Why MONSTER WAVES Can't Sink US Navy's LARGEST Aircraft Carriers During Rough Seas

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  • čas přidán 15. 08. 2023
  • Aircraft carrier in rough seas is a sight to behold! Ever wondered how the massive vessels of the US Navy withstand the fury of nature?
    Dive deep with us into the vast ocean of knowledge, where we shed light on how the mighty US Navy safeguards its warships, including the colossal aircraft carriers, from the wrath of monster waves and treacherous storms. Discover the intricate systems in place that ensure a ship's stability and the safety of its onboard equipment even when faced with the harshest conditions at sea.
    Ever wondered how the sailors manage to stand firm and conduct operations on a ship deck that's constantly rocking in rough seas? Or how aircraft on these carriers are kept secured against the fury of the storm? We’ve got all the answers! From specially designed non-skid surfaces to high-tech advancements in naval engineering, we unveil the secrets behind the US Navy's prowess in tackling the fiercest challenges of the sea.
    Get an exclusive peek into the future as we discuss the cutting-edge technologies that are poised to revolutionize naval operations, like adaptive hull surfaces and the integration of Artificial Intelligence in stability systems.
    #aircraftcarrier #usnavy #roughseas

Komentáře • 1K

  • @navyproductions
    @navyproductions  Před 7 měsíci +34

    Become a member and proudly bear the title of 'Navy Life Supporter'!
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    Together, we offer a glimpse into the unique world of the navy and show our appreciation for the brave men and women who brave the open sea and defend our country. Whether you want to relive old sea tales or learn more about the maritime world, it's all possible here.
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  • @joemoore4027
    @joemoore4027 Před 9 měsíci +705

    I was on the USS Constellation in the 1970's. We were trying to out run a typhoon near Thailand and were caught on the outer edge. I worked the flight deck with VA146 with A7E's as a plane captain. My aircraft was being towed to the number 1 spot on the bow with me in the cockpit riding brakes. The swells were coming over the bow and my plane started to slide off the flight deck. The deck crew threw chains anywhere they could on my landing gear and tug The plane finally stopped sliding with one of my 3 main wheels hanging in midair. My buddies had to pull me out of the cockpit I was shaking so bad I could not move. They had to medicate me in sickbay I was so bad. Seeing what mother nature can do to a 100,000 ton carrier is something you will never forget.

    • @Jakuboooooooooo
      @Jakuboooooooooo Před 9 měsíci +35

      And on today’s episode of things that didn’t happen

    • @labmug
      @labmug Před 9 měsíci +6

      CGI much?

    • @browsman2328
      @browsman2328 Před 9 měsíci +32

      I think we operated with your ship in 69. I was a radarman on the Galveston GLG-3. We were doing shire bomb, monitoring Hanoi airport and vectoring FACs. We hit the tail end of a typhoon and the ship did a 35 degree starboard roll and stayed there for about 20 seconds. I thought we were going to capsize but it slowly came back up.

    • @supercellonova
      @supercellonova Před 9 měsíci +16

      That is terrifying, sir. I am glad you made it out of that situation.

    • @cynthiathomas404
      @cynthiathomas404 Před 9 měsíci +12

      Are will never be a ship that will out do the forces of the ocean

  • @LoFiMofo
    @LoFiMofo Před 9 měsíci +152

    I served on the USS John F. Kennedy while attached to a S3 Viking squadron. We hit a storm off Morocco where we were still doing flight ops and the shooter was timing launching the planes between the waves. I was aft on the flight deck with one of our S3s as a plane captain turning and burning, my shipmate holding onto a pad eye with one hand and the other on my belt. I watched the shooter mis-time the waves and send a tomcat straight into a wave, the bow went up and i thought the tomcat was in the water. As the bow went down again i saw the tomcat pulling up barely above the sea, somehow avoiding going in the drink. That was the last flight we launched that day. Good times.

    • @Zomby_Woof
      @Zomby_Woof Před 9 měsíci +22

      And that is what sets our Navy in a league of its own.
      Not only can we drop air power anywhere on the planet, we can do it under just about any condition - on demand.

    • @johnmorgan3083
      @johnmorgan3083 Před 9 měsíci +1

      What year was that? I might have been stationed on the Kennedy at that time "91-"93

    • @LoFiMofo
      @LoFiMofo Před 9 měsíci

      @@johnmorgan3083 92-93 Med / Adriatic Sea Cruise. You may remember us visiting Italy five times.

    • @Thultarn
      @Thultarn Před 5 měsíci +3

      Was on her ships company but during our 86-87 Med cruise I ran the DATS bench for VS-22. I remember during hurricane Gloria watching our cruiser escort go completely under and pop back up on ships tv

    • @LoFiMofo
      @LoFiMofo Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@Thultarn Yep, that was my squadron. The Checkmates of VS-22 out of NAS Cecil Field Jacksonville, Florida.

  • @Dr.Pepper001
    @Dr.Pepper001 Před 6 měsíci +11

    I was blown off the poop deck when our destroyer was passing Tahiti. No one saw me go overboard. A canoe filled with topless Tahitian women rescued me and took me to one of the uninhabited out islands. I was their love slave for 6 months. Then a passing yacht took me onboard and we sailed to Australia. I'm still here. True story.

  • @US3YGF
    @US3YGF Před 9 měsíci +8

    I love how many sailors are watching this

  • @ronaldhartigan1291
    @ronaldhartigan1291 Před 9 měsíci +141

    I was a meteorologist aboard the U.S.S. Enterprise CVAN65 during the Viet Nam war. Many stories, but 2 particular. On second deployment we left Pearl Harbor for the Philippines and a few days out were headed right into a typhoon. Support ships with us were too small and turned around back to Pearl. Ship was buttoned up and all equipment and personnel confined inside; except me. I had to go outside the Captain's bridge to take observations and had to wear a safety harness. The flight deck is 85 feet above water, and we were punching through the top of the waves! The anemometer in the office was pegged at 100kts, so we don't know what the actual wind was. If anyone went overboard there's no way they could have been rescued. I went out the balloon launch rack midway from water to flight deck and when the stern was down in a trough I couldn't see the sky.
    Enterprise always left San Francisco (Alameda) in January and one February in the Gulf of Tonkin the USS Pueblo got commandeered by North Koreans. We were outfitted for Monsoon weather and not a shred of foul weather gear. We arrived off the coast of N. Korea in freezing, snowy weather and had to stand watches outside for 6 hour shifts. Freezing water on the deck sloshing over our work shoes and dungaree pants. Most of us got so sick after awhile the weather officer agreed to let us observe through a porthole and just step outside for a few minutes twice an hour. 40 days and 40 nights.
    On another deployment we left Pearl early morning on a beautiful day for live ammo training exercise. One flight deck crewman parked his APU with hot exhaust discharging on a AIM9 Sidewinder missile and short circuit fired it down the flight deck. Hit a fighter, sprayed fuel all over flight deck, and detonated eight, 500 pound bombs. 29 men killed in that disaster.
    But I loved my ship. So sad that they dismantled it.

    • @coldonnamariefuentesdumont8598
      @coldonnamariefuentesdumont8598 Před 9 měsíci +21

      Hi Ronald my name is Col Donnamarie Fuentes Dumont Lavallee and I am a retired US Army Air Corps combat pilot and flight leader and I have and own 2 vintage fighter bomber air craft A P-47 D and a F4-u Corsair N and I am going through the navy comments of being aboard ship's in gale and full Gale storms and typhoon type weather and I came across you on the CVN 65 Enterprise and I think you might have known my dad his name is senior chief Russell R Lavallee he was in charge of ordinance of all air craft and he also served on the Lexington I hope you both got to know each other He was a great and blessed wonderful man He past 6yrs ago and is very much missed I am very proud of your navel service and your extremely important but dangerous mos field you were in I hope you and your family are doing well and I hope you and your family stay safe and healthy My love 💕 to you and your family and all sailors of WW II and their families too sempre fi COL Donnamarie Fuentes Dumont Lavallee

    • @nukewurld
      @nukewurld Před 9 měsíci +8

      The enterprise isn't dismantled yet. It's sitting on Pier 3 of newport news shipbuilding with a small team babysitting her. Ask me how I know. Actually, I'll save you the breath. I walk by the rust bucket every day on my way to work

    • @louiswood57
      @louiswood57 Před 9 měsíci +1

      It use to be in Alameda Naval Base

    • @michaelottesen6143
      @michaelottesen6143 Před 9 měsíci

      I heard some of the steel went into the new Enterprise (cvn-80). I was stationed aboard from September 1985 to March 1987 (ships company - AIMD).@@nukewurld

    • @Tw0099
      @Tw0099 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@nukewurldthat’s sad, she was an awesome boat. Could turn & burn like no other boat I’d ever been on.

  • @RufusGRufus
    @RufusGRufus Před 9 měsíci +30

    I was serving on the USS Carl Vinson (CVN-70) when Hurricane Iwa followed us into Pearl Harbor in ‘82. The day before I was helping an aircraft plane captain tie down his plane to 24 points. A wave came over the angle deck. I was about 30 feet from the edge of the deck and, in the brief second I saw it, it looked to be about 50 feet tall (no joke!). Plus, there’s another 90 feet from the flight deck to the waterline to consider. My shipmate saw it coming, yelled at me, and just dove on me knocking me to the deck and we both scrambled to grab a nearby tie down chain. That Airman probably saved my life that day!
    Mother Nature and I have established a different relationship since that day to be sure.

    • @JacobGodly
      @JacobGodly Před měsícem +1

      I’m on the 70 now haha

    • @RufusGRufus
      @RufusGRufus Před měsícem +1

      @@JacobGodlywell good on you, shipmate! Fair winds and following seas. 🫡

    • @johnbwright
      @johnbwright Před měsícem +1

      I was onboard the Chucky V during that cruise.

    • @RufusGRufus
      @RufusGRufus Před měsícem

      @@johnbwright Hopefully not working the flight deck. 🌊

    • @johnbwright
      @johnbwright Před měsícem +1

      @@RufusGRufus I worked in the Armory. I have a lasting memory of how solemn the docking into Pearl was especially with the bubbling oil pockets bursting up through the blue waters of the harbor.

  • @RetiredSailor60
    @RetiredSailor60 Před 9 měsíci +80

    To all Sailors; Maritime and Navy all over the world, thanks for your service. I too served on many US Navy ships from small boys (DDG/DD) to large deck (LHD).

    • @ListenToGlobal
      @ListenToGlobal Před 9 měsíci +9

      Thank you for your service!

    • @StevenCaldwell-ev8br
      @StevenCaldwell-ev8br Před 9 měsíci +1

      Thank you Sailor, from Another ret. Usndv. Vietnam era, and I Respect your Service! SEMPER FORTIS FAMILY NAVY VETS. MY DAD WW2 PEARL HARBOR, 35 YRS. MY BROTHER 4, ME 4. ITS A HONOR TO SALUTE MY COMMRADES AT SEA. USNDV. LA CALIF. STAY HEALTHY BROTHER and GOD BLESS UR FAMILY. / ALL MILITARY!❤

    • @StevenCaldwell-ev8br
      @StevenCaldwell-ev8br Před 9 měsíci +2

      Sir, May your retirement be a blessing and happiness to YOU, AND ALL OUR SHIPMATES. ACTIVE DUTY, AND US VETERANS. MAY YOUR SERVICE TO UNITED STATES BE A INSPIRATION TO OUR YOUTH! HOOYAH"""

  • @matthewchamberlain2464
    @matthewchamberlain2464 Před 9 měsíci +76

    I have served on three fast attack submarines, and have spent one fifth of my total life underwater, decks awash. There are a few hurricanes we encountered, and one of the blessed things about submarines is that you can submerge beneath them. However, the energy put into the water by hurricanes reaches very deep, and even at very deep depths, you can feel the waves. We have seatbelt style straps that you can wear while sleeping in the racks, to help with the storms. If we are at periscope depth, at a relatively mild sea state, 2 or 3, the ship can throw you out of the rack if you are not strapped in. Keeping everything stowed for sea is vital to crew survival during heavy seas or impacts. Note the collision of the USS San Fransisco.

    • @djskam2
      @djskam2 Před 9 měsíci +8

      Thank you for your service.

    • @CaliWaliDoDaDay
      @CaliWaliDoDaDay Před 9 měsíci +5

      Yes Thanks for sharing and your service. God Bless

    • @enriquechang1204
      @enriquechang1204 Před 9 měsíci +3

      ​@@CaliWaliDoDaDay❤

    • @Kenmarshallintereststx
      @Kenmarshallintereststx Před 9 měsíci +3

      Thank you for sharing

    • @ruger8412
      @ruger8412 Před 9 měsíci +4

      Must of been thrilling at times. Thanks for your service & your experience well serving. 🇺🇸 🌎

  • @snuffysmith6058
    @snuffysmith6058 Před 9 měsíci +72

    Not a sailor but you might enjoy this. I was a med-evac pilot in I Corps VN in 1970. When the hospital ships, Sanctuary and Repose, were on station we would deliver severely wounded to the ships. They were so far off shore we would FM home on them half the time. On a couple of missions, I had to land on their tiny decks when the props were coming almost entirely out of the water. Big pucker factor but they always brought my crew ham and cheese sandwiches and a Coke. Happy times but wouldn't have wanted to live on those ships in those conditions.

    • @donoliver9733
      @donoliver9733 Před 9 měsíci +6

      One of my Commanders served on the USS Repose as a surgical nurse during the Vietnam War.

  • @jeffingram8279
    @jeffingram8279 Před 9 měsíci +157

    I was on the CVN-71 as a reactor operator. During a hurricane we received a distress call when we turned into the storm while the escort ships had to go around. We had waves that would come over the bow and land on the stern (granted we were really pushing the speed). An HY-80 steel door wasn’t dogged properly when a wave caught the edge and peeled it like made out of aluminum foil. The power of waves is staggering.

    • @coastal9181
      @coastal9181 Před 9 měsíci +18

      88-92. I had to help shore that door up. Off the coast of France. BM3, 2nd Div Deck.

    • @lorriecarrel9962
      @lorriecarrel9962 Před 8 měsíci +3

      Peeling 80kpsi steel is some serious power

    • @nicknickels7951
      @nicknickels7951 Před 8 měsíci

      😳

    • @tedpreston4155
      @tedpreston4155 Před 6 měsíci +9

      I have a vivid memory of one particular storm that threw CVN-71 around, as we were sailing back from a North Atlantic cruise in 1988. I was stationed on the lifeboat davits for general quarters. It was a pleasant GQ station, normally, being outside the skin of the ship with lots of fresh air. But this evening we were at GQ only because of the rough seas. The Executive officer appeared on the davit that night, and ordered us to leave our normal post and come inside the skin for safely. I'm glad he brought us inside: the lifeboat davit was hit by a huge wave that night, one that might have washed us overboard, if we were still outside.
      That is the only storm I remember tossing the Roosevelt around like a toy. I appreciate the effort the Navy goes to to avoid rough seas! Most of my experience on CVN-71 was literally smooth sailing.

    • @soarabove337
      @soarabove337 Před 5 měsíci

      Soooo... I apologize, Squids... and I mean that term sincerely ok?... bc I'm just a regular ol' Army 11B grunt digging in the sand ok? Except: FOBs & so I didn't have to dig lol. And also, I didn't have to call a tossing, twisting, turbulent "boat" my home. IDK why you weirdos do it lol. SUCKS TO BE YOUUUU!!!! Other Sailors have commented, so I'm just following the swails ok... read below...

  • @everettnichols9062
    @everettnichols9062 Před 9 měsíci +49

    I weathered a typhoon in the Sea of Japan during the early 1960's aboard the USS Dixie! We had 40-to-50-foot seas and 100 knot winds!!! The ship came within 2 degrees of capsizing!!! It was scary as hell to be honest!!! It went on for most of three days!!!

    • @davidyetter5409
      @davidyetter5409 Před 9 měsíci +5

      I visited a friend of mine stationed on the USS Dixie. That was the first navy ship I ever stepped foot on. And only one of two that had
      wooden decks. The person I visited was a store keeper named Reynolds.
      I was on the USS Wisconsin BB 64, and that also had wooden decks.
      I retired in 1994.

    • @KnightRider872
      @KnightRider872 Před 9 měsíci +4

      The Devil's Sea.

    • @camronbay1
      @camronbay1 Před 2 měsíci

      Man that sounds scary as hell man.

    • @phyllisalderson6247
      @phyllisalderson6247 Před měsícem

      🤦‍♀️

  • @carlfischer4163
    @carlfischer4163 Před 9 měsíci +22

    1982 November ,USS Forrestal returning from our 6 month Med cruise. Sailing west in the Atlantic headed for Jacksonville Fl. Rode the storm for about 4 days. We had water in the hanger bay. Felt bad for the F4’s and A7’s tied down on the flight deck, they really got a salt water bath. Sleeping in my rack was like sleeping in a rocking chair, loved it. 😊

    • @williamdodge5123
      @williamdodge5123 Před 9 měsíci +7

      Was aboard Shipmate.
      R Div Pipeshop HT2
      DCC POOW/ Chopstix/
      GQ Repair locker #4mmr/ #1 nozzleman.

    • @williamdodge5123
      @williamdodge5123 Před 9 měsíci

      Load of Tigers onboard🤢🤢🤮🤮

    • @bobbyswift5384
      @bobbyswift5384 Před 9 měsíci +2

      I WAS STATIONED AT NAS JAX THEN VP 16 WAR EAGLES

    • @rodneybarnes4509
      @rodneybarnes4509 Před 9 měsíci +1

      I was on the FID that cruise, shipmate, in G-3 Division.

    • @williambrodmanvi5944
      @williambrodmanvi5944 Před 5 měsíci +2

      I was on that crossing it has been 40 years I was aboard as an 11 year old tiger cruise kid along with my retired grandfather a WWII CAPT. and my late father retired Comander! Who was at that time a LTComander who was deployed as an aviator in the prowler squadron! I saw things my young mind could not have ever imagined. Some 40+ years later some of which i can recall as clearly as if they had been yesterday. I very much enjoyed of it too. Thank you to all no matter where you may have served. Every single one of you deserve it and much more. Thank you all, from a grateful Navy Brat...

  • @markredgrave6282
    @markredgrave6282 Před 9 měsíci +30

    I remember my dad who retired as a senior O-6 at the end of Vietnam tell me as an ensign right after the war, he was on U.S.S. Hughes which was an old single stack pre-WW2 destroyer even smaller and lighter than the Fletchers. They were sailing her out to Bikini where she was eventually in the target fleet for both the airburst shot(The Able test) and the underwater lagoon burst(The Baker test). Incredibly after surviving the entire conflict and then both atomic blasts, she was finnaly taken back to Bremerton Wash. where she was finnaly sent to Davey Jones locker as a target for Navy TBM bombers but not before taking multiple 500lb. bomb hits and torpedoes. I know because i read her final cruise book my dad had. One tough little ship she was lol.

  • @JonGlez978
    @JonGlez978 Před 6 měsíci +7

    I made several deployments on boards these behemoths... I was a weather forecaster (AG) so it was my responsibility to ensure the Captain was informed of any inclement weather the ship may encounter. In October 2005 I was doing workups with the USS Enterprise and that year was the most active Hurricane season on record (Still valid to this day).
    I remember vividly finishing my "watch" as the ship weather forecaster... leaving a tropical storm named Wilma as a 70kt storm about to become a hurricane in the western Caribbean. When I returned the next morning, the night watch turnover the 70KT is now a monster Category 5 Hurricane with a central pressure of 882 mb!!! In less than 24 hours almost a 100 mb pressure drop. We tracked the storm as it recurve into Florida as a Category 2 storm... race across it, and regain Category 3 as it emerge over the Gulfstream.
    At that time the Enterprise was between Bermuda and the North Carolina coast doing a logistic unload... I informed the Captain... the monster that was racing towards our location at 30+ Knots. I finished my watch thinking "everything will be okay once we head west to the coast at best speed"
    Well I wake up counting up to 18 seconds feeling as I weigh 200 lbs more... followed by 12 seconds of free fall. My bunk was all the way forward in frame 40 so the ship motion was amplified. I was thinking to myself... what the hell is going on?! I crawl to the walls trying to brush my teeth in the head... stagger along the walls trying to make it to frame 180 where my office was... and once I reach it... the night forecaster said... Yeah we didn't make best speed... we only did 8 knots and the hurricane is now 20 miles from us! A category 3 Hurricane Wilma (Once the strongest Hurricane in the Atlantic Basin) almost on top us.
    I look at the flight deck camera and we had gust almost to 110 knots with waves breaking over the bow. Thankfully we had no air wing, we were full of fuel, and everything was "secured for sea". Still we were experiencing extreme movement more than 30° rolls. I briefed the Captain on the bridge that we were now in Hurricane conditions basically balancing myself between the 30° rolls and he just had the biggest grin in his face (He was an aviator) and drinking his coffee. We can only recommend but the Captain has the ultimate responsibility. He probably think everything will be fine with no air wing. Eventually we made it to the coast not before crossing the (600 ft /182 meter ) depth curve... at that depth the biggest waves break... but once you cross that depth into shallow water the seas just abate considerably since there not enough depth to get the full height of the waves. So that was the end of that ordeal.
    On another occasion in 2006, the same Captain try to Maverick though 26 ft swells but this time we had the air wing onboard and in swells like that... chains usually don't hold the expensive aircraft down and costly mishaps happen... the Captain doesn't want the backlash when we already recommend him not to go. So almost 9/10 they will follow our recommendations. When the weatherman is wrong... oh boy! But we do a pretty good job.
    TLDR: To answer the Video question...Why MONSTER WAVES Can't Sink US Aircraft Carriers? Well it's all about buoyancy. These behemoths can compartamelize themselves in such a way that they are basically unsinkable. But that doesn't mean the things inside don't move around. 😅

  • @patsyw26
    @patsyw26 Před 8 měsíci +6

    I am very proud of our Navy and jealous at the same time. I served during the Vietnam Era and as a female was never allowed on a ship. And maybe that was for the best! :) Still proud to have served at VT6!! NAVY, YOU ARE AWESOME!!

  • @Beer-can_full_of_toes
    @Beer-can_full_of_toes Před 9 měsíci +8

    All of this technology on modern carriers makes me have even more respect for our sailors of earlier times. Specifically the Pacific campaign of the second war.

  • @waynewimberley5854
    @waynewimberley5854 Před 9 měsíci +6

    Thank you guys for your service,I have four brothers that served,enjoyed reading your life stories.

  • @allenhelderman1134
    @allenhelderman1134 Před 8 měsíci +4

    Thank you for serving our country. 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @barrypoland8589
    @barrypoland8589 Před 9 měsíci +34

    I was on board the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower, in the early 90s. We left the Persian gulf, and headed for the north Atlantic. I was an ABE, flightdeck duty. We were supplied extreme weather gear. I was working bowsafety, harnessed to the ship. The waves were breaking the bow, that's over 90 foot waves. I was so scared, and so cold, but it was awesome. God bless America.

    • @kimmuckenfuss2284
      @kimmuckenfuss2284 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Thanks for the story. That's scary stuff! Thanks for your service.

    • @andyleotell
      @andyleotell Před 5 měsíci +1

      What’s up V-2 shipmate? I was a lens ic- man onboard Nimitz…. Loved you grease eatin ABE’s…. Funniest and toughest dudes on the ship! Consumed enormous amounts of alcohol with you guys…. Green shirts are the lords of the flight deck! FTN, TPS lol…. Man up recovery stations, man up recovery stations, let’s man ‘em up! Groove, short, ramp!!

    • @barrypoland8589
      @barrypoland8589 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@andyleotell Love ya shipmates. Have a great Navy day, haha.

    • @matthewsacca188
      @matthewsacca188 Před 2 měsíci +2

      I was on the USS Bainbridge during this same cruise. The rest of the battle group pulled into England but we went with you because we were nuclear powered and bottom heavy so more resistant to heavy seas. The weather decks were secured due to the high seas. I as a reactor operator and rarely went up to the bridge but went up for about 5 minutes. We could look up and see the crest of each wave. The seas would hit the windshield when we hit the trough. It was terrifying. We hit a 47 or 49 degree roll. I was in line for Midrats when it happened. It was a scary time but we got to pull into a fjord off the coast of Norway and that was incredible.

    • @user-db2fb1db1m
      @user-db2fb1db1m Před 18 dny

      USA 🇮🇱 #1

  • @lancepeters6497
    @lancepeters6497 Před 9 měsíci +32

    I was on a Canadian warship which passed thru the tail of a hurricane we hit waves of a height of 55ft . We were loaded heavy leaving narvik Norway. After passing thru the storm we deverted to England for repairs.

  • @toddrich9278
    @toddrich9278 Před 9 měsíci +22

    The Roughest Seas was off the Coast of Japan for myself,. Not allowed top side for a couple of days, top Rack broke loose and fell on my head while asleep. Got stiches from the Master at Arms ⚓⚓⚓🦈🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @user-fh4ju8hw6s
    @user-fh4ju8hw6s Před 9 měsíci +23

    I was attached to the Ike in early 80’s and hit a storm in the North Atlantic above the Arctic Circle and the waves were huge. We had water coming over the bow and the screws were coming out of the water. No flying but everything else was operating normally. Trying to eat was a challenge sleeping was great. Rocked to sleep.

    • @mrt2this607
      @mrt2this607 Před 23 dny

      Could you hear it loud thru the hull? Yeah, very relaxing hearing waves crash & rocking. Ass long as it wasn't violently moving you in a smaller ship.

  • @Marv4yer
    @Marv4yer Před 9 měsíci +21

    I was on the USS Mt.Baker, an ammunition ship, in 1972. It was our first deployment to the Med, and we had been ordered to make best speed across the Atlantic to deliver arms to Isreal. On the way we ran into a large storm, and the waves were high enough that when on fantail watch I had to look up to see the tops. After getting off of that watch I went to the bridge to check on a radar I maintained, and while there I saw the forward king post for the underway replenishment gear (STREAM) have green water come over the top of it. As this was about 100 feet above the water line, I took it as a sign I was going to going to die, and decided I might as well be comfortable to went to my rack. I had a bottom rack next to a padded weather bulkhead, and was able to wedge myself in. At reville things had calmed down, but when I went out to look at the bow the next day all of the deck gear except the anchor had been swept away, and the hull plates had been warped.

    • @Boatswas
      @Boatswas Před 3 měsíci +1

      When did a deck seaman take care of radar gear?
      ...or, how badly did an RM or ET screw up to have to stand after lookout?

  • @jamesjoy8866
    @jamesjoy8866 Před 9 měsíci +30

    I was on a Gearing class destroyer (DD845) that frequently escorted the USS Midway. Our procedure was to go over one wave then under the next. There were always footprints on the lower bulkheads after a storm. 30 degree rolls were not usual. I had two canvas straps to tie myself into my bunk. The Good Old Days 😳

    • @charleswheeler3689
      @charleswheeler3689 Před 9 měsíci

      Why I joined Army.

    • @johnchilds6471
      @johnchilds6471 Před 8 měsíci +1

      I was on the Meredith (DD890), last of the Gearing class. We should have dot sub pay!!!

    • @foylebutler8952
      @foylebutler8952 Před 6 měsíci +2

      I was on a Destroyer . Like being on a cork in a water fall. Walking on the bulkheads was common practice. I always tried to have a bottom bunk.

  • @kevinchilds655
    @kevinchilds655 Před 6 měsíci +3

    every time someone say's waves can't sink a ship , i hear mother nature say , hold my beer .

  • @martinmarsola6477
    @martinmarsola6477 Před 9 měsíci +7

    Another intriguing video today. The carriers are amazing vessels. Thank you for the video today! ❤😊

  • @williamdobbins3131
    @williamdobbins3131 Před 9 měsíci +28

    I worked the flight deck on the USS Independence CV-62. Had water coming g over the bow, and life boats carried away from the waves. The ship was moving, but felt rock solid.

    • @acdcduke2037
      @acdcduke2037 Před 9 měsíci +2

      I was ships company on the Indy front 1964 to 1968. Water around South Africa threw us around like we were a tooth pick. We had to tie down in our bunks. Roughest water I was ever in.

    • @bdsilkgroup
      @bdsilkgroup Před 6 měsíci

      Were you scared

    • @phiksit
      @phiksit Před měsícem

      I worked in 3MMR. We had just finished going through SLEP in Philly and were getting re-homeported to San Diego so we had to round south america... must have been 89'. I think it was the only time I really felt the ship pitch.

  • @robscott919
    @robscott919 Před 9 měsíci +147

    I was onboard The Nimitz off the coast of South Carolina when Hurricane Hugo made landfall. When ever a bad storm like that approaches, ships like the Nimitz always put to sea with it's escourts. (This is to protect smaller ships at port, from being damaged by the big ships movements) We were in 40 to 60 ft seas and the weatherdeck of the Nimitz barely seemed to be moving at all. I looked off to port and saw one our destroyer escorts. The entire front keel of the ship came out of the water with every wave. I felt sorry for the crew onboard her. I knew they were getting beat to death.

    • @popparotc
      @popparotc Před 9 měsíci +8

      I was on USS Ranger CV61 in 1976 when we put out from Subic to ride out a typhoon. It was the only time I felt the swells cause a roll. It was quite gentle, and in fact comforting when I turned in that night.

    • @jeffingram8279
      @jeffingram8279 Před 9 měsíci +7

      I would go out and watch during resupply the small boys bow would plunge under the water and back up and out again when we felt like we were riding on glass. Just insane.

    • @markhammar3977
      @markhammar3977 Před 9 měsíci +7

      Thank you for your service, from your brother to the north.

    • @starlite5880
      @starlite5880 Před 9 měsíci +7

      My experienced on board a surface ship is getting seasick as a recruit the day we leave port, until we arrived to the our destination Treasure Island to boot camp San Diego, CA. I felt, I only have skin/bones holding me together. Recruited by the Submarine Services after boot camp and stayed on for 22 Years, until retirement. Quite a hellish experience crossing the Pacific Oceans on board the USNS Gen. C. G. Morton T-AP 138..

    • @charleswheeler3689
      @charleswheeler3689 Před 9 měsíci +10

      One minute you're a Destroyer. Next minute you're a Submarine.

  • @monstermashed6266
    @monstermashed6266 Před 9 měsíci +11

    El Faro was located at a very deep depth a sad loss of life may they rest in peace

  • @toddrich9278
    @toddrich9278 Před 9 měsíci +11

    Very nice ,. I was lucky enough to dive underneath F.F.G. 3 ( SCHOFIELD). In the Persian Gulf 83 to cut fishing rope from Fin Stabilizer,. Ships Diver ⚓ No mobile dive team at that time 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🤿🤿🤿🤿

  • @richardm7275
    @richardm7275 Před 9 měsíci +27

    I was in a super typhoon aboard a 370 foot WW2 destroyer in the Taiwan Straits in the 1960's. 90-110 foot swells - one over 120 foot. The swells seemed about a mile apart. After you crested one and started down the oncoming wave would slowly rise in your view till it passed the top of the windows on the bridge. The bow would dig in and seem like it wasn''t going to stop but then it popped up like a cork. We went beyond our point of no return in one roll, but we didn't capsize because the captain had the ship topped off in Kaohsiung. He had to radio for special permission because they didn't have the fuel we usually used (NSFO)., we also topped off with everything else we could. But we had to go out because at the time the US had a treaty with the Republic of China to keep a destroyer in the straits, and that was us this time. I also almost got washed overboard in that same storm. I just managed to get my knees and elbows locked around a stanchion for the life line , which I did because I had been in undertow before and knew how strong it was.

    • @kimmuckenfuss2284
      @kimmuckenfuss2284 Před 9 měsíci +5

      Incredible & glad you survived. Thanks for your service.

    • @johnchilds6471
      @johnchilds6471 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Your Captain saved your ass, empty fuel tanks will kill you in a Typhoon. As the ships Oil King I was responsible for keeping the tanks either full or empty and ready to ballast with sea water if needed. Half empty tanks are minimized due to the free surface effect as the ship takes heavy rolls.

  • @politicsuncensored5617
    @politicsuncensored5617 Před 9 měsíci +3

    The U.S. Coast Guard Sailors & other countries coast guard sailors have my 100% respect. They have to put everything on the line everyday. Shalom

  • @borgonianevolution
    @borgonianevolution Před 9 měsíci +18

    I was in the Navy onboard USS Nimitz back in the early 80's. We had to leave port when a hurricane was moving up the east coast. We did a wide circle out of port and then someone decided we would launch aircraft outside the storm, proceed into the eye, launch more, leave the eye go recover the outer aircraft, then go back in and recover those aircraft.
    There were waves cresting the bow of the ship and it barley moved. When the ship was turning about and the wind and waves were broadside it was hard to walk a straight line but still no major motions. The high speed turns during work ups is much worse that that was.
    As far as all the gear moving that was all properly secured long before weather could even show any more that a gentle rain.

    • @justinegorski2703
      @justinegorski2703 Před 9 měsíci +5

      My ex was on the nimitz in the 80's. He talked about how they had to go out to sea due to a hurricane and they didn't want to be tied to the pier during the storm.

    • @borgonianevolution
      @borgonianevolution Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@justinegorski2703 Yup tied to a pier is the worst place for big ships to be when big storms hit.

    • @michaelrenner3214
      @michaelrenner3214 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@borgonianevolution9164 why is that 🤔 exactly. Being tied to pier in storm.i imagine because ship's are tossed and smashed into pier.very interesting 🤔 stories. And I convey my respect 🙏 to all . That served and are serving

  • @jakehccc1
    @jakehccc1 Před 9 měsíci +25

    I was on a naval oil tanker that went aground off the lighthouse entering Newport RI, Naval Base. After 3 days we were pulled free of the rocks yet suffered hull damage. To make a long story short, we were bound for Boston dry dock but had to pull out to sea as, there were hurricane winds coming over the next 2 days. Being a lead helmsman, it was scary looking through the Bridge windows to see the bow literally sink into waves that were reportedly in excess of 80 feet high. It was up and down a wave for a dozen hours. My orders were to steer a course directly into waves and not allowing more than a 10 degree run in course. The engine order telegraph was a huge asset to keep waves from pushing the bow left or right beyond the 10 degrees that had the capability of sinking the ship. It would have been easier if we were loaded with oil and aviation fuel however we were moving to home port, essentially empty.

    • @luisfernandoriveragallegos7282
      @luisfernandoriveragallegos7282 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Para el mar cualquier varco es una cascara de mani... Es impresionante una fuerte marejada... Soli cruzar. El paso de los vientos en un barquito bananero. Y ahi conoce uno la naturaleza y el poder de Dios

    • @jakehccc1
      @jakehccc1 Před 6 měsíci

      @@luisfernandoriveragallegos7282 I don't speak Spanish and yet you speak English. Some reason why you sent a reply in Spanish?

  • @quentinroaldson3041
    @quentinroaldson3041 Před 9 měsíci +8

    In the early 70s on board USS MIDWAY headed to the south China sea big storm tore the gun tub from mt 51 all but off. Spent a week in Pearl for repairs.

  • @darrellarsen4183
    @darrellarsen4183 Před 9 měsíci +5

    I was on the USS constellation in 1963 going around the Horn of South America, and ran into a terrible storm, which lasted about three days. We had one wave, and it tore the starboard catwalk off. it was hell. Never will forget it.

    • @nathanbeverly2412
      @nathanbeverly2412 Před 8 měsíci

      My sister's husband was on the Connie 62-66 and he talked about riding out a typhoon several times

  • @maxwedge5683
    @maxwedge5683 Před 9 měsíci +34

    Look up Typhoon Cobra, aka Halsey's Typhoon. Hit TF 38 in Dec of 1944, sank three DD's killed nearly 800 sailors, damaged 9 ships and destroyed hundreds of aircraft. Since then the USN has diligently employed the only successful tactic to mitigate storm damage from typhoons. Avoid them completely. With modern satellite technology the Navy simply goes where the typhoon isn't. It's worked well so far.

    • @jamesbarrett918
      @jamesbarrett918 Před 9 měsíci +5

      My father's ship was in that typhoon. It took 46 degree rolls. The carriers took 70 degree rolls. Some DD's took 90 degree rolls with seawater entering their stacks. Surprisingly, the DE's did better than the larger DD's.

    • @johnedwards3621
      @johnedwards3621 Před 9 měsíci +13

      Halsey's Task force was low on supplies and needed to refuel at sea as its ships headed into the eye of the storm.
      Halsey claimed to be unaware of the worsening weather. -- despite aviator and meteorlogist reports. A board of inquiry on the Cascade assembled. MacArthur and Halsey supported supported each other, The losses were glossed over and he was given another task force --and he repeated the same mistake but with less fatal results.
      Halsey blamed the Navy for not having an origanization he could call upon for the precise location of Hurricanes.
      Nearly three years earlier, Halsey was in command of the Task Force to defend Midway, but he had a bad skin rash and Ray Spruance went in his place. Ray planned the surprise that sank three of Japan's carriers in four minutes. He sank the last one a few hours later. It was the turning point of the war.
      Rewards went out at the end of the war. Who would get the Navy's third 5-star? Spruane deserved, but Halsey wanted it.
      Mac left Gen. Johnathan Wainwright in his place at Corrigador when he left for Austraila where he got a CMOH which is something Wainwright deserved. Nimitz, proposed Wainwright for CMOH, bur Mac blocked in until Spruance said he didn't mind if Halsey got the 5th Star. Is this familiar?
      I met a person many years ago who grew uo on Corranado Island and knew both of them. Ray Spruance was a generous genius.

    • @donaldcarey114
      @donaldcarey114 Před 9 měsíci +3

      The DD's that sank were top heavy due, mostly, to added AA guns and radars.

    • @user-nk6zg3ev1k
      @user-nk6zg3ev1k Před 20 dny

      😊 11:57 11:57 ​@@donaldcarey114

    • @SCHRUBBE1966
      @SCHRUBBE1966 Před 3 dny

      We still can get stuck in them

  • @Lorenzo-ew6so
    @Lorenzo-ew6so Před 6 měsíci +3

    Never under estermate the power of the sea.

  • @rolanddunk5054
    @rolanddunk5054 Před 9 měsíci +12

    Years ago I was a UK side trawler fisherman working the North Sea,Norwegian waters and north of Iceland in winter weather,a lot of the time in heavy seas with gale force winds.a side trawler lays beam on to these seas in order to haul the nets aboard..so the ship is often rolling through 90 degrees of arc.trawler’s were built to take a battering,but one has to get used to the discomfort as a way of life.Roly🇬🇧

  • @williammagirl6357
    @williammagirl6357 Před 9 měsíci +6

    2000-2001 was stationed on the USS Enterprise, we were returning from an exercise in Atlantic Ocean. A hurricane was moving up from the south and heading north east up the coast line. We held off for a day returning to Norfolk because we would have went through the eye. The battle group push on and we hit tail end of storm . I remember looking out on the catwalk and the waves were a few feet from them. 60+ foot waves were over the bow and the small boys were getting bashed . You could see bow almost at 90 degrees up then the destroyers would disappear. It was really nothing on the carrier, but after talking to some of the sailors in the battle group, stationed on the smaller ships, they said it was hell!!

    • @arcanewyrm6295
      @arcanewyrm6295 Před 27 dny

      You don't happen to remember an AS3 Baxter from that time, do ya? He was a good friend of mine, went to A school and C school together, and was also my roommate for 6 months or so before a cruise around that time. He went to Enterprise around the same time I went to the Eisenhower. He was a true cowboy from Montana. Nice as hell. Probably worked in IM-4 for the most part, but not sure if he TAD'd anywhere else aboard.

  • @ronaldhartigan1291
    @ronaldhartigan1291 Před 9 měsíci +12

    Thank you so much, and I wish you well too. I wasn't too social in those days and didn't get to know shipmates other than my own department. Sounds like your dad had a very dangerous job, too. Especially when the Big E caught fire; hope he stayed well too. I found out from the VA that some of my health problems were due to exposure to Agent Orange, and the constant loud noise like from F-4 Phantoms taking off with full after burners just feet from my position. But the VA has improved so much in the last 10 or so years and taking care of me well. I have so many interesting experiences from military duty, probably the best was growing up/maturing. I developed a work ethic that has done me well, even now in retirement. My biological father was a ferry boat captain in San Diego, and my adopted father was also in the Navy and then worked at NAS North Island where I was born and lived my first 14 years. When the Enterprise went into dry dock in Bremerton, WA. I married my first wife during that time. It was truly amazing seeing those 4 propellors in the open air! Geez they were humongous. I think about 25 feet in dia., and solid brass. And the Enterprise the first carrier nuclear powered. So nice to not have that black smoke billowing out of smoke stacks. What a mess for other ships.
    How cool you have 2 planes. Radial engines, other than the RR V12 in the Mustang, are my favorite. When I was 18 my Air Explorer scout troop got to fly some at the Navy base. I flew an S-2F Tracker submarine hunter. Throttles overhead, push forward for full power, and the sound and feel of that rumbling, I'll never forget.
    Well, nice chatting with you, and bye for now
    Ron Hartigan

    • @coldonnamariefuentesdumont8598
      @coldonnamariefuentesdumont8598 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Thank you so so much for contacting me Ron I am so so happy to hear from you you made my evening and I hope you and your wife and family are doing well and healthy I see someone else loves screws that shine out in brass just like me I am nuts on huge screws especially the 20-30 ft diameter screws I think they are 50-100 tons each thay are really beautiful and I'm so happy you met your lovely wife there and married so sweet and beautiful I wish you both all the great things that life can give you Thank you all so much to complement on both my vintage fighter bomber air craft that made me feel so happy and I'm so glad that you got to be a pilot too so happy for you those top throttles are my favorite and when you give those throttles the juice to those engines you feel the world just slip away and you got all the power and control of the world 🌎 in your hands I'm so happy I have a wonderful and blessed and amazing brother and friend as you Thank you so much for sharing your life and past with me I'm so happy I'm very tired and I have to get to bed and get some sleep So I hope you and your family stay safe and healthy and well and I will get back to you again soon and I hope you and your family have a wonderful weekend and a delightful tomorrow My 💕 love to you and your family COL Donnamarie Fuentes Dumont Lavallee

  • @valuedhumanoid6574
    @valuedhumanoid6574 Před 9 měsíci +25

    I was on the USS Theodore Roosevelt up north of Hamburg Germany (yes, got my Blue Nose card) and we were in 25 to 30 foot swells. About every third wave the bow would bite hard into the sea and we actually had waves breaking over the flight deck that covered half the ship. It was insane. We sustained minor damage but she rode it out like a champ

    • @tedpreston4155
      @tedpreston4155 Před 6 měsíci

      I was there with you that night, shipmate, in the fall of 1988! We paid a visit to Wilhelmshaven and Hamburg, then sailed up the coast of Norway where we saw the northern lights and were initiated as "tried and trusted, ice and brine encrusted" blue noses. As we steamed back across the Atlantic, the seas were so rough that our escorts took a different route around a storm, while Captain Ritt chose to steam right through part of it.
      We spent most of one night at General Quarters. I was stationed on the starboard lifeboat davit for GQ. Normally, spending GQ on a lifeboat davit meant fresh air, sunshine and relative relaxation, compared with most GQ stations inside the skin of the ship. But this night we were at GQ because of the dangers posed by this storm. After dark, the Executive Officer came out on the davit and ordered us to come inside the skin of the ship for safety. A wise choice, as the davit was hit by a big wave that night, and we might have been washed overboard if we were still outside the skin of the ship. Instead, we were right inside a weathertight door when the huge wave hit, and the sound of the wave crashing against the bulkhead behind us was deafening!

    • @valuedhumanoid6574
      @valuedhumanoid6574 Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@tedpreston4155 Nice to hear from a shipmate! I was in the G-3 Department, Weapons division. I was a "Mag Rat" red shirt. The Wilhelmshaven/Hamburg was my first port of call. I took 2 days leave and spent it in Hamburg. So much fun. Take care shipmate!

    • @tedpreston4155
      @tedpreston4155 Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@valuedhumanoid6574 I was in Engineering Department, A Division. I'm the guy who kept the small boats and the emergency diesel generators running.
      Wilhelmshaven/Hamburg was my final port visit. When we returned from the North Atlantic Cruise, I finished my enlistment, became a veteran on Veteran's Day that year, and went back to Wyoming to college.

  • @MikiSuzuki2000
    @MikiSuzuki2000 Před 8 měsíci +2

    When the Great East Japan Earthquake hit Japan in 2011, it was a US aircraft carrier that overcame the "tsunami" and transported various supplies. I watched the footage of that time, and I still remember how moved I was

  • @njjeff201
    @njjeff201 Před 9 měsíci +6

    Bless our Vets 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @stevecurtiss46
    @stevecurtiss46 Před 9 měsíci +10

    1973 USS Enterprise CVAN 65, return from Veit Nam cut straight through a typhon doing 48 knots. Water over bow at times and 68 foot roster tail. The only time I got sea sick. Went to head, barfed then returned to work. One hell of a ride. Thank you Capt )now admiral) Tissot. One hell of an sailor.

    • @Laserblade
      @Laserblade Před 9 měsíci

      I was aboard that WESPAC deployment and rode through that storm. We had it good compared to the esscorts.

    • @rickyt11
      @rickyt11 Před 9 měsíci

      Oh Yeah, I remember it well. Like it was yesterday. Later that evening the boatswain mate whistle ( very long) sounded. Stand by word from the Captain. Captain Tissot came on telling the crew about the event of the day. Having our escorts to get behind the Big E and ride out the storm. That the Enterprise was going to have all four screws to churn the waves to create a smooth ride for the escorts. Waist Catapult V-2 Being on the angle deck, under the catapult area is all ocean. And you can her the wave hit the side of the ship.🎌

  • @pdoylemi
    @pdoylemi Před 9 měsíci +21

    As a submariner, I was never in rough seas - I was under them. But I have been a sailor most of my life, and being in a 21 foot sailboat on Lake Michigan in ten foot seas counts, I would say. This was especially true as it was late November and the water was deadly cold. I will admit that we were stupid to be there in the first place, but it took all my skills and those of my friends to get us back to Muskegon Lake in one piece.

    • @captainkirk4514
      @captainkirk4514 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Say, you're from my neck of the woods. I live only a few miles from Muskegon Lake.
      Your story sounds terrifying.
      I got caught on Lake Michigan when a storm came up unexpectedly. We have a 27ft cabin cruiser. Luckily we weren't far from the break water and channel, so we got the boat in before the worset of the storm hit, it was scary!
      The one thing you learn from living here, as I have all my life is you have to have respect for that big body of water, because it can kill you.

    • @pdoylemi
      @pdoylemi Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@captainkirk4514
      Yeah, I thought I knew about respecting the big lake before that happened - then it hit home. In years since even with bigger boats I have been more cautious than I was then.
      I'm curious, was your 27 a sailboat or a power boat? Advantages to both of course - a 27 foot sailboat with a full keel can weather a storm better than a power boat, but a power boat can get back to safety faster and more easily.

    • @captainkirk4514
      @captainkirk4514 Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@pdoylemi It is a power boat.
      I seen a lot boats get into trouble on that lake. A lot of people drown. I myself have been cought in a rip current while swimming as teenager and it was pretty scary, and I'm a very strong swimmer. Rip currents are not to be taken lightly.

    • @DirtPerson
      @DirtPerson Před 8 měsíci +2

      The Great Lakes can get plenty deadly! I'm sure we've all heard the stories.

    • @stumpedII
      @stumpedII Před 8 měsíci +2

      we buried our bubble in a hurricane.. someone thrown across the mess decks.. a stupid ood (in pacific). then the transits in and out of holyloch (atlantic) could be hell in rough seas.. pure hell.. bobbed like a cork not a ship.

  • @LWDeering
    @LWDeering Před 9 měsíci +5

    It's funny that we've been Salling carries on the high seas for almost 100 years, and we've never lost a carrier to a storm yet. it's not impossible but our sailors are professionals.

  • @EnriqueOchoaMaldonado-uc8kl
    @EnriqueOchoaMaldonado-uc8kl Před 8 měsíci +2

    Me encantan los portaaviones, es una pequeña ciudad flotante, ya me imagino las odiseas que han de vivir la tripulación, cuando se enfrentan a fenómenos meteorológicos, ahí demuestra la tripulación todas sus capacidades y destrezas..!! Excelente documental..!! Excelente video..!! Saludos

  • @davidyetter5409
    @davidyetter5409 Před 9 měsíci +3

    I was on the USS TULARE LKA112 in a severe storm in the South China Sea when a young FA opened a weather tight door on the after quad and couldn't get it closed as the weather decks were secured. It flooded the mess deck, and we were called to general quarters to control the flooding.
    It was a large enough ship that the waves didn't bother me, but many others were seasick.
    One of my favorite pastimes was to go to the bow and feel the gravitational differences as we went over the high waves and swells.

  • @danw7760
    @danw7760 Před 9 měsíci +3

    I was on the USS Midway in the late 70s we ran into a few typhoons and had no issues, kinda fun to watch from the hanger bay.

    • @johnchilds6471
      @johnchilds6471 Před 8 měsíci

      Spent 3 years on board her, 81-83, the best ship I was on due to the great crew, we were the tightest, best trained crew in the Pacific. A real tough old gal!!!

  • @FredVanAllenRealtor
    @FredVanAllenRealtor Před 9 měsíci +2

    “Stand by for Heavy Rolls.... Batten all Hatches and secure all Gear Adrift."

  • @darcicali7693
    @darcicali7693 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I ❤ the Navy!!! RIP Master Chef Dad

  • @velcroman11
    @velcroman11 Před 9 měsíci +6

    All this maintenance is oblivious. Yet, you have forgotten the first rule of the sea. If the sea wants you it will take you.

  • @GradyyLairdyes
    @GradyyLairdyes Před 9 měsíci +3

    I was on the USS SHANGRA LA CARRIER IN 1955 to 1957ans se waves coming over the flight deck on the bow and on the stern when this happened you could not stand up due to the vibrations. The ship was the first angle ( permanent) deck.

  • @jfinsterwald
    @jfinsterwald Před 9 měsíci +1

    I was on an Adams Class Destroyer (DDG-15) and indirectly skirted a typhoon off of Luzon on more then one occasion. On the Beaufort Scale it was a sea state of 9 or a 10--approximately 35 to 45 foot waves and high winds. The destroyer that I was on was about 440 feet long and 50 feet at the beam. In high seas the bow would lift into the air and expose the sonar dome. As the ship crested the bow would pitch sharply downwards into the oncoming wave and the sonar dome would loudly slap against the water. Above decks a wall of water would slam into the bridge and go over the 0-4 level. The lookouts would literally be tied to their posts so they wouldn't wash overboard. As the bow submerged the aft portion of the ship would lift the screws fully out of the water. I still distinctly remember the shiver that would vibrate down the keel from bow to stern when the sonar dome would hit the water. When you were in aft steering you could hear the screws lift out of the water and then descended back into the sea, it sounded like a loud "thwap thwap thwap." The two tandem screws on an Adams class destroyer were each about 10 feet in diameter. We'd pitch back and forth at a 45 degree angle. When it was really bad we'd go to 'dog zebra' to ensure that we'd maintained water tight integrity if the hull got breached. Everyone would be locked into their compartments. Once on the bridge I experienced a 57 degree role--at 60 degrees the turrets were designed to fall off of the ship to keep it upright. The racks that we slept in had seat belts that we used so we wouldn't fall out of bed as we slept. The whole experience was insane. I was almost washed over the side of the ship on two separate occasions.

  • @pruddyvalentin-xi2xo
    @pruddyvalentin-xi2xo Před 9 měsíci +3

    Caught on after lookout on a Destroyer during a storm that rocked us in 30° rolls, had to tie myself to a welded to deck stancion with the ships wired comm system. Fell unconcious for 2 days and spent a week recovering from the traumatic experience of 30' t0 40' waves that crashed down on me for 3 hrs.

  • @kevinballenger1211
    @kevinballenger1211 Před 9 měsíci +4

    I Was An ABH3 Aboard The USS Dwight D Eisenhower (CVN-69), In Air Dept/V-1 Div From 1980 - 1984. We Encountered Rough Seas Like Those In The North Atlantic. We Weathered It Fairly Well Because Of Our Size, But Our Little Destroyer Escorts Were Getting Tossed Around Like Toy Boats! ⚓

    • @heirtothethrone000
      @heirtothethrone000 Před 9 měsíci +1

      I was on the Eisenhower in 85-89 and have encountered rough seas as well.

  • @michaeltaylor8501
    @michaeltaylor8501 Před 9 měsíci +6

    I don't know much about sailing, but...
    Once when this subject came up, Marines who had been aboard a nearby destroyer told me that they were hanging on for dear life during a storm in which I had never felt a thing - as I was aboard an LHA (a ship which carries stuff like aircraft, landing-craft, & troops: it's fairly large 'though smaller than a full-sized aircraft carrier... & much larger than a destroyer).
    Size makes a difference.

    • @littenteller7124
      @littenteller7124 Před 9 měsíci

      Terrible

    • @williambrodmanvi5944
      @williambrodmanvi5944 Před 5 měsíci

      Size does very much matter right up until it just doesn't!1982 CV-59 Mid Atlantic Re-turn from Rodda Spain to Jacksonville Florida USA! A canoe is a canoe is a canoe...

  • @brianperry
    @brianperry Před 9 měsíci +1

    l sailed in the British Merchant Marine from the mid sixties into the seventies. l did six month or more trips to various parts of the world. Ships of 35,000 tons to VLCC...(very large crude carriers) of over 200,000 tons. During my time l experience some pretty scary weather, high seas, massive swells and hurricane force winds that sent huge waves rolling along the deck...very uncomfortable and noisy. To be on open deck space meant certain injury and/or drowning by being washed overboard. so was to be avoided unless absolute emergency. Any vessel that floats can sink given the right circumstances...Having said that, l loved my time in the Merchant Navy, have fond memories of my youth, some great times with some great crews...

  • @user-lk2og7rb2o
    @user-lk2og7rb2o Před 6 měsíci +1

    I love all these tales of terror from Flattop Sailors when, the real action was on their Support Group Ships.
    3 days straight in 70 foot seas crossing the North Atlantic onboard an FFG, one Sailor was thrown onto a bulkhead during an extreme roll and died, another had a hatch fall on his head and passed.
    Every time the bow dived under a wave it felt like the ship would come apart.
    It was terrifying.

  • @JesusMagicPanties
    @JesusMagicPanties Před 9 měsíci +12

    I was on a quite common ferry from Poland to Denmark. The captain decided to set sail at 10 degrees Beaufort, even though many vessels stayed in port because there were reports of accidents at sea. (On this route, one ferry had already sunk several years ago) On the high seas, I was standing on the upper deck of a rather large ferry and could see the crests of the waves in my line of sight as the ship plummeted to their bottom. I knew that whatever happened I had no control over anyway, so I smoked a cigarette and enjoyed the gloomy beauty of the situation which nobody can doubt while the rest of the passengers bounced inside against the walls and got seasick.

  • @GeorgeTaylor-hb9jp
    @GeorgeTaylor-hb9jp Před 9 měsíci +3

    This is bilge water. Any ship no matter how big, can and do sink. They real key is avoiding the storm in the first place.

  • @MegaSilverStacker
    @MegaSilverStacker Před 9 měsíci +1

    God Bless our Military🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @gcam12000
    @gcam12000 Před 9 měsíci +2

    It’s always fun to eat in the galley during rough seas where one hand is holding on to the table and the other with a fork. Probably the worst I’ve been to was in the English Channel. One of the forklift came loose after tied down and the fork hit a sailor on the thigh and his leg had to be amputated. Rough seas are no joke and sea sickness is the least of your worries.

  • @richarda.valdes1197
    @richarda.valdes1197 Před 9 měsíci +4

    As a young marine , over 60 years ago ,at sea from Hawaii to Philippines we encountered waves higher than our ship. Down one side and up the other 😢. Sleeping on canvas racks and holding on to stop from rolling out of the rack. Watching the salt water running from one side to the other in the urinals that are also full of vomit from fellow grunts😮. Too sick to report for our man over board drill and no one even noticed. After wards dealing with the sea legs ! That was once after 18 days at sea, if I remember correctly

  • @davidfrancis9722
    @davidfrancis9722 Před 9 měsíci +3

    We came out of Australia in1977 into a typhoon. Only wish we had some of the stabilizing stuff. The sonar dome came out of the water regularly. This made the ship shutter from stem to stern

    • @robertburns629
      @robertburns629 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Me to brother

    • @johnchilds6471
      @johnchilds6471 Před 6 měsíci

      Yea, the Knox class had a big sonar dome, when it came out of the water always made me think of a dog shaking a big bone!

  • @gepal7914
    @gepal7914 Před 9 měsíci +2

    When I was a small kid, I was in an ocean liner caught in a storm in the Indian Ocean. I, and my parents, all got sick. When we emerged from our cabins, three days later, going on deck I can remember the waves towering above the top of the ship when we were in a trough. It was a 30,000 tonnes ship, so not small. All I remember hearing was being told that the ship’s external stabilisers had broken during the storm. We got to our destination safely, thereafter.

  • @paul-pk7ey
    @paul-pk7ey Před 9 měsíci +3

    I served on an LHA flat bottom amphibious ship I went thru a few hurricanes it wasn't fun

  • @robertpesche
    @robertpesche Před 9 měsíci +3

    At 3:05 you say the El Faro wreck hasn't been located, while the video shows underwater footage of the wreck (which has indeed been located). 😂😂😂

  • @marvellis6762
    @marvellis6762 Před 3 měsíci

    The ocean can sink absolutely anything man has made without hesitation. Totally unstoppable!

  • @Rattytatt
    @Rattytatt Před 9 měsíci +9

    Onboard Barbour County (LST-1195) in heavy seas, transiting through the south China Sea, we took several rolls exceeding 52 degrees. Not good for a flat bottomed vessel. Suffered wave damage stbd side foc'sle where the bulwark was pushed inward about 15 degrees. Lost a ladder and some rigging amidships. The possibility of capsizing had us all pretty focused.

    • @johnchilds6471
      @johnchilds6471 Před 8 měsíci

      Walken on the walls!, been there done that Ride a Destroyer through a typhoon some time. Fun for all.

  • @CaliWaliDoDaDay
    @CaliWaliDoDaDay Před 9 měsíci +2

    Thanks folks for sharing as I really enjoyed the video and comments.
    Anyone here that served on or had a relative serve on the William Wood? My Pop William T Smith did a few world tours on her but sad to say he never talked about his service that much to me or my brother.
    I would love to see some personal photo’s you may have of her and hear some stories.
    Thanks and May God Bless

  • @GUITARDIS
    @GUITARDIS Před 9 měsíci +1

    Not a sailor myself (in another life, perhaps), despite having a fascination with the lives, and old 'sidewinder' ships of the North Sea & Arctic trawler fleet, as a teenager. My late father, 'Doctor Who' co-creator and 'TARDIS' originator, Anthony Coburn, co-devised, and produced the first two seasons of, the seventies BBC series, 'Warship', about the exploits of the fictional Leander Class frigate, 'HMS Hero'. In the run-up to the production of which, he spent a week or so, aboard Leander frigate HMS Euryalus, during NATO exercises in the Bay of Biscay, which involved the USS carrier 'Franklin D. Roosevelt'.
    Already no stranger to the sea, having travelled to the UK in 1950, from his native Australia, aboard the liner, 'RMS Mooltan' (and long nurturing an unfulfilled dream of buying an 'Ocean 71' ketch rigged yacht to sail home again, in), he nevertheless returned from his week aboard Euryalus, a chastened man. He described watching the giant carrier (compared to the tiny frigate) as he described it 'bucketing about', while Euryalus herself was being half-lifted out of the water by the huge waves.
    He told me, he thought, every aspiring 'politician' or so-called 'leader' who fondly imagined they knew what 'power' was, should be compelled to experience what he, and the many greatly more experienced commenters here, had endured, so as to acquire an (often sadly lacking) appropriately humbling sense of proportion.
    He later personally directed the filming of 'Warship's dramatic opening titles , showing Leander frigate, 'HMS Phoebe' (playing the part of HMS Hero) plunging through heavy seas (also in the Bay of Biscay) towards his and the camera's POV, from one of the back seats of Phoebe's tiny Westland Wasp helicopter. He told me, the pilot (who I believe, but don't quote me, rejoiced in the name, 'Pongo Blanchford') had been jokingly threatened with a transfer to the submarine service, for the number of times he tried to submerge his helicopter.
    For anyone interested in (or remembering the series), all four seasons of the show, comprising 45 episodes in total, have now been uploaded to CZcams, by 'Harry the Hatchet Hopkirk'. Putting 'Warship S01E01 "Hot Pursuit" (1973)', in the YT search box, will take you to the first episode.

  • @MitchM240
    @MitchM240 Před 9 měsíci +1

    That dudes face firing the 50 call at 6:44 is awesome!

  • @JamesStreet-tp1vb
    @JamesStreet-tp1vb Před 9 měsíci +8

    I was on a Spruance Class, and we hit some waves in the Pacific, somewhere between Hawaii and Japan, that were out of this world. We had green water going over the forward gunmount. About every third wave would submerge the entire gunmount. We rocked and rolled for a couple of days. It was hard to stay in your rack, eat or walk. Although I have to say I do miss it.

    • @toddrich9278
      @toddrich9278 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Desron 23. The Little Beavers.

    • @JamesStreet-tp1vb
      @JamesStreet-tp1vb Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@toddrich9278 DESRON 23 is a notable Squad for sure. Thanks for bringing that up. We were part of DESRON 9 out of Terminal Island in Long Beach. I had a blast. As hard as some days were I do miss it.

  • @olddog103
    @olddog103 Před 9 měsíci +8

    1970, last cruise of cva31 ,Bonnie Dick, typhoon coming out of Singapore, 3 days in typhoon, had all our exterior cat walks ripped off ,all the way to mid ship gun tubs. Was keep very hushed up, no disciplinary action, she went from subic to San Diego. We threw all stores over the side, she was going to scrape after a fuel stop in Hawaii and 😊eventually Washington .this was a BIG COVERUP.

  • @wilsonrawlin8547
    @wilsonrawlin8547 Před 9 měsíci +2

    US Navy also has the most accurate real time weather monitoring systems on the planet. Carrier groups are updated constantly to keep them in calm seas. They are not going to drive through heavy seas or storms.

    • @MichaelThorpeNJ
      @MichaelThorpeNJ Před 9 měsíci +2

      They go where they choose to go. When they choose to go.Katrina was 600 miles wide...it won't be outrun.

    • @wilsonrawlin8547
      @wilsonrawlin8547 Před 9 měsíci

      @@MichaelThorpeNJ
      Heck Yeah!

    • @williambrodmanvi5944
      @williambrodmanvi5944 Před 5 měsíci

      Until there is a reason to be somewhere! Funny how quickly the rules can see to change!

    • @wilsonrawlin8547
      @wilsonrawlin8547 Před 5 měsíci

      @@williambrodmanvi5944
      They plan for it. Not trying to rain on your parade, but the US Navy has the best real time weather tracking systems in the world. They are on point 24/7 around the world where ever their ships are deployed.

  • @BillyBob38846
    @BillyBob38846 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I was on the USS America CV-66 in the 80's and I went through a few storm's during my time onboard.

  • @johncole3010
    @johncole3010 Před 9 měsíci +10

    On a aircraft carrier ( Cv-60) on a med cruise in early 90’s a rouge 6:50 wave came suddenly and took a tractor off the deck. We also had a sea sparrow sponson partially ripped off. While I didn’t see heavy weather, I appreciated climbing ladders as the ship fell in a trough. It was funny watching ensigns get sea sick when we rocked slightly. My friends stationed on DD’s share tales of Listing almost to non self righting angles and walking on the bulk heads. Sea states are not to be trifled with

    • @brianfoster7064
      @brianfoster7064 Před 6 měsíci

      You mean the USS Saratoga? I was ships company USS Ranger CV-61 85 to 88. Same class (Forrestal).

    • @johncole3010
      @johncole3010 Před 5 měsíci

      Yes, experimental boiler plant at 1200psi super heated main steam

  • @gojewla
    @gojewla Před 5 měsíci +3

    Waves during hurricanes are NOT 300 feet! 😂

    • @brettallendunn
      @brettallendunn Před 22 dny

      I like how he said 300 and the video showed 200 and neither are true

  • @paulmarjoram2258
    @paulmarjoram2258 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I was onboard an eleven hold bulk carrier in a force eleven hurricane off the Norwegian coast in the early eighties. We had lost the engine due to a jammed valve. The ship was fully laden, her back was breaking. We needed to make the jig to remove the jammed valve but all the cutting gear was in the forecastle. We were calling Maydays. A very brave Norwegian crewman volunteered to go out on deck to get it. I went to the bridge to stand watch. One minute you could see him, the next he was under water. He made it back with the cutting gear. We got our power back just in time. The ship had been pushed to within a couple of miles of the rocky Norwegian coastline. That crew member was a hero. He deserved a medal.

  • @user-qo9su6zx7p
    @user-qo9su6zx7p Před 9 měsíci +2

    Service USS AMERICA CVA-66 1965-1968! LTJG COMMUNICATIONS! LOVED THAT RIDE! The video(?),.... perfect any/all conditions!

  • @johnpittinger1545
    @johnpittinger1545 Před 9 měsíci +4

    On board the USS Midway 1962 transitioning from San Diego to San Francisco before going on Westpac. Don’t have to have a storm for rough seas. We were in 40 to 50 foot seas took a 36° list that scared the hell out of this plane captain while I was riding the bridge on Phantom.

  • @brianguth8307
    @brianguth8307 Před 9 měsíci +4

    Too many to count. Life on a DDG.

  • @computernerdtechman
    @computernerdtechman Před 9 měsíci +1

    I spent 2 1/2 years onboard the USS Carl Vinson (CVN-70). I had 2 WestPacs and 1 world cruise while I was onboard. We never bothered to tie down the computers sitting on our desks because the ship had always been so stable that you rarely felt the ship pitch or roll.
    Then during one WestPac we were going from Gonzo station (outside the Persian Gulf) to a port visit at Perth Australia. Unfortunately there was a typhoon in the middle of the Indian ocean at the time. Normally we would sail way around it, but we were late going off station and didn't want to miss the port visit in Perth. So we did a chord line across the typhoons path and had really bad rocking and the computers started falling off desks. That was the ONLY time I felt the ship rock and roll. Needless to say we tied down the computers after that.

  • @bouffant-girl
    @bouffant-girl Před 8 měsíci

    The US Navy avoids storms whenever possible, and "advises" the US Coast Guard to avoid storms also. Needless to say, The US Voasy Guard Cutters's OOD's and CO'S thank their Navy Counterparts for the warnings, strap themselves into their racks and chairs, and go through the storms! It's a dangerous job, but somebody has to do it!

  • @ninowalker4221
    @ninowalker4221 Před 9 měsíci +6

    I served with two naval AVIATION aircraft carriers and seen hugh waves which were unbelievable super big!

  • @maundamartin59
    @maundamartin59 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Yeah... rough seas can be hell on the human STOMACH. SOMETIMES causing headaches....the DOC'S would give us these pills in 1992, to overcome sea sickness but them shits didn't work for me. I would still get queasy.

  • @timh4737
    @timh4737 Před 8 měsíci

    Great informational program! I'll never cease to be amazed with the tech that our armed forces produce! And I'm thankful everyday, for the men and women that are rigorously trained in the use of that tech!
    And to the men and women that build your equipment. You should be just as proud as the people that use it!
    My hats off to all of you!❤

  • @rexpayne7836
    @rexpayne7836 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Great content and presentation. 😊

  • @Puymouret
    @Puymouret Před 9 měsíci +3

    All good stuff but you do make it appear that all these things were invented by, and apply only to, the US navy. ALL navies have these problems and have solved them, in many cases before the US navy did. Please, I am a ex navy man, 36 years in, and have great respect for the US armed forces but try to remember all those other forces around the world that work with the US

  • @olderr4youngerr
    @olderr4youngerr Před 9 měsíci +4

    It was early 1963, aboard the USS Springfield (at the time, Flagship of the 6th Fleet) in the Mediterranean. A WWII Cruiser, re-commissioned as CLG-7 after upgrades to include Guided Missile weapons.
    As a flagship, on occasion we'd host locals in various countries' ports for guided tours, refreshments & the missile demonstrations. These were a highlight (limited to loading inert missiles onto the launcher) & always impressive.
    Now, about the storm:
    It was exciting while nervous watching the bow plowing through just about every other huge wave. There was no escaping the salty spray to observe this though I sheltered my trusty Kodak from it.
    I have (original) photos of that storm - (1) if I could find them & (2) if I knew how to share them... I would. 🙂
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Springfield_(CL-66)

  • @user-vy8zs5xz2t
    @user-vy8zs5xz2t Před měsícem

    Can't sink a ship? Nature says, "hold my beer"

  • @doronamitai9368
    @doronamitai9368 Před 6 měsíci

    I served in the Israeli Navy for three years as an electrician and staff sergeant of the electronics unit. I also have been the steer wheel man.
    On febuary 2010 we set sail from Crete back to Israel along side an american tighon deroga after about 24 hours in the aegean see which is very unstable sea, a storm broke out with waves peaking at 9 meters. Now. My ship was a small misile ship with a lenght of 63 meters and i thought we were going to die. Wind speed of over 100kph. The american ship was not efected and got to the port 24 hours before us. We had to sail back to get shelter of the greek islands. The most terrifying situation i have ever been in

  • @chuckmcqueen2743
    @chuckmcqueen2743 Před 9 měsíci +5

    Kind of funny, a whole bunch of sailors on here telling there stories of the high sea's and not one of them ever encountered a 300ft wave. I spend the majority of my adult life in the navy and at sea, on all different types of ships, been through hurricanes and what the North Atlantic could throw at a ship. Went through a couple of rouge waves in my day, just maybe reaching 75ft, maybe a bit more, but I have never seen a 300ft wave in the middle of the ocean. Possibly tsunami at the shoreline could possibly reach this height, but I do not think you would find to many naval ships anchored in the way of a Tsunami. Now Naval vessels are designed differently than commercial ships and are made to handle the sea states at high speeds for maneuvering and doing tight turns in any sea state.

  • @Kirovets7011
    @Kirovets7011 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Mother nature is mightier than all of us together.
    EVERY ship can be sinked! The only difference is that it will take a little more time to
    sink an aircraft carrier than an average navy ship.

  • @2coryman
    @2coryman Před 8 měsíci +1

    Went through that on a West Pac in the USS Jason AR8 between Hawaii and Japan ‘78-‘79
    A sight to behold both bow and stern

  • @mavericklane6206
    @mavericklane6206 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Any ship, no matter its size, can be sunk in ocean storms. Four U.S. Navy ships were sunk by a Typhoon in WWII. They said the Titanic was unsinkable too.

  • @2happyhippies
    @2happyhippies Před 9 měsíci +1

    Loved your Video ! 15 yrs of sea duty here . rode the storms on the last CG class the Oklahoma City CG5 a couple DD[s and at the time one of the newest a Ticonderoga class Aegis Cruisers all a different "ride" Loved riding the storm!