Glad I'm not the only one who was amused by that. Ryan: " . . . just a spare part if you need it down in the engine room." 'Wait, that's not right.' 'Much better. Ok, moving on.' (as if nothing happened) "We've got more air conditioning equipment back here . . . ." Me: "Whaaat? Wait, what just happened?" "Did he really just do that?" "Wow. That's . . . incredible." On the way past them again one minuet later, he checked them again, just to make sure nobody happened to mess with them.
Never ceases to amaze me how complex an Iowa class battleship is, and how such an astonishing machine was designed in the days before computers. The manpower needed to draw up the plans for this ship must have been absolutely enormous
@@reubenmorris487 Yes Reuben, in Dead Weight Tonnage (DWT) a modern US aircraft carrier must now displace *more* than its own weight in spreadsheets. Previously then there must've been less than than a battleship's DWT in spreadsheets.
Nice of you to mention the ham station that operates from the battleship's radio room. From Australia, I visited the battleship on a Saturday in October 2022 and made prior arrangements to meet the hams on-board. A great bunch of people. After the tour I got to operate using the club's callsign NJ2BB, made numerous contacts and even had a contact with the museum ship USS Drum, who also have an associated radio station. I had a great visit. It was this channel that got me interested in visiting the ship.
As a New Jersey local, I’m so happy that you got to visit my state and my state’s namesake battleship. I hope we made a reasonably good enough impression 😂 Regards down under 🇦🇺
There are actually a couple of spots on street view you can look around. There is a good portion of the main deck on the pier side you can 'walk' up and down. And some random areas within the ship as well. Go take a look it's awesome. It would be amazing if they could get someone from Google or anyone with the right equipment to walk the entire ship. No better way to preserve it imo. And would be great for those of us stuck thousands of miles away but obsessed with the ship nonetheless
Looking at these spaces I always end up thinking about what it would have looked like on ships like Bismarck, PoW or Yamato while they were under attack and getting destroyed. Hard to picture the scene of such a big ship that seems almost indestructible, brave men.
seems like roughly from accounts a battleship tends to hold together until something catastrophic happens then its up to the training and crew whether the ship effectively ceases to function or not
I'm amazed at the fine condition of this magnificent ship. A credit to the designers, builders and sailors who kept her in fighting shape for 50 years. And now a credit to you Ryan and your staff and volunteers.
2 things I'd like to see in future tour videos. A walking tour deck by deck seems like it would be pretty cool, see all the various areas that aren't on the tour. I'd also be interested in seeing tours of unrestored, versus restored spaces. Like the restored turret and engine/fire room versus the unrestored ones. I would imagine there isn't much difference honestly, but would be interesting to see just how good of a condition she was put away in.
Good suggestion! I would add the features Ryan has called "gold plated". The things Iowa class ships got because they had the time and funding to include, compared to proceeding battleships.
Have you seen the tour of the unrestored turret on Texas? Far out it is a most oppressive operating environment only surpassed by one of the triple expansion steam engine rooms on Texas. Words escape me except to say it is the stuff of nightmares. I'm a mechanic by trade and I love this sort of thing but not on Texas - an Iowa yes but a Dreadnought era capital ship forget it. It's on RUclips. The channel is Tom Scott, The Older One: ruclips.net/video/PC9g9WkDS-4/видео.html ruclips.net/video/TsoFvg7ZsEs/видео.html
fuel gauges - not "measure time to get bubble out" but measure pressure needed to bubble out air from probe pipe. The higher the level of fuel - the bigger pressure required. So you pump air into probe pipe until pressure stabilises means air started to bubble from it and pressure at this moment shows depth, distance between probe end and liquid fuel surface.
Cringy "I was" story incoming. I was an IC on CVN 74. I worked in both forward and aft "IC" I always assumed the name stood for Interior the same as the Rate. I'm still pretty sure it was Forward Interior Communication and Aft Interior Communication Room from what I recall on the ships prints. I'm not sure which is right and I honestly don't think it matters to much since what you said had a similar meaning, but now its going to keep me up tonight. loved th tour Ryan, from IC2 Ryan
18:35 I've not been on New Jersey, but I'd wager that AMR stands for Auxiliary Machinery Room vice After Machinery Room. If they used standard nomenclature, AMR 1 would be the forward Aux Mach Room and AMR 2 would be the aft Aux Mach Room. I could be wrong as the ships I served on were 20-30 years newer than New Jersey but I'd put my confidence level at medium-high...
It is amazing what we human could do before the computer age. The awesome mechanics of this beast of a machine is extraordinary..... God, what our grandparents built and operated. I gotta say I am proud and in awe of them
A space I would love to see a tour of, maybe with the people that maintain/restored it, is the telephone spaces. Telephone equipment from that time period that still works is pretty cool to me and I’d love to learn more!
Since you asked for ideas again: lol Start at the rack for the morning watch lookout. Wake him up and do the walk he would do to get to watch. (Head, getting dressed, quick chow, transit to watch station, relief process).
I, for one, would love to spend a week on board New Jersey with Ryan learning all these special connections, passageways, and spaces. The information he shares about New Jersey is amazing and I would love to watch him geek out in person. #SimilarNerd #MuseumShipsRock
I'm amazed that a group of people designed ALL OF THIS. There is so much! Lines and tanks and levers and gauges and wires and liquids and ammo and people and all of it. To design all of that, it's amazing something this large and complex could even be built and it's not even the most complex ship out there.
I find the PCB testing to be great for the general public, but I find it humorous since there is more dangers in the everyday places we go, especially the food we eat. Thank you for a great tour of the broadway passageway!
Great as usual Ryan. One small correction, we could actually cross-connect main and aux steam forward and aft, along with everything else. Fully cross-connectable all systems in engineering.
11:00 Wide variety of radio equipment! I noticed Hammarlund SP-600 (R-274B), AN/FRR-59, AN/URT-23, AN/URT-24, R-1051D, Collins R-390A, and several WW2 transmitters and receivers. Also, URA-17 TTY converters.
Love this... it has what I feel has been missing, which is more of a view of the internals of the ship, as a whole. Can't wait to visit! I'm ham radio too (KI5YG) so I'll be listening for y'all in June... I've worked museum ships before.
I just got to have this walk down Broadway on Wisconsin about a month ago. Very interesting, they had just opened it late last year. I would love to see the original CIC aboard New Jersey, the guys on Wisconsin said it's unlikely they'll ever open 4th deck to the public.
One of the most interesting tours I have seen. Do you ever look at the ships diagram and go. Have I ever been there. Then video your walk an adventure to get there. You can describe where you pass and who would work or sleep there.
It looks quite wide , but certainly wouldn't be when the ship was crewed . The paint and finish is a real credit to you and your volunteers hard work . Strange about the radio room being re-elected equipped when other shops weren't but again credit for getting it looking right and working . One question , are there any multiple cable glands in main bulkheads? There may be above the individual glands ( you call stuffing tubes) as those main runs make a lot of penetrations necessary .
There were/are cable raceways. These had many larger cables ran thru them with a clamping system on both side to maintain water tight integrity. Most of the wiring was thru individual stuffing tubes though.
I was fascinated when you got to the radio room, as perhaps my radioman / Dad worked in there (1945-46). I also wonder if Dad slept in those berths back then with no AC.. and maybe limited ventilation? His time on the NJ was probably the highlight of his life, and he always relished it.
I just got back from a tour on the Iowa. I was disappointed that broadway was not on the tour. Compared to New Jersey it’s kind of a tourist trap. Looks like I will have to drive 3,000 miles to see you! Your tours and especially videos are way ahead!
The New Jersey is almost 80 years old and been out of service for 30 years and yet it looks better than a lot of new ships. It looks like it's ready to deploy tomorrow.
I can hear the bandwidth screaming now. I think the New Jersey is partly funded by people actually visiting, at least partially, so they would need to effectively digitize their entire ship AND find a way to make it pay for itself, as well as the potential hit to "real world visitors..." but it's a course of presentation that I really hope they're considering. It can be done, though, and can be a good supplement to the physical tour. The USAF museum does something SOMEWHAT similar with many of their aircraft. They can't let people just sit in Bockscar, but they can let you pan around a full 360 degree view from a camera in the pilot's seat.
@@Tomyironmane I'd imagine they could have a few rooms as free samplers, and paid options for the full experience. Could also offer a simple 360 degrees VR walkthrough video for those who want the basic tour experience, and use this to fund the full 3D experience. Lots of options and ideas there, and you're right that funding it will be the tricky part. Even so, digitising the ship and its contents could be amazing. Who wouldn't want to have a full Iowa-class battleship in their game? :)
Very interesting! I especially liked seeing the Marine's berthing area. Perhaps you could do a segment on what the Marine's did on board and what their assignments are during GQ. More videos on the berthing areas would be cool too.
The rail is sectioned so that several feet on each side of the door are removeable. There are brackets on the bulkhead nearby to stow that section when it is removed. In her museum deployment configuration, many of the sections have been tack welded into place. Possibly as a safety precaution ?
Anyone know what the black, white, and red things are mounted to the walls at 5:03? They're labelled A, B, and C and seems like they're in pairs every so often.
So, a couple of things I was hoping you would explain, how do the scuttles actually work? (I looked them up, they are a neat idea!) It actually looks like the scuttles on your ship, painted red, are non-working due to paint covering the center where the handle would go to operate them? Would have loved to see you open one and show just where they lead to. Second, am glad you explained the yellow overhead ammo trolley rail as it was looking like some sort of aftermarket addition, however at 14:38, how on earth is that compatible with the door? Is the rail something that comes and goes during ammunition loading?🙂
How do you close the water-tight hatch With the gantry rail going through it? Does the rail split or at some point did Iowa class sacrifice center integrity?
Sections detach and are stowed on the wall next to the hatch, not sure I saw any on this video but if you look at some of the other videos on the turret loading you'll see. I'd love to see the process of how it was done, but I suspect health & safety might have a thing to say about moving big lumps of metal around at head height.
Ryan, I was an Army telephone operator doing my job from the back of a HMMWV and I am curious how a Navy / Battleship phone room / switchboard looks. could you please do a video on it at some point?
Great vid, awesome ship! That yellow ammo rail that runs down the ceiling on Broadway... looks like it prevents all those watertight doors from being closed? Isn't that dangerous?
The yellow rail does not connect through hatch doors unless IN USE. (so doors CAN close) There are removable sections near each doorway that you can often see secured to the ceiling in the general vicinity. Several are about 4ft long, and some are over 10ft. Before the drop chain hoist can be used, men would have to move the I-beam sections from stowage positions to connect the hoist I-beam rail through any doors needed... use chain hoist to move heavy loads from place to place... and then remove connect beams so doors can close again as needed. As Ryan walks, you can see the beam stops at most doors, and has a red end-cap to make it more visible, and less likely to hit your head. The beam stops far enough away from opening on side where door swings, but reaches closer to the opening on the side away from door.
Would like to see the anchor chain room - space just inside of the anchor drop holes. The foc'sle was cool room on the Inchon but I dunno if a battleship has a room like that separate from the foc'sle or not. Also, general crew berthing and of course the galley, mess decks, and sculleries. You know, where all future "good sailors" have to hang for awhile.
At 18:30, I noticed there were two water fountains next to each other. Did the crew just really love their water or is there a bit of history behind the separation?
There pretty much was drinking fountains everywhere crew would normally travel, including the main spaces. These were mostly 40’s era, but some got updated for refrigeration units. It was the only place people could get water most of the time, and these spaces were generally VERY HOT, when operating.
If you notice, anywhere there are large numbers of people, there are multiple drinking fountains. Such as schools and stadiums. The New Jersey had a crew of about 2,000 men and in the South Pacific it would get quite hot.
Perhaps this has been commented on before but it would be nice to have a simplified ships diagram of where the tour is moving as you cut across and move down side passages. You are making some great videos and the ship looks great. Thanks
Absolutely great video!!!)))) Why aft plot isn't in tour program - but some switches are blocked with translucent piece of plastic?? Is it still functional???
At 14:56 is that large donut lashed to the bulkhead a spare collar and bearing set for one of the main thrust bearings? Size and shape look about right. I see what look like separate shoes of a Kingsbury bearing inside the assembly. Just a W-A-G.
out of all the stuff on the walls, randomly notices 2 levers out of place. The man knows his ship. Love it.
But what do those levers do
@@gjs9871 Launches the missiles in Nebraska 😆
yeah noticed that too. cool! Ryan sure knows what he is doing!
I would be SO paranoid about that. Even doing night watch on an AHTS it was stressful, and we were definitely NOT open to the public!
Glad I'm not the only one who was amused by that.
Ryan:
" . . . just a spare part if you need it down in the engine room."
'Wait, that's not right.' 'Much better. Ok, moving on.'
(as if nothing happened) "We've got more air conditioning equipment back here . . . ."
Me:
"Whaaat? Wait, what just happened?"
"Did he really just do that?"
"Wow. That's . . . incredible."
On the way past them again one minuet later, he checked them again, just to make sure nobody happened to mess with them.
Never ceases to amaze me how complex an Iowa class battleship is, and how such an astonishing machine was designed in the days before computers. The manpower needed to draw up the plans for this ship must have been absolutely enormous
Back when we engineered more THINGS and less financial spreadsheets.
@@reubenmorris487
Yes Reuben, in Dead Weight Tonnage (DWT) a modern US aircraft carrier must now displace *more* than its own weight in spreadsheets.
Previously then there must've been less than than a battleship's DWT in spreadsheets.
Agreed
You must mean "Electronic Computers" since this battleship has several mechanical computers in each fire computer.
These ships are resplendent examples of what the minds and hands of men can craft if so determined. I fear that we’ve all but lost that spirit today.
By far the one space on New Jersey that makes you realize “yeah, I’m on a battleship” - apart from the 16 inch turrets, of course 😂
Nice of you to mention the ham station that operates from the battleship's radio room.
From Australia, I visited the battleship on a Saturday in October 2022 and made prior arrangements to meet the hams on-board. A great bunch of people. After the tour I got to operate using the club's callsign NJ2BB, made numerous contacts and even had a contact with the museum ship USS Drum, who also have an associated radio station. I had a great visit.
It was this channel that got me interested in visiting the ship.
As a New Jersey local, I’m so happy that you got to visit my state and my state’s namesake battleship. I hope we made a reasonably good enough impression 😂
Regards down under 🇦🇺
I really want to get my HAM license. I mean, I've wanted it before, but I had no idea museum ships here in the US did anything like this. Very cool.
The air conditioner is not where I'd wanna see an asbestos warning 😂
I like that "Frostbite Zone" stencil.
I am not sure how realistic this would be but google street view of this ship would be fantastic! Thanks for the tour!
There are actually a couple of spots on street view you can look around. There is a good portion of the main deck on the pier side you can 'walk' up and down. And some random areas within the ship as well. Go take a look it's awesome.
It would be amazing if they could get someone from Google or anyone with the right equipment to walk the entire ship. No better way to preserve it imo. And would be great for those of us stuck thousands of miles away but obsessed with the ship nonetheless
@@shorey66 drone fly through with 360 camera could work
The size and complexity of this ship is mind boggling.
Looking at these spaces I always end up thinking about what it would have looked like on ships like Bismarck, PoW or Yamato while they were under attack and getting destroyed. Hard to picture the scene of such a big ship that seems almost indestructible, brave men.
seems like roughly from accounts a battleship tends to hold together until something catastrophic happens then its up to the training and crew whether the ship effectively ceases to function or not
The thing to remember is,
YOU GET WHAT YOU INSPECT , NOT WHAT YOU EXPECT .
I'm amazed at the fine condition of this magnificent ship. A credit to the designers, builders and sailors who kept her in fighting shape for 50 years.
And now a credit to you Ryan and your staff and volunteers.
Ryan, this is one of your best tours yet. thanks
Love to see a video of the "life of a Marine" on the ship and the spaces they use.
Thanks!
2 things I'd like to see in future tour videos.
A walking tour deck by deck seems like it would be pretty cool, see all the various areas that aren't on the tour.
I'd also be interested in seeing tours of unrestored, versus restored spaces. Like the restored turret and engine/fire room versus the unrestored ones. I would imagine there isn't much difference honestly, but would be interesting to see just how good of a condition she was put away in.
Good suggestion! I would add the features Ryan has called "gold plated". The things Iowa class ships got because they had the time and funding to include, compared to proceeding battleships.
Have you seen the tour of the unrestored turret on Texas? Far out it is a most oppressive operating environment only surpassed by one of the triple expansion steam engine rooms on Texas. Words escape me except to say it is the stuff of nightmares. I'm a mechanic by trade and I love this sort of thing but not on Texas - an Iowa yes but a Dreadnought era capital ship forget it.
It's on RUclips. The channel is Tom Scott, The Older One:
ruclips.net/video/PC9g9WkDS-4/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/TsoFvg7ZsEs/видео.html
Really shows what a complex piece of machinery a battleship is!
fuel gauges - not "measure time to get bubble out" but measure pressure needed to bubble out air from probe pipe. The higher the level of fuel - the bigger pressure required. So you pump air into probe pipe until pressure stabilises means air started to bubble from it and pressure at this moment shows depth, distance between probe end and liquid fuel surface.
Cringy "I was" story incoming.
I was an IC on CVN 74. I worked in both forward and aft "IC" I always assumed the name stood for Interior the same as the Rate. I'm still pretty sure it was Forward Interior Communication and Aft Interior Communication Room from what I recall on the ships prints. I'm not sure which is right and I honestly don't think it matters to much since what you said had a similar meaning, but now its going to keep me up tonight.
loved th tour Ryan, from IC2 Ryan
The ship looks absolutely awesome, great work guys
Interesting that the main passageway is called Broadway. In RN and RCN ships it's generally known as Burma Road. Excellent video tour and info. 👍
Absolutely born to be a curator. A joy to watch. Thank you, we love the content
That Michigan university helmet in the repair 5 locker is awesome. Go Blue. 😊
Using bubbles to measure liquid quantity is one of the more unique things I’ve heard in one of these videos. Great tour.
18:35 I've not been on New Jersey, but I'd wager that AMR stands for Auxiliary Machinery Room vice After Machinery Room. If they used standard nomenclature, AMR 1 would be the forward Aux Mach Room and AMR 2 would be the aft Aux Mach Room. I could be wrong as the ships I served on were 20-30 years newer than New Jersey but I'd put my confidence level at medium-high...
Whenever Ryan talks about Broadway and the overhead beam I am reminded of that documentary that he once referred to ... "Under Siege". :)
I had already noted the name "Broadway" in other reading, and noted its use in Under Seige; a great movie. This was long before youtube.
How does the overhead rail move out of the way to allow the hatches to be secured?
@@JeepWranglerIslander Part of the rail is removed to allow the door to close to set condition Zebra.
This was the #1 video tour I wanted to see! It's also quite impressive what counts as "unrestored" on USS _New Jersey_ ...
Ryan is really knowledgeable of his ship, impressive, i wish all museum ships had curators as devoted and motivated as him. Bravo sir!
It is amazing what we human could do before the computer age. The awesome mechanics of this beast of a machine is extraordinary..... God, what our grandparents built and operated. I gotta say I am proud and in awe of them
Excellent tour. You've kept the ship in outstanding condition!
A space I would love to see a tour of, maybe with the people that maintain/restored it, is the telephone spaces. Telephone equipment from that time period that still works is pretty cool to me and I’d love to learn more!
Great video! I love how Ryan saw two levers not in place!
On the way back past, he checked them again, just in case.
Since you asked for ideas again: lol
Start at the rack for the morning watch lookout. Wake him up and do the walk he would do to get to watch. (Head, getting dressed, quick chow, transit to watch station, relief process).
extremely interesting walk- makes you realize how complex the battleship is. sure one of the most complex machines ever devised....
I, for one, would love to spend a week on board New Jersey with Ryan learning all these special connections, passageways, and spaces. The information he shares about New Jersey is amazing and I would love to watch him geek out in person. #SimilarNerd #MuseumShipsRock
I'm amazed that a group of people designed ALL OF THIS. There is so much! Lines and tanks and levers and gauges and wires and liquids and ammo and people and all of it. To design all of that, it's amazing something this large and complex could even be built and it's not even the most complex ship out there.
I find the PCB testing to be great for the general public, but I find it humorous since there is more dangers in the everyday places we go, especially the food we eat.
Thank you for a great tour of the broadway passageway!
Tha walking tour format is a very good idea. It gives a better sense of location and we get to really experience the ship anf its atmosphere.
Thanks for the walk along Broadway - it has helped me connect some of the areas of the ship that have always appeared disconnected in my mind.
Great tour. Many thanks for your hard work in keeping this ship
Great as usual Ryan. One small correction, we could actually cross-connect main and aux steam forward and aft, along with everything else. Fully cross-connectable all systems in engineering.
I'm hoping to be able to visit Battleship New Jesey sometime during the first week of August!
I enjoyed the tour. Thanks for heads-up about radio day N5RXP
11:00 Wide variety of radio equipment! I noticed Hammarlund SP-600 (R-274B), AN/FRR-59, AN/URT-23, AN/URT-24, R-1051D, Collins R-390A, and several WW2 transmitters and receivers. Also, URA-17 TTY converters.
Love this... it has what I feel has been missing, which is more of a view of the internals of the ship, as a whole. Can't wait to visit! I'm ham radio too (KI5YG) so I'll be listening for y'all in June... I've worked museum ships before.
I just got to have this walk down Broadway on Wisconsin about a month ago. Very interesting, they had just opened it late last year.
I would love to see the original CIC aboard New Jersey, the guys on Wisconsin said it's unlikely they'll ever open 4th deck to the public.
why not?
@@Greensiteofhell money mostly, plus the difficulty in finding the pieces needed to restore the area
@@adambowman8543 Ah, I missed "original" - thought it was something secret. I would love to see it no matter what! ;)
Thank you for this tour!
These kinds of videos is great for us that can not visit. I live in Sweden and will probably never be able to.
Im really enjoying these tour videos you've started putting out. This is a great format.
the best tour video yet i like the starting somewhere, then going to see something deep inside
training with that oba on was a sweaty mess!
Many times I walked Broadway on the USS Iowa while on magazine security watch.
He's good. You have to say it. If I was over there I'd be volunteering. Beautiful war machine of the finest calibre.
Thanks for doing 3rd deck! Great to see!
So Wise , Thank You .
Darn good tour again!
I was just looking for this video (or at least this topic) last night and here it is today, thanks! :)
Awesome video! The tour style videos are great
One of the most interesting tours I have seen. Do you ever look at the ships diagram and go. Have I ever been there. Then video your walk an adventure to get there. You can describe where you pass and who would work or sleep there.
All of them please. I'd love to see more of the big picture stuff, where we get to see where one area is relative to another.
It looks quite wide , but certainly wouldn't be when the ship was crewed . The paint and finish is a real credit to you and your volunteers hard work . Strange about the radio room being re-elected equipped when other shops weren't but again credit for getting it looking right and working . One question , are there any multiple cable glands in main bulkheads? There may be above the individual glands ( you call stuffing tubes) as those main runs make a lot of penetrations necessary .
Ah , the wonders of technology . I meant to say De - equipped the term I am familiar with to describe the radio room .
There were/are cable raceways. These had many larger cables ran thru them with a clamping system on both side to maintain water tight integrity. Most of the wiring was thru individual stuffing tubes though.
Many thanks for the info. Ships built in the 50s and since have most original cabling through multiple glands .
I was fascinated when you got to the radio room, as perhaps my radioman / Dad worked in there (1945-46). I also wonder if Dad slept in those berths back then with no AC.. and maybe limited ventilation? His time on the NJ was probably the highlight of his life, and he always relished it.
The detail design of these ships is remarkable. Good video.
Awesome. Keep up the awesome work
Great stuff, thanks for the video!
Brilliant! Thankyou..
I just got back from a tour on the Iowa. I was disappointed that broadway was not on the tour. Compared to New Jersey it’s kind of a tourist trap. Looks like I will have to drive 3,000 miles to see you! Your tours and especially videos are way ahead!
Thank you
Great video. Feels like a virtual guided tour. 👍👍
This is amazing - please walk the entire ship! ;)
Thank you for the Video . A mazing place .
Nice pun!
The New Jersey is almost 80 years old and been out of service for 30 years and yet it looks better than a lot of new ships. It looks like it's ready to deploy tomorrow.
I’ve visited the North Carolina in Wilmington but it is a much older ship. I’d love to come see y’all and see a more modern ship!!
I would like to see how the yellow overhead rails move, so they can close the watertight doors.
There are portions of the rail that they could take out in order to close the door
@@rl-762 As designed, yes, but in her museum deployment, many but not all have been tack welded in place.
Amazing as always
Excellent video. Almost like being there.
A virtual reality tour where you can virtually walk through all the spaces would be totally awesome.
I can hear the bandwidth screaming now. I think the New Jersey is partly funded by people actually visiting, at least partially, so they would need to effectively digitize their entire ship AND find a way to make it pay for itself, as well as the potential hit to "real world visitors..." but it's a course of presentation that I really hope they're considering.
It can be done, though, and can be a good supplement to the physical tour. The USAF museum does something SOMEWHAT similar with many of their aircraft. They can't let people just sit in Bockscar, but they can let you pan around a full 360 degree view from a camera in the pilot's seat.
@@Tomyironmane I'd imagine they could have a few rooms as free samplers, and paid options for the full experience. Could also offer a simple 360 degrees VR walkthrough video for those who want the basic tour experience, and use this to fund the full 3D experience.
Lots of options and ideas there, and you're right that funding it will be the tricky part. Even so, digitising the ship and its contents could be amazing. Who wouldn't want to have a full Iowa-class battleship in their game? :)
Remembering my time I served in the Navy.
This is so Enterprise.
Really like these walking tours. Keep up the great vids!!
Very interesting! I especially liked seeing the Marine's berthing area. Perhaps you could do a segment on what the Marine's did on board and what their assignments are during GQ. More videos on the berthing areas would be cool too.
I think they did one or more
Marines did
Chalk rations evaporate with the marines.
The rail is sectioned so that several feet on each side of the door are removeable. There are brackets on the bulkhead nearby to stow that section when it is removed. In her museum deployment configuration, many of the sections have been tack welded into place. Possibly as a safety precaution ?
Very cool ryan. Thanks
Anyone know what the black, white, and red things are mounted to the walls at 5:03? They're labelled A, B, and C and seems like they're in pairs every so often.
Three phase power outlets. For reconnecting in case of battle damage.
Imagine working in these place when you're called to your stations, so intense!
So, a couple of things I was hoping you would explain, how do the scuttles actually work? (I looked them up, they are a neat idea!) It actually looks like the scuttles on your ship, painted red, are non-working due to paint covering the center where the handle would go to operate them? Would have loved to see you open one and show just where they lead to. Second, am glad you explained the yellow overhead ammo trolley rail as it was looking like some sort of aftermarket addition, however at 14:38, how on earth is that compatible with the door? Is the rail something that comes and goes during ammunition loading?🙂
I'll definitely have more respect when I play the game Battleship!
What an amazing machine!!!
How do you close the water-tight hatch With the gantry rail going through it? Does the rail split or at some point did Iowa class sacrifice center integrity?
Sections detach and are stowed on the wall next to the hatch, not sure I saw any on this video but if you look at some of the other videos on the turret loading you'll see. I'd love to see the process of how it was done, but I suspect health & safety might have a thing to say about moving big lumps of metal around at head height.
Ryan, I was an Army telephone operator doing my job from the back of a HMMWV and I am curious how a Navy / Battleship phone room / switchboard looks. could you please do a video on it at some point?
I'd also love to see the internal communications room.
I wonder how now with networks and fibre optics if it could be mostly replaced, or at least shrunk significantly.
We had no broadway on the destroyers I served on. You had to travel on the main deck or on the "01" level.
That sucks. Must've been pretty old DDs. The DE/FF I was on had full length of the ship travel on 2nd deck.
Very nice.
Great tour!
About 4:59 or so it sounds like a striking of the bells over the 1MC was edited out. I always want to hear the 1MC.
fresh cut is looking slick Ryan
Great vid, awesome ship! That yellow ammo rail that runs down the ceiling on Broadway... looks like it prevents all those watertight doors from being closed? Isn't that dangerous?
The yellow rail does not connect through hatch doors unless IN USE. (so doors CAN close) There are removable sections near each doorway that you can often see secured to the ceiling in the general vicinity. Several are about 4ft long, and some are over 10ft. Before the drop chain hoist can be used, men would have to move the I-beam sections from stowage positions to connect the hoist I-beam rail through any doors needed... use chain hoist to move heavy loads from place to place... and then remove connect beams so doors can close again as needed.
As Ryan walks, you can see the beam stops at most doors, and has a red end-cap to make it more visible, and less likely to hit your head. The beam stops far enough away from opening on side where door swings, but reaches closer to the opening on the side away from door.
@@BillSteinhauser - ahh, many thanks for the explanation.... 😊
So I guess the safest place on the ship is right behind Ryan
16:40 Curators Quotes:
"What used to be the telephone switch room...which it still is." 😂
Would like to see the anchor chain room - space just inside of the anchor drop holes. The foc'sle was cool room on the Inchon but I dunno if a battleship has a room like that separate from the foc'sle or not. Also, general crew berthing and of course the galley, mess decks, and sculleries. You know, where all future "good sailors" have to hang for awhile.
At 18:30, I noticed there were two water fountains next to each other. Did the crew just really love their water or is there a bit of history behind the separation?
There pretty much was drinking fountains everywhere crew would normally travel, including the main spaces. These were mostly 40’s era, but some got updated for refrigeration units. It was the only place people could get water most of the time, and these spaces were generally VERY HOT, when operating.
If you notice, anywhere there are large numbers of people, there are multiple drinking fountains. Such as schools and stadiums. The New Jersey had a crew of about 2,000 men and in the South Pacific it would get quite hot.
Super cool!! TY!
Perhaps this has been commented on before but it would be nice to have a simplified ships diagram of where the tour is moving as you cut across and move down side passages. You are making some great videos and the ship looks great. Thanks
As a telecom technician I would love to see the telecom room!!!
Absolutely great video!!!))))
Why aft plot isn't in tour program - but some switches are blocked with translucent piece of plastic?? Is it still functional???
At 14:56 is that large donut lashed to the bulkhead a spare collar and bearing set for one of the main thrust bearings? Size and shape look about right. I see what look like separate shoes of a Kingsbury bearing inside the assembly. Just a W-A-G.