans to counter these threats but as with EV cars, we can't compete.
Chinese graduates 6 million engineering degrees per year and the US 80k and half of them are Asian students studying in the US.
The rear most portion of a Screw type Submarine is the Dunce Cap. God Bless Submariners
Were interesting material.
Navy don’t have “medics”, they have Corpsman.
awesome video!!
Thanks a lot!
I like this powerful nuclear submarines
Thanks for watching!
Retired AF nuke troop.
NEVER had all the scoop on the subs in ONE presentation.
Thank you.
Thanks for watching!
I guess they learned the lessons from the Thresher to always have a backup generator...
Lots of lessons were learned from Thresher and I put the first sub with SUBSAFE into commission as a result of that accident. We were the first submarine since the accident to not be depth restricted. Nuclear submarines have always had diesel generator back up from the beginning. You just can't run them submerged without snorkeling or you would burn up all the air inside the hull in a few minutes.
Very informative. Frightening how the Trident II can carry 12 to 14 nuclear warheads. It looks like there could be at least 12 of them on one sub. That's insane firepower 😅
Did you know that a single Ohio class submarine carries 87 Megatons of firepower! It can completely Obliterate 336 Cites! Thanks for watching!
@sygdesignworks 87 megatons is nuts. I think submarines are the scariest weapons right behind nukes because they're everywhere & nowhere. Silent assasins!
182 independently targetable warheads per boat, I was on one.
If any of these subs launch their tridents, it's well past game over. Either the MM2 and bombers on alert got caught in the silos or at their bases, or not enough FAFO nukes survived post launch. Either way, it's back to the stone age.
@user-yq3fz9ch5q nah, the nuclear apocalypse is absolutely over blown. The scary part people want to avoid thinking about is that a nuclear war will absolutely fuck shit up, but it won't reboot society, many many of us will survive along with a battered infrastructure, the ugly truth is we will probably live and have to deal with the literal and figurative fallout.
Epic
Thanks for watching!
Very nice the only problem is the information about the sonar, Submarines use two types Active and Passive You described their active sonar quite well but its not used all the time or hardly at all as it gives away your position to the enemy as well as tells you where it is. Passive sonar is using both the ships hull mounted hydrophones as well as the towed array which is a cable the sub will drop behind itself and is covered in hydrophones allowing the ship to listen behind its screw as well as grants the sub a better idea about what is around it.
cool. thank you.
Trident subs are not equipped with active sonar. Active is for tactical warfare. Tridents are strategic weapons, and run from any potential threat to retain their designed purpose - Nuclear deterrence
Good animations but the information and narration isn't great
MK stands for Mark hence it is pronounced "Mark 48 torpedo" not "M K 48 torpedo"
ALCON, if you served on either attack, or boomers, please refrain from violating opsec and your NDA. You may no longer serve, but those serving now need all the opsec they can get. Retired army, loose lips, sink ships, or in this case boats.
@@TheDogGoesWoof69
That's not the point. We've got an Air National Guardsman on charges of treason. Two US Navy Sailors who are CCP Nationals passing classified information about THEIR ships to the CCP for money. OPSEC is OPSEC, when it comes to military hardware and potential loss of lives because the enemy can find a weak spot in its defense. With a name ultra maga, I shouldn't have to explain this.🤦♂️
😂😂😂😂😂 meanwhile everyone criticizing layout, structure, purposes, and so many other errors....
@@mutiur7396 I get it, however my point is still valid.
WOW! How did I not know all this? MTC(SS) 1964-1984
Mouse house commandoes. Fair winds a following seas brother of the Phin. MMC/SS AGANG RET.
Love to see 3D versions of Russian, Brits and French boomers.
I'll add that to my list. Thanks for watching!
Has it ever been put to use. I wish there was more information on how nuclear energy is created to keep it running.
In naval parlance "MK" is pronounced "mark."
cant wait for the Columbia class
Definitely. Thanks for watching!
Just remember that the missile knows where it is, because it knows where it isn't.
LOL!
Good effort, but I am going to have to correct a laundry list of errors... or just keep my mouth shut. Haven't decided yet.
Good ficción
Nice.
The listed designation of the Tomahawk's engine is out of date.
Originally designated the F107-WR-14A6, then designated the F107-WR-103 by Williams then designated the F112-WR-100 by the USAF.
Point of correction The steam when cooled back to water does NOT return to the reactor (That water is a closed system that is highly radioactive) it returns to the steam generator where is will be heated to steam again and again.
I was a nuke electrician from 98 to 09 and after seeing all the mistakes he made up in the cone I was like, welp, the engine room sure ought to be interesting! lol Can't really hold it against him too much though, considering just how much more difficult it is for outsiders and civvies to get accurate info.
Genuis!!!
Thanks for watching!
Very well done!
Thank you very much!
You're welcome. You obviously put a lot of time into it.
Another correction, torpedos are ejected with seawater, not air, a piston that pushes the water is run by compress air.
@19:00 better say vapour turbine, otherwise the term gas turbine is confusing, that one is used in major warships.
Steam turbine. But still steam turbine is subcategory of gas turbine, so I would not see as problem at all.
You know what you are talking about?@@tomascernak6112
Sooo good thank you
Thanks for watching!
VLF means very long wavelength. Compare light being blocked by a piece of paper but longer radio waves going through building walls.
Fun fact: the sonar is loud enough to kill a person in close range
Ohio class submarines with the BQQ-6 Sonar system don't even have active sonar. All we had was an under ice transmitter for pinging ice above us. Tridents don't engage in ASW. We ran from all threats to remain hidden to end the world
Tridents have no active sonar