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  • #76
    Re: OT USS IOWA

    PM sent.

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    • #77
      Re: OT USS IOWA

      Thanks much for those great shots of a great Warship. Beautiful machine.

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      • #78
        Re: OT USS IOWA

        great shots!!!!!!!

        Here is my favorite Uss Iowa Pic!
        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Iowa_(BB-61)
        Last edited by Coyote Chris; 05-27-2012, 08:48 PM.

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        • #79
          Re: OT USS IOWA

          Veering off course a little, I found some other interesting ships in the bay this weekend...





          I'm not sure what destroyer that is. The carrier is the Nimitz.

          Will

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          • #80
            Re: OT USS IOWA

            Will,

            That's the USS Decatur, DDG-73.


            Bob
            ps... did you get the e-mail ?

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            • #81
              Re: OT USS IOWA

              Originally posted by Tibia View Post
              Will,

              That's the USS Decatur, DDG-73.


              Bob
              ps... did you get the e-mail ?
              Thats it. A co-workers, daughter's boyfriend is aboard the Decatur. We were trying to get aboard but he was on duty and couldn't visit. After looking at the Iowa lately, the Decatur is tiny.

              Yes I got your email. I'll get a cd burned for you shortly.

              Will

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              • #82
                Re: OT USS IOWA

                Will,

                After looking at the Iowa lately, the Decatur is tiny.
                ( chuckle ... )

                Just checking if those silly electrons made it out of my machine... Sometimes they don't, due to operator error.

                Many Thanks for Your Efforts. The results are wonderful !!!

                Bob

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                • #83
                  Re: OT USS IOWA

                  To keep this thread (sort of) Aviation related...

                  Here's a little info on certain single masted "sloop" that can not accomplish what the USS Iowa was able to last Saturday.

                  http://tech.fortune.cnn.com/2012/05/...?iid=obnetwork
                  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirabella_V
                  http://www.bymnews.com/new/mirabellav/index.html

                  Bob

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                  • #84
                    Re: OT USS IOWA

                    Proud to be Engineman Third Class today.
                    1973-75 USS Denver

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                    • #85
                      Re: OT USS IOWA

                      Since someone mentioned sailboats, in size large. The summer of '94 I sailed this http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concordia_(ship) from San Francisco to Hilo Hi, to Victoria BC. Let me tell you, doing a sail maneuver at 3am 90 feet up a mast while the boat is rolling around is something you never forget. Since I wasn't afraid of heights, I got the job of working the clew for the Royal yard arm (the highest one on the foremast.) Sliding out the main cable that you stand on wasn't a big deal, it was the big step from the well supported and tight cable, to the flapping line (rope) that extended out to the clew. It wasn't easy to see in the dark either. During the day, it was something you think about, at night it was a possible step into oblivion (I was wearing a safety harness just in case.) I managed to not find out how well the safety harness worked. (I later found out when I was up the main mast sitting in a bosun's chair with nothing but a very large sail around me when the guy at the helm was paying more attention to me rather than where the boat was going, swung the bow around and the next thing I knew I was kicking off the mainsail 75 feet above the deck, nearly falling out of the chair. It was exciting to say the least.)

                      On the return trip we had to do an airlift off a tall ship, in pea soup fog 800 miles from shore. 0655 the morning watch went aloft to set a sail and one of the people failed to clip their safety harness as they climbed onto the crows nest, slipped and fell. She missed the roof of the galley, on the left side, and the pin rail to her right, landing feet first on the deck. 6 inches either direction she would have been dead. Still, she broke everything from the waist down. The Coast Gaurd was 8 hrs away, and we certainly didn't have the means to treat her on board. The USS Abraham Lincoln was not too far away (no idea where, we couldn't see anything on radar) Either an S3B Viking or an A6 Intruder verified our position (I heard it but couldn't see it in the fog) and shortly there after a SH60 Seahawk dropped a Navy Seal in the water next to us and assisted with the airlift off the stern. The trick here was the stretcher was lowered with a tether off the end of it (allowed to touch the water first to avoid static electricity shock) and we pulled the stretcher aboard as the SH60 moved aft to clear the masts and rigging (I'll say it, the pilot was a bad ass.) The injured person was loaded aboard the stretcher and lifted to the railing where the stretcher was lifted by the winch on the helo and fed out to keep it from swinging into the hull. After lifting the stretcher aboard, the seal was plucked out of the water and they flew off to our north. We ended up motoring the rest of the way to Victoria.

                      The Concordia was a bad luck boat, there were several serious accidents and at least one death (paint locker blew up and all that was left of a guy was his shoes). I'll admit, sailing the high seas has its dangers, especially when its mostly crewed by high school kids. Still, it was a fantastic learning experience. I'd do it again if I had the chance. (Anyone have a sailboat here in the Bay Area that needs a random crew member? I haven't been sailing since. )

                      Will

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                      • #86
                        Re: OT USS IOWA

                        Just a little update on this sea-going war veteran:


                        "Divers have begun cleaning the hull of the battleship Iowa, preparing the decommissioned warship for its new role as a floating museum at the Port of Los Angeles.

                        The 887-foot-long ship has been anchored about three miles offshore after its four-day tow from the San Francisco Bay ended Wednesday morning. It is scheduled to be pulled into port on June 9 and open to the public at Berth 87 on July 7."

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                        • #87
                          Re: OT USS IOWA

                          Here she is, anchored off Seal Beach 5-30-2012


                          Click image for larger version

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                          • #88
                            Re: OT USS IOWA

                            Originally posted by Tibia View Post
                            Here she is, anchored off Seal Beach 5-30-2012
                            Thought it was going straight into Pedro? How long will it be hanging off shore?
                            http://www.pbase.com/marauder61
                            http://www.cafepress.com/aaphotography

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                            • #89
                              Re: OT USS IOWA

                              Victor,

                              From what they are reporting, a couple of days... 2, 3, 4 ??? Getting her bottom cleaned first...

                              Afterwards she'll move temporarily to pier(s) 50-51. Final move will be June 9th, to pier 87 with an official public opening of July 7th.

                              Bob

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                              • #90
                                Re: OT USS IOWA

                                Originally posted by Tibia View Post
                                Here she is, anchored off Seal Beach 5-30-2012


                                [ATTACH]18428[/ATTACH]
                                Is that Seal Beach 2012, or somewhere in the Persian Gulf circa 1988? If the cars in the foreground weren't there, it might be hard to tell. Heck, crop the parking lot out of the shot and call it 1988. It really is an imposing silhouette to see Its a one of those, "Pick a fight, I dare you." scenes.

                                Will
                                Last edited by RAD2LTR; 06-01-2012, 07:52 AM.

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