The kids did a great job yesterday! They were engaged, curious, asked great questions and were fun to watch. Awesome job! And great video today as well!
Torpedoes are loaded through a chute that opens on the top deck of the submarine directly into the torpedo room and then placed on racks on either side of the torpedo room. There is a chute forward and a chute aft for each torpedo room. I believe the missles are able to be loaded directly into their tubes since the doors that open to launch the missles are on the deck of the submarine.
I didn't see anyone else answer her question "how does it float". Subs use ballast tanks to mix air/water to achieve neutral buoyancy. Inject more air, they go up. Let in more water, they go down.
A very basic answer but, Yes. Submarines are pure Physics in operation and every bit as if not more complicated than anything going into space. Every action has a reaction. A surface ship works on buoyancy. A submarine works on balance and weight to suspend itself in the water column. A submarine submerged should weigh nothing in the water. Too heavy and it will sink, too light and it will surface.
@@Chris_at_Home I'm submarine qualified and served on two submarines. I'm aware of how submarines work. The "weight" you talk about is "ballast" and it is stacked in the bottom of the ballast tanks either side of the 'keel'. I have been in Ballast Tanks. They are slimy, dark and stink to high heaven. The Pressure Hull sits on top of the keel. How many subs have you served on?
@@webbtrekker534 I worked at EB and saw the lead being poured. Also saw all the different ballast tanks. I’ve even been to the bottom of the periscope well.Never served on subs, both brother and brother in law were STCs. My other brother and I were in Patrol Squadrons. I’ve been inside a few that were active. The 650 when it was in Rota my brother had me for breakfast, he came by the squadron the next day and got to talk with the ASW guys. I was an AT2 after one enlistment and got out about 50 years ago.
@@timothydixon2545 Yeah, YT has started auto disabling comments on certain videos, especially if there's kids, violent content, or anything they think is controversial in them. A couple other channels I'm subbed to have had it happen and said it wasn't them who turned the comments off.
TH-cam auto disabled comments when "Children" are the main source of the video to prevent morons from pressuring them into things they probably shouldn't be doing.
Your kids did an awesome job in the other video. Anyways, I love all the branches of military, we need them all. I have many family members in the Air Force. Great videos. Keep up the great work.
I enjoy watching your family channel. I must say, Garin is a very inquisitive young man and I can see him going far in life. He seems to be very intelligent and not at all shy when it comes to making videos. When is he going to have his own channel or both he and his sister. It’s nice to see children interested in learning about the world than glued to the video games. Is my impression wrong? You both should be proud of your children. Thanks for your videos. I hope you get to visit America someday soon and it exceeds your expectations.
They are called ballast tanks to surface to the top they fill the ballast tanks with air to submerge the submarine they filled the ballast tanks with water
That picture at 6:30 is a SEAL delivery vehicle which is a mini sub used by SEAL teams. There are also other vehicles called Swimmer Delivery Vehicles used by all SF and SOF forces.
For the vertical launch tubes on top of the sub, the missiles are just lowered into them. The missiles and torpedo's that shoot from the horizontal torpedo tubes are lowered into the front escape hatch where the upper and middle decks can be removed so the weapons can be dropped right into the torpedo room on the bottom deck.
Torpedos and harpoon missiles are loaded through a weapon loading hatch, the decks in a straight line from that hatch a Have sections that can be reconfigured as rails and sleds so they can lower the weapons down the hatch and down to the torpedo room. Cruise missiles in the vertical tubes are loaded at dockside by crane, or by shipboard crane from a submarine tender.
To try to answer the question, how do they float?It's a big tank and it's either filled with air or with water.They fill it with water to go down and air just bring it back up.
I was in the US Navy from 1964 to 1970. I served in submarines the whole time. Can't imagine having been any other place. Great life! Great times. GREAT food!
I'm with probably the majority of commentor's. Since the comments were turned off yesterday. I want to say how Bloody awesome, Lea & Garin did on their own. Great job, keep the Vlogs coming. I'm really am enjoying your Vlogs.
They load the various weapons in different ways. The torpedoes and harpoon missiles are loaded in a special weapons loading hatch, and the big ballistic missiles are loaded directly into the vertical launch tubes. And you were right about the mini subs. I spent 4 years aboard a sub from 79 to 83
A friend of mine met his wife while they served on duty on the US submarine. He said the good news is "you can't get away from each other for 90 days". That is also the bad news if the relationship goes south. Ugly break-ups don't actually pair well with nuclear tipped missiles in your pantry so common sense must prevail!
The kids amazing and to answer the question they kept asking, it depends on the school system. Some schools do what’s called a block schedule where you do fewer classes in a day, but each class is longer. Then you alternate which group of classes you have each day. Other schools have you do all your classes every day. No matter which schedule you use your day lasts for about 6 to 7 hours, including lunch. Very similar to having a job as an adult; you work about 7 to 8 hours a day with a 30 minute break at some point in the day, typically. That’s what most companies do; admittedly there are special circumstances or certain jobs are different for a specific reason.
the new version of this sub the block 5 will be 460 ft (140 m) and have another section for more missiles. and the new anti-ship missile is a new version of tomahawk missile.
The WWII battleship New Jersey has a youtube channel that's family friendly. It's one of the four battleships of the Iowa class that are preserved as museums.
Since this interests you and your fam, one slight correction: you mentioned the sub that imploded, and yes, it was a sub, though not a true submarine. It was a submersible, which is dependent upon another vessel like a submarine or ship.
Lol, your favorite navy vet here, haha. Anyway, I could never have done sub duty. Nope, can't. Not getting me that far down under the water. Love your reactions with the family. I served back in the late 70's early 80s. Technology is so far advanced..it is scary. Keep up the great reactions!!! If I remember right, sub duty is voluntary/
My dad was on submarines for years when he was in the Navy. He said one of the things they had to do, which was both thrilling and scary, was the emergency surface! What they call an Emergency Blow. You should check that out!!
You should check out the "Smarter Every Day" Submarine Deep Dive. There are 9 videos in the list. He explains a lot about how they work. He went underway on one under the arctic ice cap.
Part of what makes the building of the defense department machines and or ships, subs, helicopters and planes they hire pre selected defense builders all over the US to build specific parts and bring these parts together to assemble them safely and securely. If during an attack within the US they will never take out the building of the defense departments projects. There are literally thousands of builders spread out strategically everywhere. I love your channel, every time Garen or Laya announces the introduction of the video I see how proud you guys are of your children. Just like at the beginning of this one. Be safe from Florida
As a former US Submarine sonar technician, I can tell you they will go all the way to the bottom if you or your crewmates screw up! And again, if someone screws up, the lights can go out. Then you are in a "no light" situation, like being in a cave. You can't see your hand at the end of your nose. If you are on the surface, you have at least starlight or something. At the same time, it was one of the best experiences of my life. If you want to get an idea of how crazy things can be, look for an "Angles and Dangles" video.
For total depth...that is a secret. There is a public known range, but these ships...most info on them are higher than top secret. But, they can go very deep...
The Virgina class is the current fast attack submarine, The Columbia class is supposedly either in design or currently being built, which is a ballistic missile sub, carrying missiles that can be launched from underwater to any point on earth. Supposedly the next generation of fast attack submarine is supposedly under development. torpedoes and Harpoon missiles are loaded one by one through special hatches that lead to the storage area, once inside they have equipment that can pick up each torpedo and load it into the tubes, the cruise missiles are loaded from the top, since those hatches are outside
The Trident ballistic missiles [with nuclear warheads] on US Atlantic Fleet and UK Royal Navy subs are loaded at the Strategic Weapons Facility Atlantic, which is located at the US Navy Submarine Base at King's Bay, Georgia. The missiles are lowered vertically into the tubes. The UK builds its own subs and warheads, but purchases US built Trident missiles.
You might find this TH-cam video interesting : " USS Hartford (SSN 768) surfaces at the Arctic circle for ICEX 2016 " A member of my family was on the Hartford during that exercise. FYI, ICEX is an Arctic training exercise conducted every two years by the US, Canada, the UK, and Norway.
The biggest mental hurdles to overcome in a submarine, I've heard from friends and family, was the fact that there really is no personal space just for you; you share beds with your crew. Then you are underwater for months at a time, never surfacing at all, no internet, no cellphones, even letters are delayed for months with some letters delayed until the end of your deployment. Even if you had windows, all you would see is a dark vast ocean.
The Chinese Navy is soiling their loin clothes with the announcement that Austalia is getting several of these Virginia Class subs, each with about 22 Tomahawk cruise missiles which can reach their major cities and all their ports. China had checked the Aussia box as a WIN years ago and now it's not so likely.
If you ever come to the United States they have tours where you go in and see US Navy ships and US Air Force tours if you want to see in person. Around the United States there is air shows all the time just need to find out when in certain states. Just a suggestion!! \/ 🗽🗽
Maybe, put a community note on the channel, next time when you a upload a solo kid's reactions? They were awesome! American schools are so different in size (building size and class size), transportation methods (busing, walking, driving) , class length, period schedule, student rules and roles, extracurricular activities, security methods (metal detectors, school police, lockdown drills, tornado drills), and dress code.
How do they get them in? They have hatches on deck they can open, and set equipment on deck to facilitate the handling of them, and they wench them down, and place them where they need to be, in their storage areas. You don't build multi-million dollar platforms without figuring all that out in the design phase. If youtube would catch up with 2024, I could post a photo of them loading munitions and you would see what I mean.
Christening a ship is a tradition for all military and civilian ships except for the White Star Line, owners of the Titanic. They chose to forego the ceremony for all their ships. In the words of one dockyard worker when the Titanic was launched, "They just builds her and shoves her in.". I vote that Garin intro all videos from now on. He's nailing it every time. The United States Navy has a naming convention for all ships. In the old days, battleships were named after states. Submarines were named after fish. Aircraft carriers were, and still are, named after notable battles and people. Cruisers were named after American cities. Destroyers were named after people and places not quite so notable. The list goes on. Battleships have not been built since the mid 1940's. Cruisers really no longer exist in the U.S. Navy. The naming convention evolved so that submarines were named after cities (cruisers) and now they are named after states (battleships). The classic "ping" of sonar at 11:11 almost never happens. When you "ping" a target you reveal you own location. It only happens when your enemy already knows where you are or you have achieved complete surprise. Submarines rely on passive sensors to locate their prey. The passive sensors on U.S. subs are the best in the world. They are also designed to be the quietest subs on the planet. Our detection sensors are so good that they can identify which sub BY NAME they are targeting. Every submarine ever built has it's own unique acoustic signature.
Just want to say. You say you are afraid is going down in a sub. There are a few, at resort. that are, made for tours. They only go down to around150 ft , along reefs. one thing that's nice is They have windows to look out of, to see the fish and reef. They have to force them down, if they lose power they float to the surface. I have been on one a couple of times Thay are called the Atlantis. They show some tour around some island. One is, A claustrophobe on a submarine in the Caribbean. Go take a look.
Here in the US high schoolers take a test called the ASVAB test find your strengths and to determine if the US military can utilize your skills and how hard they’re going to pursue you for jobs like a standard sailor or someone who qualified for nuclear engineering. Kids can take it a few times but how many times I don’t know.
LOL!! Kat saying they don't sink. They do but in a controlled way. Probably not a 'text book' sinking anyway. Missiles stay in place (not moved) for the whole voyage. A vertical launch has a jet engine (no joke) that fills the tube with hot steam very quickly. Launch depth is classified and even if I did know, it has probably changed since last I heard. Say the submarine can be as deep as half it length to launch anyway. The missile follows the bubble of steam all the way to the surface so fast it actually jumps out ot the water. Then it fires it's engines. Simplistic answer.
If you all make it to the US...in Mobile Alabama they have a US battleship (the Alabama), a captured ww2 German Uboat, a blackbird and a B52 bomber...at least that all used to be there!!!
To be fair. Those folks on the commercial submarine that imploded. Didn't feel a thing. They might have heard the very first split second of the explosion. But not much else. Death would have been instantaneous at those depths.
Has your son, watched the “ Miracle on Ice” it’s a movie starring Kurt Russel. Herb Brooks was the coach of the USA ice hockey team in the Olympic in 1980. Sports Illustrate magazine vote the 1980 ice hockey team as the best team for USA Ever.
The kids did a great job yesterday! They were engaged, curious, asked great questions and were fun to watch. Awesome job! And great video today as well!
Garin and Lea were Amazing yesterday, love y'all. Peace from Central Texas Hook'em Horns 🤘
Torpedoes are loaded through a chute that opens on the top deck of the submarine directly into the torpedo room and then placed on racks on either side of the torpedo room. There is a chute forward and a chute aft for each torpedo room. I believe the missles are able to be loaded directly into their tubes since the doors that open to launch the missles are on the deck of the submarine.
Also add that the toredoes or missiles are not armed while loading. That is done just prior to firing.
I didn't see anyone else answer her question "how does it float". Subs use ballast tanks to mix air/water to achieve neutral buoyancy. Inject more air, they go up. Let in more water, they go down.
Just like most fish.
A very basic answer but, Yes. Submarines are pure Physics in operation and every bit as if not more complicated than anything going into space. Every action has a reaction. A surface ship works on buoyancy. A submarine works on balance and weight to suspend itself in the water column. A submarine submerged should weigh nothing in the water. Too heavy and it will sink, too light and it will surface.
They actually put a lot of weight on the submarine keel for stability and so they need less ballast to make it submerge.
@@Chris_at_Home I'm submarine qualified and served on two submarines. I'm aware of how submarines work. The "weight" you talk about is "ballast" and it is stacked in the bottom of the ballast tanks either side of the 'keel'. I have been in Ballast Tanks. They are slimy, dark and stink to high heaven. The Pressure Hull sits on top of the keel. How many subs have you served on?
@@webbtrekker534 I worked at EB and saw the lead being poured. Also saw all the different ballast tanks. I’ve even been to the bottom of the periscope well.Never served on subs, both brother and brother in law were STCs. My other brother and I were in Patrol Squadrons. I’ve been inside a few that were active. The 650 when it was in Rota my brother had me for breakfast, he came by the squadron the next day and got to talk with the ASW guys. I was an AT2 after one enlistment and got out about 50 years ago.
Since the comments were disabled......THE KIDS DID GREAT YESTERDAY!
I don’t think it was just there’s I was having problems with a lot of sites
@@timothydixon2545 Yeah, YT has started auto disabling comments on certain videos, especially if there's kids, violent content, or anything they think is controversial in them. A couple other channels I'm subbed to have had it happen and said it wasn't them who turned the comments off.
TH-cam auto disabled comments when "Children" are the main source of the video to prevent morons from pressuring them into things they probably shouldn't be doing.
I understand why the comments were disabled, but you are correct ...the kids were fantastic !
Perhaps one day they will have their own channel !
@@davebcf1231 that’s crazy to me they are getting out of hand with this crap
You know what I like about this channel? It's that different family members come and go for each video.
The kids did great yesterday!!!
watch the Movie " Hunt for Red October" for a good coldwar submarine movie.
Das Boot and Crimson Tide are also good submarine movies.
The kids did an awesome job yesterday.
Your kids did an awesome job in the other video. Anyways, I love all the branches of military, we need them all. I have many family members in the Air Force. Great videos. Keep up the great work.
You can watch live streaming cameras in San Diego showing Navy ships coming and going. Subs. Carriers etc. The training for submariners is crazy!
I enjoy watching your family channel. I must say, Garin is a very inquisitive young man and I can see him going far in life. He seems to be very intelligent and not at all shy when it comes to making videos. When is he going to have his own channel or both he and his sister. It’s nice to see children interested in learning about the world than glued to the video games. Is my impression wrong? You both should be proud of your children. Thanks for your videos. I hope you get to visit America someday soon and it exceeds your expectations.
They are called ballast tanks to surface to the top they fill the ballast tanks with air to submerge the submarine they filled the ballast tanks with water
Red October introduced another saying: "Going through this underwater canyon is like flying through the Alps in a plane with no windows".
The kids did great yesterday.
That picture at 6:30 is a SEAL delivery vehicle which is a mini sub used by SEAL teams. There are also other vehicles called Swimmer Delivery Vehicles used by all SF and SOF forces.
For the vertical launch tubes on top of the sub, the missiles are just lowered into them. The missiles and torpedo's that shoot from the horizontal torpedo tubes are lowered into the front escape hatch where the upper and middle decks can be removed so the weapons can be dropped right into the torpedo room on the bottom deck.
09:51 notice how the sub does not have a keel to slice the waves, and so on the surface she plows through the waves. Impressive the power.
I served aboard a fleet ballistic missile nuclear powered submarine during the cold war. The USS John Adams, SSBN 620.
Torpedos and harpoon missiles are loaded through a weapon loading hatch, the decks in a straight line from that hatch a
Have sections that can be reconfigured as rails and sleds so they can lower the weapons down the hatch and down to the torpedo room. Cruise missiles in the vertical tubes are loaded at dockside by crane, or by shipboard crane from a submarine tender.
To try to answer the question, how do they float?It's a big tank and it's either filled with air or with water.They fill it with water to go down and air just bring it back up.
I was in the US Navy from 1964 to 1970. I served in submarines the whole time. Can't imagine having been any other place. Great life! Great times. GREAT food!
I'm with probably the majority of commentor's. Since the comments were turned off yesterday. I want to say how Bloody awesome, Lea & Garin did on their own. Great job, keep the Vlogs coming. I'm really am enjoying your Vlogs.
9:00 1 of the russian subs has windows on the conning tower
They load the various weapons in different ways. The torpedoes and harpoon missiles are loaded in a special weapons loading hatch, and the big ballistic missiles are loaded directly into the vertical launch tubes. And you were right about the mini subs. I spent 4 years aboard a sub from 79 to 83
A friend of mine met his wife while they served on duty on the US submarine. He said the good news is "you can't get away from each other for 90 days". That is also the bad news if the relationship goes south. Ugly break-ups don't actually pair well with nuclear tipped missiles in your pantry so common sense must prevail!
The kids amazing and to answer the question they kept asking, it depends on the school system. Some schools do what’s called a block schedule where you do fewer classes in a day, but each class is longer. Then you alternate which group of classes you have each day. Other schools have you do all your classes every day. No matter which schedule you use your day lasts for about 6 to 7 hours, including lunch. Very similar to having a job as an adult; you work about 7 to 8 hours a day with a 30 minute break at some point in the day, typically. That’s what most companies do; admittedly there are special circumstances or certain jobs are different for a specific reason.
the new version of this sub the block 5 will be 460 ft (140 m) and have another section for more missiles. and the new anti-ship missile is a new version of tomahawk missile.
The WWII battleship New Jersey has a youtube channel that's family friendly. It's one of the four battleships of the Iowa class that are preserved as museums.
Since this interests you and your fam, one slight correction: you mentioned the sub that imploded, and yes, it was a sub, though not a true submarine. It was a submersible, which is dependent upon another vessel like a submarine or ship.
Comparing that to these military grade nuclear submarines, is like comparing a cardboard box with wheels to a Ferrari lol.
Lol, your favorite navy vet here, haha. Anyway, I could never have done sub duty. Nope, can't. Not getting me that far down under the water. Love your reactions with the family. I served back in the late 70's early 80s. Technology is so far advanced..it is scary. Keep up the great reactions!!! If I remember right, sub duty is voluntary/
Slanted planks if you will to load internal missiles, outer missiles are via crane.
The ballast takes take on water to dive and stay underwater, blow blast to surface
, watch the 80s documentary on USS Seawolf
Sorry for the reply but I can tell you this because of my retired Navy cousin in San Diego California.
That noise is SONAR, Sound, Navigon and Ranging.
My dad was on submarines for years when he was in the Navy. He said one of the things they had to do, which was both thrilling and scary, was the emergency surface! What they call an Emergency Blow. You should check that out!!
You should check out the "Smarter Every Day" Submarine Deep Dive. There are 9 videos in the list. He explains a lot about how they work. He went underway on one under the arctic ice cap.
Part of what makes the building of the defense department machines and or ships, subs, helicopters and planes they hire pre selected defense builders all over the US to build specific parts and bring these parts together to assemble them safely and securely. If during an attack within the US they will never take out the building of the defense departments projects. There are literally thousands of builders spread out strategically everywhere. I love your channel, every time Garen or Laya announces the introduction of the video I see how proud you guys are of your children. Just like at the beginning of this one. Be safe from Florida
You guys move fast!
Hopefully I spelled their name's correctly
physical as well as psych evals are evaluated to determine fitness for assignment as crewmember onboard any US sub
Don’t forget to play for Garren the US Navy Blue Angels cockpit view video. His hair will catch fire ! Lol
As a former US Submarine sonar technician, I can tell you they will go all the way to the bottom if you or your crewmates screw up! And again, if someone screws up, the lights can go out. Then you are in a "no light" situation, like being in a cave. You can't see your hand at the end of your nose. If you are on the surface, you have at least starlight or something. At the same time, it was one of the best experiences of my life. If you want to get an idea of how crazy things can be, look for an "Angles and Dangles" video.
For total depth...that is a secret. There is a public known range, but these ships...most info on them are higher than top secret. But, they can go very deep...
I have a cousin in Naval Intelligence. He spent 2 years on a submarine.
They just launched a new nuclear submarine the USS Massachusetts last week.
The Virgina class is the current fast attack submarine, The Columbia class is supposedly either in design or currently being built, which is a ballistic missile sub, carrying missiles that can be launched from underwater to any point on earth. Supposedly the next generation of fast attack submarine is supposedly under development. torpedoes and Harpoon missiles are loaded one by one through special hatches that lead to the storage area, once inside they have equipment that can pick up each torpedo and load it into the tubes, the cruise missiles are loaded from the top, since those hatches are outside
Not any point on earth. For example not from North Dakota. 😊
@@davidfryer9218 I don't understand what you're trying to say
The Trident ballistic missiles [with nuclear warheads] on US Atlantic Fleet and UK Royal Navy subs are loaded at the Strategic Weapons Facility Atlantic, which is located at the US Navy Submarine Base at King's Bay, Georgia. The missiles are lowered vertically into the tubes. The UK builds its own subs and warheads, but purchases US built Trident missiles.
You might find this TH-cam video interesting : " USS Hartford (SSN 768) surfaces at the Arctic circle for ICEX 2016 " A member of my family was on the Hartford during that exercise.
FYI, ICEX is an Arctic training exercise conducted every two years by the US, Canada, the UK, and Norway.
They really need to step up production of the FAX, Virginia, and the new Columbia class subs. The Ohios and Los Angeles classes are old.
The go to dry dock to get new rockets and food after 6months out to sea
You all would enjoy the film called DAS BOOT 1981.
It’s The greatest submarine film ever.
It’s all filmed on an actual submarine , no sets or CGI
The biggest mental hurdles to overcome in a submarine, I've heard from friends and family, was the fact that there really is no personal space just for you; you share beds with your crew. Then you are underwater for months at a time, never surfacing at all, no internet, no cellphones, even letters are delayed for months with some letters delayed until the end of your deployment. Even if you had windows, all you would see is a dark vast ocean.
The Chinese Navy is soiling their loin clothes with the announcement that Austalia is getting several of these Virginia Class subs, each with about 22 Tomahawk cruise missiles which can reach their major cities and all their ports. China had checked the Aussia box as a WIN years ago and now it's not so likely.
One of my gaming buddies was/is a bubblehead (submariner)...
If you really love tight spaces, there is a WW2 Submarine in SF at fishermans warf you'd love it
Little sub is an SDV: SEAL Delivery Vehicle.
Smarter Everyday is a great channel to react to. He makes pizza in a submarine! Thanks Graham Fam!
The missiles and tomahawks are loaded before they leave port. They can be reloaded at sea by support ships. Go USN! Fair winds and following seas...
Submarine crews are sworn probably more then any other branch for operation secrecy.
Watch “Hunt For Red October” amazing Submarine Movie Cold War times
I think you all should watch and react to "The Hunt for Red October". It's submarine move and dramatized of course but it's fun to watch. 😁
If you ever come to the United States they have tours where you go in and see US Navy ships and US Air Force tours if you want to see in person. Around the United States there is air shows all the time just need to find out when in certain states. Just a suggestion!! \/ 🗽🗽
From someone who knows poquito Spanish, I really dig Kat's Manana shirt...
The newer subs they more then likely will not tell you maximum operation depth just for operation secrets of limitations on the submarine.
You guys should watch a movie called greyhound with Tom hanks.
Maybe, put a community note on the channel, next time when you a upload a solo kid's reactions? They were awesome!
American schools are so different in size (building size and class size), transportation methods (busing, walking, driving) , class length, period schedule, student rules and roles, extracurricular activities, security methods (metal detectors, school police, lockdown drills, tornado drills), and dress code.
How do they get them in? They have hatches on deck they can open, and set equipment on deck to facilitate the handling of them, and they wench them down, and place them where they need to be, in their storage areas. You don't build multi-million dollar platforms without figuring all that out in the design phase. If youtube would catch up with 2024, I could post a photo of them loading munitions and you would see what I mean.
Preloaded in place except torprdoes
oh look Cat has 2 sons now lol😝
y'all going have let Garin watch crimson tide, the hunt for red october, and kurisk some of the best submarine movies ever made
I enjoy your video's very much. And the sound you hear submarine make is not radar it's sonar.
Just think about the men. That volunteer Because we have a volunteer navy. To do that. On top of the sea. YES. William s
I suggest reacting to living underwater:how submarines work by Wendover productions it's a great in depth video about how submarines operate
Christening a ship is a tradition for all military and civilian ships except for the White Star Line, owners of the Titanic. They chose to forego the ceremony for all their ships. In the words of one dockyard worker when the Titanic was launched, "They just builds her and shoves her in.". I vote that Garin intro all videos from now on. He's nailing it every time.
The United States Navy has a naming convention for all ships. In the old days, battleships were named after states. Submarines were named after fish. Aircraft carriers were, and still are, named after notable battles and people. Cruisers were named after American cities. Destroyers were named after people and places not quite so notable. The list goes on. Battleships have not been built since the mid 1940's. Cruisers really no longer exist in the U.S. Navy. The naming convention evolved so that submarines were named after cities (cruisers) and now they are named after states (battleships).
The classic "ping" of sonar at 11:11 almost never happens. When you "ping" a target you reveal you own location. It only happens when your enemy already knows where you are or you have achieved complete surprise. Submarines rely on passive sensors to locate their prey. The passive sensors on U.S. subs are the best in the world. They are also designed to be the quietest subs on the planet. Our detection sensors are so good that they can identify which sub BY NAME they are targeting. Every submarine ever built has it's own unique acoustic signature.
Just want to say. You say you are afraid is going down in a sub. There are a few, at resort. that are, made for tours. They only go down to around150 ft , along reefs. one thing that's nice is They have windows to look out of, to see the fish and reef. They have to force them down, if they lose power they float to the surface. I have been on one a couple of times Thay are called the Atlantis. They show some tour around some island. One is, A claustrophobe on a submarine in the Caribbean. Go take a look.
First successful submarine, CSS Hunley.
You should try to show your son the Iowa class battleships of world war 2
Here in the US high schoolers take a test called the ASVAB test find your strengths and to determine if the US military can utilize your skills and how hard they’re going to pursue you for jobs like a standard sailor or someone who qualified for nuclear engineering. Kids can take it a few times but how many times I don’t know.
That is only true in "some" schools, not all schools in the United States.
These submarines can dive deeper than 1,200 feet (370 meters). The true depth is much deeper but that is the depth that has been publicly released.
They work kind of like a fish. And they get the oxygen from the sea water.And that's how they breathe underwater
Look up battleship Texas
LOL!! Kat saying they don't sink. They do but in a controlled way. Probably not a 'text book' sinking anyway. Missiles stay in place (not moved) for the whole voyage. A vertical launch has a jet engine (no joke) that fills the tube with hot steam very quickly. Launch depth is classified and even if I did know, it has probably changed since last I heard. Say the submarine can be as deep as half it length to launch anyway. The missile follows the bubble of steam all the way to the surface so fast it actually jumps out ot the water. Then it fires it's engines. Simplistic answer.
Should react to USS Ronald Reagan Super Carrier, good in-depth video. Its about an hour long.
that was in 2020 so by now shes been deployed somewhere under the ocean
Y'all bring to mind a saying: it works like screen doors on a submarine...
Fun fact, a US and French sub had a collision because both were undetectable despite being close enough to hit each other
❤❤❤❤U GUYS.TEXAS SHOUT OUT.....LOV YOUR ❤FOR MILITARY PEACE EQUIPMENT 😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊
Tell them kids they did a great job 😊
You guys should checkout the movie called Hunter Killer.
Oh....I'm with you when it comes to submarines.
I wouldnt mind being on one but I wouldnt want someone shooting torpedos at me.
Check out the movie: The Hunt for Red October.
How deep they can actually go is classified.
If you all make it to the US...in Mobile Alabama they have a US battleship (the Alabama), a captured ww2 German Uboat, a blackbird and a B52 bomber...at least that all used to be there!!!
You guys should react to the USS Ronald Reagan video by Spark
America says done Fk with our boats.
Check out the movie "Hunt for Red October" to see sub warfare.
A Virginia Class Submarine can dive up to 800 feet underwater
To be fair. Those folks on the commercial submarine that imploded. Didn't feel a thing. They might have heard the very first split second of the explosion. But not much else. Death would have been instantaneous at those depths.
Has your son, watched the “ Miracle on Ice” it’s a movie starring Kurt Russel.
Herb Brooks was the coach of the USA ice hockey team in the Olympic in 1980.
Sports Illustrate magazine vote the 1980 ice hockey team as the best team for USA
Ever.
Yeah! 😂
A US Submarine is actually faster when it's underwater.Than when it's on top of the water.
243 m is the max depth of US naval submarines according to the internet
This is about yesterday's video. The student will probably have different classes the next day.😊😊😊
Not likely unless something has changed