British Couple Reacts to Living Underwater: How Submarines Work

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British Couple Reacts to Living Underwater: How Submarines Work

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I'm a retired submarine sailor, loved it! Windows wouldn't matter because there is no light other than near the surface. Boats can't tell where each other are, they are so quiet you'd never hear them. I can't get into how US boats avoid each other, but ideally we do. Great reaction, as always.

rileyfam
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Sharing a bed as described is called "hot racking" (a rack being military slang for a bed) it happens from time to time on surface ships as well.

charlieeckert
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A couple things that need to be pointed out. First, windows on subs. It has nothing to do with reflection of a window. First, there is no need for a window. Why would you have a window? So the submariners can look outside and see fish? No!!!! There is no military need for a window. Also, when a sub is under water there is immense pressure exerted on the sub outer shell. Having a window would only weaken the strength of the subs outer shell. Also, the concept of Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD) has been around since the early 1950's, so it's nothing new. THE MAD concept is good in that it almost guarantees that a nation will never use nuclear weapons on another country. Why you ask. Well if you have MAD and you, as leader of a nation know if you use nuclear weapons then your own nation will also be destroyed why use them. So, having no winner in a nuclear conflict guarantees no one will use them.

stevem
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In my head cannon the conversation after a British sub hit a French sub would be like something straight out of Flying Circus.

slaughterzealibib
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The Typhoon wasn't much longer, but it was twice as wide.

OldBuzzard
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Not all subs have two crews. It depends on the type of sub. Better food, tighter crew, more pay 💰 I HATE when I can’t communicate with my son when he’s on deployment. If a death or horrible thing happens, you call Red Cross and they communicate with the sub. Then, when command can, THEY counsel the Sailor on what happened. The Red Cross was wonderful when my Sailor lost his grandmother.

eaglelove
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I was born and raised in Groton, Connecticut.
Also known as The Submarine Capital Of The World.
I lived in my home state for 31 years until I decided to move to Columbia, South Carolina where I live today.
My father worked building these beasts until his death, a veteran of both World War II and the Korean War.
So, I know a little about submarines.
Your fasciation about these warships would make my dad proud.
In a way.. we all live in a yellow submarine. 😆
Great channel!

rodneygriffin
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I served on a U.S. Navy ASW ship, a Fast Frigate. We did training with attack subs and it was not uncommon for them to be within a few hundred feet from us without being detected. U.S. Subs can be deadly.

michaelscoggins
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Yes, for the most part, the sub changes depth by using its "planes", and like an airplane, points its nose down to dive and up to surface. When the sub dives for the first time after leaving port, they go through a process of using the many ballast tanks and smaller tanks to "trim" the boat to a neutral state of buoyancy. Then they use the planes at the front and back to point the nose of the sub up or down, and then the forward motion of the engine drives the sub to whatever depth they need or want. Unless there is an emergency, or if they are practicing for an emergency, most of the time the sub is submerged at sea the ballast and trim tanks are only operated to adjust the buoyancy to take account for the changes in temperature and salinity in the local water.✌💯

iKvetch
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Actually as the food gets worse, it means you have 6 or 7 weeks left on your cruise. I met a some submariners while I served in the Navy. While they loved the extra pay. They felt it was a tough way to make a living. The actual depth the subs can go down to is a closely guarded secret. One former submariner I served with wouldn't tell us, even though we were close friends.The US also uses a communication system with aircraft. There are aircraft flying around that can relay messages to and from the sub

vniesky
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Yes put windows on the submarine so the people inside can look outside and watch all the fish go by! Just like an aquarium!

jdanon
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I’m glad you added Millie to your videos. She brings a different touch. It’s nice.

NavyCombatCorpsman
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Not Navy but did take NJROTC in High school Sept 1967- June 1970 based on that I would say: There are NO WINDOWS in a Submarine because of pressure, they must be made out of the strongest material available as the water puts 44.5 PSI per 100 feet down you go, so at 800 ft down there is 371.9 PSI on the subs hull, no window material would stand up to that much pressure. Plus the sub has two hulls the inter and outer hulls with water and air in between these hulls so again pressure of the water and air used to let the sub dive and surface.

miltonpasley
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The old saying "As useful as screen doors on submarines" comes to mind...

warrendavis
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Smarter Everyday channel does a better more comprehensive look inside a nuclear sub. he goes about as in depth as the Dept. of Defense allows to be recorded on camera.

-EchoesIntoEternity-
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A fun fact: the UK's ballistic missile submarines (the current Vanguard class and the future Dreadnought class) carry Trident II D-5 ICBMs just like the US Ohio class ballistic missile submarines.

MichaelScheele
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LOL!! No Windows . . . The reasons no window on modern subs is it is a weak spot on a hull meant to take huge pressures. They try to make as few holes in this type of hull as they can. In the open ocean, there just isn't much to see out a window anyway. And once you are down very far, it is completely dark. Windows on a submarine, like on a ship, would probably be called a porthole.

hardtackbeans
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7:40. Yes, Millie
We Americans know the psychology of being submerged so deep and so long without sunlight. We do like to encourage our troops to feel like they are at home in a diner style mess hall.

halicarnassus
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The lack of communication was tough. I missed two deaths in my family while at sea on submarines. It was always nerve wracking making that first phone call home when you hit a port or returned from a patrol or mission. You never knew if there was going to be bad news. Sometimes you could get good news from a “family gram, ” a 25 word text message system before email. Still, it was an incredible job, surrounded by the most the professional (and simultaneously most juvenile & crude) group of men with whom you could hope to serve. Great reaction, and salute to my brothers and now sisters who wear dolphins.

pablozee
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The reason the crew on the submarine eats so well is because they have the hardest duty of all the navy. They're underwater for extended lengths of time. Food is one of their only distraction!

gregorywright