Graham Family Reacts To The Deadliest Submarine the USA Ever Built
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Graham Family Reacts To The Deadliest Submarine the USA Ever Built
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These submarines are the most powerful nuclear deterrent in the world. Even if bomber bases and nuclear silos are destroyed by a nuclear attack, the location of the submarines are unknown. Their retaliation will be certain and unstoppable.
God forbid, Don't say the Bomber bases, leave them out of this. But I guess anyone including Russia and China and North Korea can know the location of the Northrop B-2 Spirit
But then you would have to strike Whiteman Air Force Base to target the B-2 Bomber. as well as 400 other locations for the Intercontinental ballistic missile
and Even replacing America's Aging ICBM would cost $131 billion So I guess Ballistic missile submarines are our only hope.
How much does the ICBM missile cost?
As new ICBMs' cost soars, a few lawmakers are trying to rein ...
The ICBM replacement program now is expected to cost some $131 billion, 37 percent more than the previous projection and some 60 percent, in real terms, over the service's original 2015 estimate. Jun 5, 2024
I don't fear death believe in Jesus you don't fear because heaven awaits as a military veteran Jesus is real I suggest people read the Bible because it talks about everything going on now
@@Majorpain32677 I'm making travel plans to White girl heaven, I don't know what god you believe in or what heaven you believe in but if there aren't white girls in heaven then it's not the place I want to end up in the afterlife.
Since nuclear powered boats can generate their own air and water, once they submerge, they usually do not surface for most of their 70 day patrol. When they do, usually the only people out on the conning tower is the skipper, the executive officer or the Chief of the Boat. These sub's job is to remain hidden so they can instantly respond to a launch order. Each boat carries enough firepower to basically destroy the world. Their missiles have enough range to strike anywhere on the planet. Lucky for everyone that we are the good guys. Peace isn't the absence of war. Peace is when your enemies are to damn afraid to mess with you. MURICA!
I was in the USS Becuna in Philadelphia, which was a WW2 sub in the Pacific.
I can tell you that if you are claustrophobic, it is not for you. I was younger and didn't have a problem with it but today such closed spaces are not for me anymore.
Jono, when you are looking at the exterior and saying it looks flimsily built, what you are actually seeing is several inches thick rubber tiles that are for reducing the reflectivity of sonar pulses produced by those who hunt them. Think of it as doing the same job as the stealth coatings on jets that reduce radar reflectivity. The structural part of the sub is beneath what you are seeing.
I was told by a Navy Chief while looking at a Trident in drydock. " Areosmith could hold a concert inside, and you'd never hear it from here" 30ft away. They are massive in size. Like an ice berg only a small part is above water.
Im a retired U S NAVY guy(74years old), and the lethality of ONE modern attack sub is MORE than ALL the ordinance EVER exploded since the beginning of time. This is a sad fact, that we have the ability to end civilization on just ONE vessel! While the number and location of our sub fleet is top secret, we have over 30 known subs. This shit is terrifying!!!!
I would rather fly the Northrop B-2 Spirit than any US Submarine available right now. Plus there are many downsides to being out at sea compared to being in the Air Force in my opinion. I'm not in the military, But I know With submarines and ships it likely takes a week to get to a far-away destination compared to flying by airplane.
yup, worked on the 688's and SSBN Ohio class
There is a video showing how the chefs prepare first class cuisine for the sailors. Being so confined, it is important for morale to have fresh and delicious food. I was amazed at the entire process.
I’m a Marine Corps veteran who spent quite a bit of time aboard ships with my infantry battalion. One thing you don’t hear mentioned is how easy it is to get lost onboard a Navy vessel early on. I never spent any time on a sub but it can take weeks to learn to navigate the inner spaces of a ship- the bigger they are the longer it takes… go at it alone and you might find yourself in the engine room while trying to get to the chow hall! It all looks the same!😂
When they say that one missile has multiple warheads , I think that means that they can separate and attack multiple targets with one missile .
Happy 4th to all my American brothers and sisters!!! 🇺🇸❤️🤍💙
Jono, if you did get kidnapped for a 70 day patrol, at least you would be eating the best food in the US military. The sub guys get the best of everything, especially food.
Those 'wavey panels' are a stealth coating. It's an anechoic coating that absorbs sonar to keep it hidden from other vessels.
This is an old video. The latest Trident D-5 can reach almost 8,000 miles.
I served aboard the Lafayette class fleet ballistic missile submarine, USS John Adams, SSBN 620, during the cold war, but I saw the USS Florida being built and they are HUGE. They are just 40 feet shy of two football fields long with five decks. My sub was 425 feet long with a 33 foot beam.
The screening process for crew is very particular for the reasons spoken about. It is confining with the same people for months at a time.
Howdy from Texas Graham Family! I'm really glad to see you feeling better Jono. Enjoyed the video. The only reason I wouldn't go work on a sub is because I'm 6 foot 3 inches tall and I would be bumping my head through every single doorway on the sub. Back when I was a Military Policeman I worked on a drug intervention task force and one of our duties were to inspect commercial ships coming into U.S. waters. We worked alongside the U.S. Coast Guard, of course, and the DEA , U S. Customs service, the FBI, and Border Patrol. It was a multi agency task force that I was proud to serve on. But on those ships I realized very quickly that they were not tall people Friendly. Had it not been for my hard hat that I was required to wear. I'd of probably knocked myself out several times. But it still jammed my neck down into my spine every time I forgot to duck far enough down going through the door hatches. I got to where I began taking pain meds just before going on board any ship we were assigned to board and investigate.
You seem kinda on the tall side yourself Jono. So I'm guessing you'd probably have that same issue.
4:10 Mark! Hmm. Previously, I mentioned the "USS Turtle" and a wackadoo who didn't understand what "retroactive" meant, tried to convince me not to use the "USS" part because it wasn't officially in use then! 😁 But anyway, I recall you mentioning our Revolutionary War for Independence. The TURTLE was actually a submersible that required a mother ship to transport it. It had a crew of one, and peddles and handcranks were used. 😮
There was the USS ALLIGATOR later on. It was similar to the CSS HUNLEY. (Named for the inventor!)
But, the modern concept era began with the USS HOLLAND (SS-1) named for her inventor, not the European nation! 🫡
There are a number of jobs in the military that you just have to stay focused and keep yourself busy to keep your sanity. The longer you sit and think about your situation the worse it gets. My dad was in the U.S. Army and was stationed on some really remote islands and he said that there would be guys that would get stir crazy and get island fever because they knew they were stuck on the island. Even though they were outside on a beach they felt claustrophobic because of the ocean surrounding them. He said that you just had to stay focused on your job, figure out a hobby and exercise to burn off the anxiety.
I did a walkthrough in a decommissioned sub once , extremely interesting, gave me more insight as to what those guys have to go through and I really appreciate them even more now
Hi! Im one of those guys that volunteered to live and serve on these. Was on BN and a VA class as a STS.
70 days is standard but can fluctuate. Most i spent underwater was 64 days but others have had more.
For the bigger boats, there is obviously more space and when you saw the orange tubes, those are where the Trident missiles are kept, you have crew berthing for enlisted. Officers live elsewhere. For thr VA class, we had to hot rack, 3 people to 2 beds.
For those in the sail we rig a flying bridge and it is safe. Clipped in and have stancions to prevent falling overboard if you are standing on it.
A BN will rarely surface while underway, only in the event of a casualty. Also we have patrols where we go radio silent, no comms sent out. Only "windows" you have is via the periscope and you get to see it in certain places while on watch.
There is an older boat available for tour in CT, dont need to go on base but its a bit smaller. Space is not that big of a deal. Some of the best times of my life were on a boat.
Also just a heads up, when a BN goes on deployment it ranks top 2 of the most powerful entities. US being 1.
They will go to PD to bring on fresh air to "boost" morale. More than willing to give you a basic unclassified rundown or more information or answer questions if you want.
My cousin Marty was one of Admiral Rickover's " kids" in the early days of nuclear subs. He was the officer in charge of the nuclear facilities on subs ( not sure what the exact title was ) for about 10 years .He didn't like life aboard the subs very much . Months at a time of being underwater became unbearable . He quit the Navy and got a job running the reactor at a nuclear power plant
13:11 Mark! Hmm. Despite what movies and series that are written for the sake of comedy and/or drama may want us to think, there is a mental health screening process and apptitude tests to cull those that would cause problems. 🧐
Best adrenaline rush ever, doing an emergency blow from test depth...
There is a former Canadian stealth submarine that is about an hour drive from me. They brought it on land and you can go tour through it. Its pretty amazing. Definitely cramped. I couldn't imagine being on there with 50+ people. But my dad and I went and it was just him and I for the tour so it wasn't bad at all from a claustrophobic standpoint.
The coating (Anachoic - sp?) is designed to hide from sonar. It looks a little weird. The round hole doors have been standardized among many countries because in an emergency we have equipment to dock on those doors to evacuate people. However, there's a catch - supplies that go into that door must fit. There have been times when supply boxes were square/rectangular and wouldn't fit through the round door. The supplies had to be removed from the boxes and passed into boat through the door. Passive sonar cable pops to mind.
I served as a Navy Diver on the USS Proteus AS19, which supported Los Angeles-class fast attack submarines during the 1980s at Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean. Those submariners would spend 200 days or more at sea with just one crew, unlike the ballistic missile submarines that had two.
It apparently takes a special type of mindset to spend months under water. Not being claustrophobic of course. But more than that. Their tour would be spent almost totally underwater. @24,000 miles
The city I grew up in Wisconsin, Manitowoc, built 28 submarines for the US Navy in WW2. The city currently has a restored WW2 submarine, the USS Cobia, on display at the Wisconsin Maritime Museum that you can take tours of and you can even spend a night in it (for a fee of course - you can find it on Air BnB). Very cool.
My brother choose that job, he was a nuke engineer on a Los Angeles class boat for 15 years most of their patrol was underwater
I served on submarine during the first Gulf war. I was on a fast attack sub which are different from the large SSBN subs
5:38 Mark! Oh! Your saying "cigarette" reminded me of something I saw, but I'm not sure of the exact circumstances. 🤔 At least once in my life, I saw a man using cigarettes as fish bait! 😮 He was sitting on a ship of some kind. 🤔
SSN subs only go out for short missions, usually to engage the enemy Navy's. SSBN subs go out to Sea and stay hidden. To detour nuclear war.
The low end of the explosive power of one sub with Trident missile, he said, was 19.5 Mega-tons. In WW2, everyone together used 5 Mega-tons of explosives.
The subs look way better than this before they hit the water, it’s the water that makes them look pale and not painted.
US Submarines are built in two places : hull sections are fabricated by General Dynamics/Electric Boat at Quonset Point, Rhode Island, then transferred by barge to the final assembly point at the nearby Electric Boat Yard at Groton, Connecticut. FYI, Electric Boat, Groton, is just across the river from the original Home Base of US Navy Submarines, New London, CT. The only other submarine construction site is the General Dynamics Shipyard at Newport News, Virginia.
My cousin is a career Navy man. He spent two years in one of these boats.
You need to go on the submarine at Legoland. You should check out some video's of that. You'll feel much safer.
The submarine flexes or squishes smaller as it dives due to pressure. I watched a video where they tied a string inside from side to side and it was taunt or tight. Once the sub dove, the sides squeeze inward and the string then sags like a weighed clothesline.
You should check out the 10 deepest Military shipwrecks ever found in the ocean
16:41 Mark! 6,194 Views + Mine! 😎 Thumb Up #845! 👍 You're welcome, and thanks! 😊
Notes: Enjoy your holiday too! 🎉
Jono, if you want to see tight spaces, read about the CSS Hunley. She makes anything look roomy.
I am a former Submarine Sailor, in our parlance a fast boat sailor, I served 10 years protecting the country that I love , willing to give all for my country , being a US Submariner is a unique calling
0:32 Mark! Howdy! 🤠 Hmm. Did you know that people are allowed to own their own personal submersibles for recreational usage? (I don't mean for spear fishing either! Instead of launching explosive torpedoes, spears are launched instead. Though in the "Walt Disney" movie I saw, someone used the tube to launch a submarine sandwich at a yacht! 😅)
The one that I'm thinking of was reported on by Al Roker for "Today" AKA "The Today Show" and various articles in men's magazines were published about it. It was years ago, though. 🤔
As I recall, it was blue with black trim, and it resembled an "Incom T-65 X-Wing" but with the wings closed. It was said to handle like a sports car or airplane to make it simple for civilians to use. 🤔🤷♂️
Like an ice burg your only seeing like 1/3 of the sub. There are probably 2 to 4 or more levels inside them. Thats why those missles are so big.
The first submarine was the CSS Hundley , used by the Confederate States Navy in the US Civil war
My uncle worked in a sub in the early 90s.
There's a submarine you can visit and go inside at the sub base in Connecticut.
As an american i can say that we dont want it to happen either but if it does were ready
Look into videos about the Glomar Explorer, a US ship designed to secretly retrieve a sunken Soviet submarine.
just FYI the 1st sub used in a military conflict ....see below
Written by: John Maguire
The H.L. Hunley was a submarine used by the Confederacy that demonstrated the effectiveness and possibilities of submersible warfare. Submarines were already in existence at the time, but this particular submarine was the first underwater vessel to engage with and destroy an enemy warship.
Built in 1863 at the Park and Lyons shop in Mobile, Alabama, the H.L. Hunley was made from an iron steam boiler with a cylindrical shape and elongated by adding narrowed ends. This submarine was not powered by diesel or a nuclear reactor, as so many are today: The H.L. Hunley was designed to be powered by eight men cranking a propeller from inside the submarine while one man (also on the inside) had the job of directing their path of travel by steering the vessel. Both ends of the submarine were fitted with ballast tanks, which could be flooded by opening valves or emptied using hand pumps, causing the H.L Hunley to float up to the surface or dive down to the depths of the ocean. An emergency ballast was added in the form of iron weights underneath the vessel. If the crew felt the need to quickly rise to the surface, these weights only needed to be unscrewed and removed.
Late at night on Feb. 16, 1864, the H.L. Hunley made history when it attacked the USS Housatonic, a 1,800-ton, 23-gun Union warship, off the South Carolina coast. The H.L. Hunley daringly rammed a spar torpedo, which was connected to a long pole on the front bow and chock full of explosive powder, directly into the warship's wooden siding. As the Hunley backed away, the crew detonated the charge using a rope attached to a trigger, sending the Housatonic and its crew of five to the bottom of Charleston Harbor. This attack put the H.L. Hunley down in history as the first submarine to sink a ship in war. Unfortunately, the proximity of the submarine to the explosion it had created sent it and its crew of nine to the bottom of the harbor along with the very ship it had attacked.
Being able to play Mutually Assured destruction = no one MAD enough to attempt playing.
I always wanted to navigate a submarine. I have been a navigator on surface ships. But submarine navigation is very differant.
Great reaction!! If you want to know about early subs, type in: First Submarine to sink an enemy warship. Many videos of various lengths and even full-length docs about the finding and preservation of the Sub. "CSS H. L. Hunley"
I went through no less than Three phycology evals during submarine school
I worked in the manufacture and repair of nuclear submarines and I could never understand how sailors could spend such long periods under water. Claustrophobia didn't bother me then but scares me now. Enlisted sailors when they sleep could never sleep on their side. Must sleep on their back or stomach due to lack of room. To change from one to the other you have to slide out of bed then slide back in on your other side. A mere inches between your body and the bottom of the bunk above you.
Im with you, i would never step foot on a Sub either.
I not a fan of the water or cramped spaces so I could never be in the Navy, mad respect to the US Navy! The way subs navigate the ocean without any windows has always fascinated me! Their calculations have to be spot on all the time, I could never do it because my mathematical understanding is basic arithmetic, nowhere near anything above division, we'd crash if I was asked to be the navigator on a sub! The US military is the best in all branches! Happy 4th of July! And by the way, thank you to the both of you for taking your hats off while watching the Star Spangled Banner video. I hope that you react to the Story Of The Tomb Of The Unknown Soldier and the Changing Of The Guard for The Tomb Of The Unknown Soldier!
When you come to the states go see the USS Cod in Cleveland, Ohio.
Yall should definitely watch a clip on the Soviets/Russia's Typhoon class submarine.
Military enthusiasts will appreciate any engineering marvel no matter what country manufacturers it.
The Submarine force is trained at New London Connecticut
The SmarterEveryDay CZcams channel did an awesome video on the science of these submarines and explained how they produce their own oxygen
These boats and other assets are the only things preventing a nuclear war.
I was on a mission to the North Pole, we went all the way to the north pole under the polar cap.
The Ohio Class submarine can dive to depths of over 1,000 feet. The true depth is not publicly known.
So if you speak of submarine with large nuclear weapons those are SSGN, SSN subs will go fight in battlefield
You can go to "Sea Wolf Park" in Galveston Texas and check out a WWII Submarine. Or visit a Carrier in San Diego California.
Seawolf is also a sub class of 3 USS Seawolf, USS Connecticut, USS Jimmy Carter, Carter is 100 feet longer for navy seals and underwater remote vehicles and the subs were made in order I listed.
We got a Balao class, the USS Batfish, in Oklahoma. Brought it up the river systems to Muskogee.
You guys should react to Operation Yellow ribbon which is about What Happened to the planes that were in the air on 9/11 and the Role Canada played in La ding them and taking care of the passengers when they were cleared and aloud to get off the planes. Everyone may only think America was effected on 9/11 But Canada was too The Canada/US border was closed the Canadian airspace was also closed after there were not more planes to land some Canadians died in the Twin towers that were there visiting for work you will love learning about it. 🇨🇦🤝🏻🇺🇸
The billionaires who built their own was extremely poorly built and engineers told them it would implode under pressure. That was a deep sea diving module - those aren't rated for more than one or two dives. Military subs don't go as deep because they don't have to. The coating and the procedures allow them to hide without diving as deep. They're so well hidden that two subs went through a channel from two different countries - and had a minor collision because they were running silent. Here's the thing: as deep as the Titanic is, that's nowhere near the deepest part of the world's ocean is. That would be in the Marianas Trench. The director James Cameron did a dive there in a brand new engineered one man bell. It was ruined and could never be used again after that dive. The video used at the beginning of the Titanic movie - most of it is effects. Although unmanned cameras were sent down to video the wreckage, the footage either was mostly unusable or the camera/drone was lost at depth. In all likelihood, there wouldn't be a lot to see after this many years. At that depth, there would be many operational issues.
Let's paint it Red, White n Blue. LOL
We all hope it never comes to that.
These ships can travel for 10 years without refueling their nuclear reactor. The limiting factor is that they only carry enough supplies for the crew for 120 days.
As far as "fuel" goes, the current Submarines can stay out for 25 years!!🇺🇲🇺🇲♥️
You have to think the first sub was used in 1776 revolutionary War. It was call The Turtle
HAPPY 4TH OF JULY. Our Military Men and Women don't get paid enough for their services. It's sad that those who carry a football make far more than those who carry a gun 😢
The Ohios are 170m long, and, 13m across the beam. They are BIG for subs.
Check out the new manta ray drone under water wild
You need to watch epic history ww1 1914-1918 please
it's quite roomy, compared to WWII subs.
They aren’t just nukes btw they have normal missiles too
If Submarines didn't have nuclear weapons what would be the point of their existence?
UGM-133 Trident II is the last resort for saving a country like the USA UK and NATO from being Dog food.
The Seawolf is scariest
Boats in class
Name Hull no. Builder Laid down Launched Commissioned Status
Seawolf subgroup
Seawolf SSN-21 General Dynamics Electric Boat, Groton 25 October 1989 24 June 1995 19 July 1997 Active in service
Connecticut SSN-22 14 September 1992 1 September 1997 11 December 1998 Active in service
Jimmy Carter subgroup
Jimmy Carter SSN-23 General Dynamics Electric Boat, Groton 5 December 1998 13 May 2004 19 February 2005 Active in service
Not far from where I live in New England, there is a WW2 submarine preserved as a "museum ship." Old subs were so cramped that if they were still in use, the Navy might struggle to find enough smaller humans to operate them. Today's subs are quite roomy in comparison.
In 2001, a U.S. sub operating off the coast of Hawai'i surfaced directly below a large, ocean-going Japanese fishing boat, sinking it and killing 9 crew members, including 4 teenaged apprentices. The sub performed a rapid surface maneuver normally used in emergencies, as a demonstration for some civilian visitors (probably politicians) onboard. The accident strained the normally friendly relations between the U.S. and Japan, especially since the sub captain did not apologize as a Japanese officer would have. The Navy prohibited any more civilian visitors.
I have a cousin who works as an engineer for the company building the replacements for these "Ohio-class" submarines. Exactly what he does is classified. Construction on the first "Columbia-class" sub began in 2020, but it's not expected to on active duty until 2031. The current estimated cost is more than $9 billion each, but that price tag might rise even faster than inflation.
Nuclear powered ballistic missile submarine:
China China
Type 092 submarine - 1 in service.
Type 094 submarine - 6 in service.[39][40][41]
France France
Triomphant class - 4 in service.
India India
Arihant class - 2 in service (2 under construction).[42][43]
Russia Russia
Borei class - 7 in service.[44] additional 2 under construction & 2 planned.
Delta class - 6 Delta IV class in service (3 additional Delta III/IV in special operations or attack role).
United Kingdom United Kingdom
Vanguard class - 4 in service.
United States United States
Ohio class - 14 in service (4 others have been converted into cruise missile submarines).
AIP based ballistic missile submarine:
North Korea North Korea
North Korean submarine Hero Kim Kun Ok
South Korea South Korea
KSS-III submarine - 3 in service (total 9 planned).
The upcoming Columbia-class (formerly known as the Ohio Replacement Submarine and SSBN-X Future Follow-on Submarine) nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines of the United States Navy are designed to replace the Ohio class.[7] Construction of the first vessel began on 1 October 2020.[8] She is scheduled to enter service in 2031.[9][10][11]
I would rather be in an Aerospace company than a Building Ships, Aircraft carriers, or Submarine building company any day. I'm sure there are many reasons why a submarine sucks compared to an Airplane. But
You need to react to Tom Clancy’s The Hunt for The Red October movie. Start another channel movie reacting. You can even have kids enjoying various high (re)viewed American movies. Now’s the time in YT world.
560 feet long and 42 feet wide...
You and cat need to check out fat electrician he has some good stories about us subs
You have to volunteer to be in a sub because people cant handle the closterphobia
The south used submarines during the civil war against the north
I would rather join the Air force rather than the US Navy. But I'm not asking to be a pilot but the Air force seems cooler to me.
Sorry folks I get excited when speaking of submarine
The ballistic missile submarines also known as "Boomers" never surface during their 70 day patrols. Never, never, never.
Unless you wanna remind Putin we got shit off their coast too.
If you think about it, there are no windows on any American Navy ship except for the bridge windows. On Aircraft Carriers there are thousands of compartments in the ship with no windows. It's really no different than being on a submarine except it may be a bit more spacious, subs are very cramped.
Fair Point, i guess Aircraft Carriers don't have windows but Aircraft Carriers are fucking expensive though.
@@WhiteGirlHeaven Submarines cost more than carriers on a per ton of displacement basis. New subs are costing 4 to 5 billion each. What does cost have to do with no windows?
Who is ill today?
😂
Ya’ll have medical conditions every day
Your wife might have sleep apnea, if you wake up not being able to breathe, need a cpap* device. Very common and nice to have.
Today is United States of America Independence day probably our last one considering whats at stake in the world we Americans leave the rest up to you as the ancient Athenians did for us we live on in the free world and smaller nations this is us Americans way of passing the tourch to the next
Jono, one thing you have to understand is that submarine crews are likely the most highly trained members of the US military. You said you would not know what is safe to touch. They are trained to if not exactly then damn close to astronaut level. Their training never ends and it is rigorous. Each person must know not only how to do their own job but also everyone else's job. They cannot abandon their mission if a crew member becomes a casualty. They must be able to fill in for anyone else on the crew if they become disabled. Submarines are more complex than spacecraft and they operate in a more hostile environment.
Be careful, this channel issues strikes to reaction channels.
According to some friends in the Navy, Submariners are always a little "different" and always smell funny. Not unclean, just.....funny. I'd imagine it's the recycled and created oxygen.
12:53 Mark! The "boomers" inherited the naval tradition of naming warships for our states from battleships as battleships were declared obsolete over time. 🫡