Berthing on a Submarine

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  • Опубликовано: 5 сен 2024
  • Let's learn about the 18.5 cu. ft. of space submarine sailors have to call home. Then we'll compare with the Captain's accommodations.
    Note: The nametag "Taylor" on the uniform in the Captain's stateroom is the name of one of the retired Navy officers (a LCDR) who was instrumental in bringing Blueback to the Oregon Museum of Science and Industry (OMSI).

Комментарии • 106

  • @DownPeriscopeUpPeriscope
    @DownPeriscopeUpPeriscope  Месяц назад +18

    Note: The nametag "Taylor" on the uniform in the Captain's stateroom is the name of one of the retired Navy officers (a LCDR) who was instrumental in bringing Blueback to the Oregon Museum of Science and Industry (OMSI).

    • @UncleJoeLITE
      @UncleJoeLITE Месяц назад

      He deserves to be remembered for that. The last boat's co in a way.

  • @schroedingersdog7965
    @schroedingersdog7965 Месяц назад +7

    3:52 "Now, in comparison, this is pretty "sub" par . . . "
    I see what you did there! 😆
    Thanks for the tour!

  • @Luis-be9mi
    @Luis-be9mi Месяц назад +19

    Grandfather served on the Balao-class subs during WW2 in the Pacific. He often joked that every time he got home after a patrol there would be a can of engine degreaser and an abrasive brush waiting for him on the front porch.
    For good reason he worked on the diesels and electric engines while only being able to shower once a week.
    When I joined the U.S. Navy and served aboard the Ohio Boomers, he NEVER let me hear the end of it on how spoiled I am serving aboard today’s subs.

    • @johnstreet797
      @johnstreet797 Месяц назад

      D.B.F.

    • @tjav001
      @tjav001 Месяц назад +2

      I love the “back in my day” story. I find myself doing that now after getting out the Army.

    • @lorenspiller7096
      @lorenspiller7096 Месяц назад

      Served on the george Washington ssbn, same here, hot racked a few times

  • @robertmunsey
    @robertmunsey Месяц назад +5

    My Dad Malcolm Munsey was the skipper of the Blueback. Took Command in Bermerton SS581 Wa during overhal and to Hawaii then to a Westpac cruise. He was also the XO of the Bonefish SS582. The Blueback. Bonefish and Barbel were known as the B-Girls.

  • @annalorree
    @annalorree Месяц назад +4

    I’ve toured that boat, it’s an interesting tour. It made me appreciate the barracks I used to occupy as a firefighter.

  • @arniestuboud
    @arniestuboud Месяц назад +8

    Great video. Two things about the captain's stateroom.
    1. A Lt-Cdr belonging to "Taylor's" uniform does not have scrambled eggs on his hats.
    2. Just like in the nuc attack boats, this captain's bunk folds up into the niche on the outboard wall to reveal a desk in the center and a seat at each end of the space below the bunk.
    3. The sink also folds up into the bulkhead. It is a clever design developed for the WW2 fleet boats.

    • @DownPeriscopeUpPeriscope
      @DownPeriscopeUpPeriscope  Месяц назад +4

      Correct. However, since Taylor's khaki shirt has O-5 insignia, his hat has the appropriate scrambled eggs on it. My guess is that his efforts to get the sub to the museum began when he was still a Lt. Cmdr. Then he was promoted and then donated his uniform items to the museum where we display them in the CO's stateroom.

  • @mr.beansstuff1370
    @mr.beansstuff1370 Месяц назад +6

    Thought that looked familiar. Worked at OMSI for 13 years. Crawled nearly every inch of that boat running cabling for networking, a/v, lighting for special events, etc. Been nearly 20 years since I left. Wonder how much of the stuff I installed is still there and in use. Was fun to stop people in the museum and ask how their tour of the sub was. They always asked how did I know they took the tour. Answer was always “I have a nose for such things”. They always smelled like old diesel fuel. 😅

  • @djcobb74
    @djcobb74 Месяц назад +4

    Very interesting! Thanks for giving us the tour!

  • @extractedentertainment8213
    @extractedentertainment8213 Месяц назад +2

    Looks like more room than we had for our three high “coffin racks” on the ship I was on in the USCG 😂

  • @armcchargues8623
    @armcchargues8623 Месяц назад +4

    Spent 20 years on submarines. Never heard the term "coffin" used in reference to a bed pan or a rack. Thankfully never had to hot rack.

    • @Tales_from_the_Fantail
      @Tales_from_the_Fantail 12 дней назад

      It was used by surface fleet. We called them coffin lockers on the destroyer. ⚓

  • @johnfulton7678
    @johnfulton7678 Месяц назад +6

    A lot more than we had on the old diesel-electric boats in the Old Navy!

  • @mrjockt
    @mrjockt Месяц назад +2

    I used to work on North Sea oil installations and ‘hot bunking’ was still common practice on many of them, since the standard working pattern was two 12 hour shifts you would be getting up about an hour before whoever you were sharing the bunk with came off shift.

  • @Gepedrglass
    @Gepedrglass Месяц назад

    Submarines are so cool just because they have to use the space given as efficiently as possible. thank you for this! always very cool to see the ways day to day life is different on these boats.

  • @tjav001
    @tjav001 Месяц назад

    I’m definitely visiting this next time I’m in Portland. Thank you for the informative video for the land dwellers.

  • @Tales_from_the_Fantail
    @Tales_from_the_Fantail 12 дней назад

    Nice tour. ⚓

  • @captainscarlett1
    @captainscarlett1 Месяц назад +47

    So sad. In the army I slept on the ground or in a hole I'd dug, in a sleeping bag under a plastic sheet if it was raining wearing the same clothes I'd worn for weeks. I ate out of cans and packets and I got up in the middle of the night to stand a 2 hour machinegun picquet. I pooped in a hole I'd dug. Next day I'd tromp through the bush carrying a pack, weapon, rations, ammunition, water from a local stream, (sterilized with foul tasting tablets), and of course my sleeping bag, then that night I'd do it all again. So sad for the navy.

    • @NoOne-zo6gj
      @NoOne-zo6gj Месяц назад

      MMMMM ok, so you enjoy being treated like crap and a pack animal. Me I will stick with the hot chow, ac, hot showers, the ice cream machine on the boats and not being treated like crap or a pack animal.

    • @DownPeriscopeUpPeriscope
      @DownPeriscopeUpPeriscope  Месяц назад +23

      I know... You Army guys get wide open spaces, fresh air, freezing or blisteringly hot days, heavy packs, gourmet C-Rats/MREs, toilet paper (if you're lucky), and the joy of firing automatic weapons. Some days, you'd think the Army got all the nice stuff.

    • @forsdykemontague1017
      @forsdykemontague1017 Месяц назад +5

      You volunteered right? 😂

    • @texican65
      @texican65 Месяц назад +8

      Sounds like a kindergarten walk in the park compared to what the guys on the submarines USS Scorpion and USS Thresher got, or the USS Bonefish.

    • @captainamerica6525
      @captainamerica6525 Месяц назад +3

      Right there with ya buddy. 101st Airborne Infantry, 11B20.

  • @williamorton7600
    @williamorton7600 Месяц назад

    Great video. We donated a few parts from Sturgeon to Blueback when they were getting her ready for museum duty in 93'. Sturgeon was being inactivated and all that is left of 637 is her sail at Keyport, WA. Same brown paneling on Sturgeon.👍

    • @DownPeriscopeUpPeriscope
      @DownPeriscopeUpPeriscope  Месяц назад +1

      Thanks for sharing! One of the biggest challenges is finding information on what parts of the boat are original (and to what time period), and what parts are donated. From my understanding, they had to refurbish a lot of the interior before turning her into a museum. It was largely gutted when they got her.

  • @paulfarace9595
    @paulfarace9595 Месяц назад +3

    Good job shipmates! Welcome to the club of RUclips channel submarines!

  • @descendantofphineas7785
    @descendantofphineas7785 Месяц назад

    My uncle was given the Honor to represent Submarine Vets.
    He was on the USS SEAHORSE WWII. For this sub at the Omsi. When it was released to the public.

  • @Chris-the-Saxon
    @Chris-the-Saxon Месяц назад

    I really like the fake wood bulkheads, definitely more cosy/homley, wish we did that on hour ships, lurs are very clinical.

  • @rswpt
    @rswpt Месяц назад

    thank you for your service my brother

  • @davidlarned4315
    @davidlarned4315 Месяц назад

    This brought back some memories...

  • @duartesimoes508
    @duartesimoes508 Месяц назад

    In the Portuguese Army of the eighties we had beds stacked in groups of three. (theoretically they could be stacked until reaching the ceiling 😀)The free room available to the bed above was probably identical, not taller than here. Mattresses were made in cheap foam but pretty comfortable.

  • @shadowguardian210
    @shadowguardian210 Месяц назад

    I remember sleeping on the Edson a while back with the others from Wolverine Division from the USNSCC it was hot, the a/c was out and we had a fan for all those bodies, most of us slept in just our undies and on top of our blankets and pillows, while I did enjoy the noise I did not enjoy the snoring coming from one of my bunk mates couldn’t tell who or where since it was completely lights out but let’s just say I won’t forget how it felt like to sleep on a destroyer

  • @UncleJoeLITE
    @UncleJoeLITE Месяц назад

    As a MIDN, I got to sleep on top of a Mk48 in an Oberon! True! Nowhere else on the whole boat, just one spare hot rack. Junior sailors spent all week taking the piss out of poor Mr UJ lol. Cheers from AU! ⚓

  • @Edward135i
    @Edward135i Месяц назад

    When I was in cub scouts I got to sleep on the USS Blueback in Portland Oregon that was more than 25 years ago I still remember it and my sleeping bag still smells like diesel as it was the last diesel electric sub in the US Navy. I remember the bed feeling very cramped and I wasn't 6ft 5in at 10 years old, I can't imagine how bad it would be now.

  • @ebergg
    @ebergg Месяц назад +1

    I was on a fast frigate in the 80's did 2 eight month med cruises with a rack like that.

  • @DJF1985
    @DJF1985 Месяц назад

    You should show the berthing space on a gator freighter, aka, amphibious ships for Marines. The Marine berthing is drastically different from the sailors berthing. At least back in the 80’s.

  • @fredericklockard3854
    @fredericklockard3854 Месяц назад +4

    No…..I’ve never wondered what it’s like to sleep on a submarine 😂

  • @wakcedout
    @wakcedout Месяц назад +1

    Aannnndddd this is why I’m glad I was usaf. At worst I slept on a cot during training and had even if briefly before getting a house with my then wife, I had a room with a proper bed to myself. Shared a bathroom tho.
    Downside was the dude I shared it with next to me was a different afsc and clearly he was night shift while I was dayshift. Had to ask him to keep his music down at night so I could sleep…kinda let it be known don’t make the guy who controls your entry and exit have a bad nights sleep lol.

  • @jebbroham1776
    @jebbroham1776 Месяц назад

    They're the same size and height as we had on the carrier. I was middle rack which worked well for me because I'm 6'3". I slept on the opposite side of the light because on our 3rd night out I busted my forehead on it so I flipped sides pretty quick after that lol.

  • @karlbrundage7472
    @karlbrundage7472 Месяц назад

    I was serving as Messenger of the Watch, while I was the off-duty Helmsman-Planesman one early morning when the Officer of the Deck, peering through the periscope noted local sunrise.
    As one of the astrological/meteorological events that are mandated to be reported to the ships Commanding Officer, the OOD ordered me to report this event to the CO.
    As per regulations, I presented myself in front of the CO's cabin, knocked three times sharply, then entered the cabin.
    My Commanding officer, a Commander in the United States Navy, a veritable Father-Figure to me (I was 19 years-old at the time) and the man who literally held my destiny in his hand.........
    Stood there completely naked.
    He was just about to get into the shower when I made my report, which I did: " Sir, the Officer of the Deck sends his respects and reports sunrise"
    The Captain didn't bat an eye and said: "Very well", then went into the head for his shower.
    Almost 40 years later, my wife and I have a dinner with my old CO and his wife, usually around Christmas, near their home.
    He's still a father to me................

  • @music4ever1981
    @music4ever1981 Месяц назад +3

    I don’t have to wonder what “sleeping” or living in a submarine is like. I spent 5 years on a submarine in the US Navy, so I know from firsthand experience what being on a submarine is like!
    ETV2(SS) Glenn Scroggins

  • @The_Black_Knight
    @The_Black_Knight Месяц назад

    Accommodations in combat zones are roughly the same. Spent years with my face 6 inches from the ceiling, inside a vehicle tophatch knees to my chest, or sleeping in a dirt hole.

  • @Sam2sham
    @Sam2sham Месяц назад

    The only submarine I gsve visited us the cavalla in Galveston. Thus is a hilton compared to it. Thanks, i would like to visit this ship.

  • @Mostopinionatedmanofalltime
    @Mostopinionatedmanofalltime Месяц назад

    Sounds delightful.😢

  • @samrogrer4959
    @samrogrer4959 Месяц назад +2

    I was on 5 different Diesel/electric boats in the 60's and 70's. Berthing was NEVER like this for the enlisted man E6 and below.

  • @ferdonandebull
    @ferdonandebull Месяц назад

    I like the way everyone complains about the services they chose.. there is no draft.
    You know the army, navy and marines talking about living arrangements.
    I joined the Air force and was an imagery interpreter. Best food I ever had. One man rooms.. and once I broke a sweat in my work area and we were sent out until the air conditioner was fixed because we could not sweat with the materials we were handling.
    All I can say is you chose poorly..
    Or… you are not complaining you are bragging about self abuse…

  • @davidschick6951
    @davidschick6951 Месяц назад

    0:10 I was really hoping you would explain what those openings in the bulkhead were.

  • @wulfeman9948
    @wulfeman9948 Месяц назад

    had that on destroyer 3 high bunks
    had hammocks on cruiser 4 high

  • @d0ntcare
    @d0ntcare Месяц назад

    My dad stayed in the junior officer's stateroom where the stairs are now.

    • @d0ntcare
      @d0ntcare Месяц назад

      Also, my family ate Thanksgiving dinner in the Blueback's Ward Room in 1988 because my dad (a Lieutenant JG) was on duty.

  • @Scarter63
    @Scarter63 Месяц назад

    Jeeze, compare that to 140 man berthing on an aircraft carrier. Same rack, but with curtains for the 4th wall.

  • @fanglethorpe
    @fanglethorpe Месяц назад

    I would think if the President was on the boat the Captain would be the one sharing a room with the XO

  • @donjohnson3701
    @donjohnson3701 Месяц назад

    Spent an overnight in the Silversides. Never forget the smell of diesel that permeated the air.

  • @intothemultiverse1033
    @intothemultiverse1033 Месяц назад

    Probably moved due to the noise from the wardroom

  • @jamesdelaney3797
    @jamesdelaney3797 Месяц назад +3

    Ever wonder what it's like to sleep on a cot in a tent in the desert eating field chow and MRE's for a year?

  • @schlirf
    @schlirf Месяц назад +3

    Speaking just for me, and couple million in Army green...Eff That! Rather be snoozing in rattletrap called an M-113! 🤣😂🤣

  • @Veterans_for_Harris
    @Veterans_for_Harris Месяц назад

    The worst part of getting out of the navy was leaving my friend's behind.

  • @bonjoey1
    @bonjoey1 Месяц назад

    I used to be a submarine

  • @rigelthekent
    @rigelthekent Месяц назад

    I could live with the limited space but that “wood” paneling would have to go!

  • @JebHoge
    @JebHoge Месяц назад

    I literally couldn't straighten my legs in there.

  • @alanstrong55
    @alanstrong55 Месяц назад

    I would be like Johnson bumping his head every time he tried getting out of bed. Ouch.

  • @charlescourtney4402
    @charlescourtney4402 Месяц назад

    Bottom line: Submarines are not for the claustrophobic.

  • @CaptainBardiel
    @CaptainBardiel Месяц назад

    Ever heard of the term "Paint and Powder"?

  • @NoOne-zo6gj
    @NoOne-zo6gj Месяц назад

    No patrol sock on the rack

  • @tolik5929
    @tolik5929 Месяц назад

    Thats the Marriot , compared to a WW2 submarine , especially a German one . They were some of the worst .

  • @thudable
    @thudable Месяц назад +1

    Nope, not for me. Know a guy that spent almost an entire Navy career on subs. He's 4'10" .

  • @glennday7802
    @glennday7802 Месяц назад

    35 years (1970-2005) in the US submarine force and I never heard a bunk referred to as a "coffin rack." Silly nonsense.

    • @sonar8594
      @sonar8594 Месяц назад

      Normally I’ve seen coffin racks refer to racks where part of the bed is walled in on both sides (especially when it is your head) in order to maximize the number in a space. Being fully walled in can increase the claustrophobic nature of the racks, though because they can be quiter they were sought after by some on the crew.

  • @remaguire
    @remaguire Месяц назад

    Better than sleeping on a torpedo skid. Don't ask me how I know.

    • @armynurseboy
      @armynurseboy Месяц назад

      Better than a woobie in the dirt...

  • @wojciechgrodnicki6302
    @wojciechgrodnicki6302 Месяц назад

    Why 6-hour watches instead of 8-hour watches?

    • @DJF1985
      @DJF1985 Месяц назад

      6 on, 6 off, 6 on,6 off, on a duty day, then work day, then training day. At sea though essentially duty days and work days. BB 61 USS IOWA MARDET. Subs are different.

  • @The_Comedian556
    @The_Comedian556 Месяц назад

    Im 5ft4, comfy ;)

  • @richardvaldes3959
    @richardvaldes3959 Месяц назад

    Man the amount of times you smack your head

  • @PfWonton
    @PfWonton Месяц назад

    damn, being homeless looks better than that. and i've been homeless

  • @dbfbobt
    @dbfbobt Месяц назад

    Laughs in diesel boat. DBF.

  • @babuzzard6470
    @babuzzard6470 Месяц назад

    6ft 2in of room, great, I’m 6ft 6in, have enough trouble with normal beds.

  • @RogerRaleigh
    @RogerRaleigh Месяц назад

    Rockabye baby seabag bunk under mattress body always in motion get over sea sickness as best you can good food learn as much as you can while you can. More school after hitch !

  • @mattcohn7882
    @mattcohn7882 Месяц назад

    I'm built like an offensive lineman...I wouldn't fit in those racks

  • @LM-ek2hb
    @LM-ek2hb Месяц назад

    What is up with all that simulated wood grain?!

  • @FoxWolfWorld
    @FoxWolfWorld Месяц назад +1

    They shouldn’t let pregnant people onto submarines. Seems like a terrible place for birthing

  • @BELCAN57
    @BELCAN57 Месяц назад

    MAYBE they have a coffee pot in the Goat Locker ?

    • @subvet694
      @subvet694 Месяц назад

      There is ALWAYS a coffee pot in the Goat Locker!

  • @chadcato887
    @chadcato887 Месяц назад

    So instead of just pointing to the XO state room, why don’t you actually show us you standing there talking that’s boring. 👎

  • @joenewton2021
    @joenewton2021 Месяц назад

    Claustrophobic !!!

  • @FrithonaHrududu02127
    @FrithonaHrududu02127 Месяц назад

    Yeah it must suck bad enough being pregnant on a submarine, but actually having to spit the kid out down there too....

  • @JeepWrangler1957
    @JeepWrangler1957 Месяц назад

    And now bringing in women on Sub's...I am sure that they are not as spartan as the men's quarters?

  • @papiparsons9045
    @papiparsons9045 Месяц назад

    Why would they let a pregnant woman get on a submarine in the first place?!🤣

  • @bodidley5015
    @bodidley5015 Месяц назад

    Spent 24 hours on a sub as a midshipman. That was more than enough. Fascinating warfare specialty but not for me.