1.I am quite happy not to use the communal showers anymore. They had stalls and curtains, but you still had to wait in line to shower. It's also nice to not have to wait 5 hours to get a load of laundry done or sleep in a bed barely larger then I am with only a curtain for privacy.sjard said:1: Are you happy not to have to use the showers on a steam cat flattop any more?
2: Any truth to the SCA Urban legends about SCA groups doing fighter practice on the flight deck?
I was thinking more the stories I've heard of showers going from freezing to steam clean in seconds due to the catapult system.Dalisclock said:1.I am quite happy not to use the communal showers anymore. They had stalls and curtains, but you still had to wait in line to shower. It's also nice to not have to wait 5 hours to get a load of laundry done or sleep in a bed barely larger then I am with only a curtain for privacy.sjard said:1: Are you happy not to have to use the showers on a steam cat flattop any more?
2: Any truth to the SCA Urban legends about SCA groups doing fighter practice on the flight deck?
2. I didn't see it but I had coworkers who said they saw guys play-dueling with swords on other ships. Apparently the CO saw it and was pissed.
That never happened to my knowledge and if I remember correctly, the water that went to the catapults was an entirely different system then the water we used for cooking, cleaning, drinking, washing, etc(which needed additional purification to be drinkable, a process we didn't bother with for catapult water). If there were temperature problems with a shower, it was due to a water heater somewhere nearby being on the fritz.sjard said:I was thinking more the stories I've heard of showers going from freezing to steam clean in seconds due to the catapult system.
thanks for the answers. I understand the need for secrecy due to national security reasons here (even though i dont agree it should be a national security issue, but thats another topic). Thanks for saying as much as you did, it allowed me to understand how these work a bit better. I was always a big proponent of atomic power and as such i enjoy learning how they work (even if i am nowhere close to being a, as you call it, nuke). Its good to hear that the ratios remain somewhat constant as i heard rumors about attempts to phase out all of the nuclear ships because of chernobyl scare.Dalisclock said:2.One of those answers I have to be careful about because of National Security, etc.
I don't know as much about the civilian plants as I'd like to but I'd be quite interesting in learning if that's true. I wonder if there was a "under ideal conditions" caveat in there somewhere.Strazdas said:Something interesting you said there though. you said the reactors could self-regulate for days. The impression i got from the civilian nuclear engineers was that it should be years instead. Perhaps you are right in that civilian one is just much more automated.
Also its so damn refreshing to finally see someone that knows what happened in Fukoshima. it seems like everyone i talk to seem to think it was a second chernobyl.
Well yes, the years of service was idea conditions scenario of nothing breaking. but even assuming worst case scenario the plant would self-shutdown according to them. (note that the question involved dissapearance of people without any physical damage to the plant, which isnt applicable in cases like the Fukoshima tsunami damage)Dalisclock said:I don't know as much about the civilian plants as I'd like to but I'd be quite interesting in learning if that's true. I wonder if there was a "under ideal conditions" caveat in there somewhere.
Part of the problem with the Fukashima disaster was the fact the Japanese government was being really tight lipped about it,no doubt because of some really embarrassing revelations since the accident that their Nuclear Regulatory Agency(whose name escapes me at the moment) had more or less colluding with the power industry, because a government officials who didn't rock the boat too much could look forward to getting lucrative jobs in the Power industry once they left their civil service positions. It was known as "Ascent to Heaven".
Despite this, The most interesting thing I've heard about it(and I haven't had a chance to fact check this yet) is that like 3 mile island, there have been no attributable deaths or even significantly higher risks of cancer among the local population, despite the fuel meltdowns that occurred. 3 mile island I can believe because there wasn't a containment breach, Fukishima I'm a little more skeptical about.
It's kind of sad that everyone uses Chernobyl as the go to for nuclear accidents considering it was effectively the worst case scenario and really, really should never have happened in the first case. The fact it took a perfect storm of design and human error to make it possible speaks to that, when numerous other accidents are far less damaging and far more contained. The US Army ran their own nuclear reactor program for several decades and even managed to have their own nuclear accident which killed 3 people(SL-1). Most people have never heard of SL-1, or even know the Army ran 9 other nuclear reactors until the 1980's when the program was shut down(more or less without further incident).
Ha! I guess I'm just an old salt. It's funny how some of these things or events turn into urban legends over time. Here's a picture of it - I can never forget the stupid frowny face that was on it:Dalisclock said:Actually, you're the first person I've ever talked to who has even seen one of those things. I thought they were an urban legend.
Isn't that the shittiest feeling though? On one hand you're happy you weren't involved because you would have been caught, on the other, 'fucking, what about me? Not good enough to be in the cheating crew?' Thanks for the answers anyway, its pretty interesting stuff.Dalisclock said:The Nuclear Navy had it's own cheating scandal around the same time, where one of our training facilities essentially did the same thing. The training instructors(Navy Nukes who were on shore duty, training the "Baby Nukes" before they hit the fleet) had to take similar exams and so did the students, but apparently some(how many, reports don't say) of the students knew what tests they were getting and asked the instructors for the cheat sheets. 34 instructors were kicked out of the Navy for violating integrity standards. What makes it disturbing is that I was a student at that same command when the cheating was going on and I sure as hell don't remember seeing or hearing anything like that, so apparently it was fairly limited at the time.
Huh. My dad had the same exact job 40 years ago, on the original Nimitz as original crew.Dalisclock said:As some of you know, I served in the US Navy for 9 years. During that time, I was trained as a Nuclear Power Technician, was assigned to a Nimitz-Class Aircraft Carrier and did several deployments to the Middle East in Support of Operations Iraqi/Enduring Freedom(AKA the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan).
The dose limits were enforced and in fact the Navy limits were lower then the NRC ones. It wasn't difficult, considering a majority of US never got close to the limits. I still have printouts of my dose readings in my medical record and they're not even close to hitting a 1 REM over my entire nuclear career. I felt the reactor plant was fairly safe.Ouroboros said:Are the NRC's yearly limits for TEDE rigorously enforced? Did you ever feel that you worked in an unsafe environment as a result of the reactor?
How do you theoretically deal with a SCRAM? If you kill your reactor at sea, aren't you potentially screwed beyond all belief? Did you have some tiered system to SCRAM in a recoverable way, or was it just an all or nothing thing like a landbound reactor?
Enlistments for the Navy were dependent on the job you chose/were chosen for when you joined. A majority of enlistments were 4 or 5 years(and you'd know before you signed. In fact, the information is freely available on the net) with Nuke and Special Forces have 6 year enlistments due to the long training pipelines of around two years(give or take a few months). Nukes also have the option of reenlisting at their 2 year point for an additional 2 years, which pushes the contract out to 8 years. The reason this is offered, and many nukes take it, is because they come in as an E4 and that re-enlistment(called STARR re-enlistment) is an automatic promotion to E5 and whatever the re-enlistment bonus is at the time(Which has been hanging out around $90-100K. There's also the unspoken fringe benefit of being eligible for housing allowance(Money to cover rent) if you're unmarried once you hit E5. Considering that's another several hundred dollars a month untaxed on top of your base pay, getting it early adds up.SaneAmongInsane said:I'm actually coming to a bit of a crossroads in my life in terms of employment and reading this thread has been... interesting..
The salary and what not... How long do you have to stay enlisted? Whats the age limits and physical requirements? I probably wouldn't make it being not very fit (Though I could possibly get myself into shape)
Were you ever afraid of seeing actual combat? What are the real risks of some assholes in a sub sinking your ship?
To join as am enlisted nuke, I needed a high ASVAB score. I had college(in fact, I dropped out of college to enlist) but it wasn't required. Nukes goes through a training pipeline that's about 2 years long, including boot camp. The other stages are: "A" School(which is Navy Speak for "Here's the basic training to do your job"), Nuclear Power School(where we learned the theory behind nuclear power) and Nuclear Prototype, which was a hands on, self paced training regimen on a operating nuclear plant, using a combination of computer based courses, standing watches and a lot of study. There's also optional extra schools for certain people, such as the Engineering Lab Techs(essentially Navy chemistry and Radcon).Rosiv said:What education did your job require? Was it a Engineering degree or was it "on the job"? Also, are there job prospects for Biology majors in the military? I was told the only work for them was few and far between,and only with the Navy doing conservation work. Aside from medical jobs.
Some of them were, though that applies to anyone. I didn't have the disdain for them that some of my coworkers did.Atmos Duality said:Huh. My dad had the same exact job 40 years ago, on the original Nimitz as original crew.
Are the air dales still obnoxious?
And have you ever done operations through a hurricane?
Yeah. Granted, apparently it started in 2006 and I was there in 2007, so maybe it hadn't gone beyond a few people at that time. Since we also had 5 shifts running on two training ships, it might have been happening on the other shifts and we didn't know about it.EvilRoy said:Isn't that the shittiest feeling though? On one hand you're happy you weren't involved because you would have been caught, on the other, 'fucking, what about me? Not good enough to be in the cheating crew?' Thanks for the answers anyway, its pretty interesting stuff.
For some reason I assumed the exams would be harder, but in hindsight it makes sense the way it is done. Just standard repeated exams, just like everybody else.
That sounds about right. MC exams are about rote memorization, and/or reasoning to an exact and known solution. Essay exams have more to do with testing adaptability and memory under pressure without worrying about 100% precision start to finish.Dalisclock said:Some of them were, though that applies to anyone. I didn't have the disdain for them that some of my coworkers did.Atmos Duality said:Huh. My dad had the same exact job 40 years ago, on the original Nimitz as original crew.
Are the air dales still obnoxious?
And have you ever done operations through a hurricane?
Never went through a Hurricane, though we hit some rough seas going down to Australia.
Yeah. Granted, apparently it started in 2006 and I was there in 2007, so maybe it hadn't gone beyond a few people at that time. Since we also had 5 shifts running on two training ships, it might have been happening on the other shifts and we didn't know about it.EvilRoy said:Isn't that the shittiest feeling though? On one hand you're happy you weren't involved because you would have been caught, on the other, 'fucking, what about me? Not good enough to be in the cheating crew?' Thanks for the answers anyway, its pretty interesting stuff.
For some reason I assumed the exams would be harder, but in hindsight it makes sense the way it is done. Just standard repeated exams, just like everybody else.
The other thing that gets me is that if I hadn't gone recruiting, I would have had to go instruct there. Since there's a New York facility and a South Carolina facility, there's a 50% chance I would have ended up at the one that got hit by the cheating scandal and possibly caught up in it.
The exams were mostly well written, but one thing to keep in mind is that they were all Essay questions and you got a majority of points from explaining and supporting your answer. So a question might be "You're standing watch and you see the following things. What situation(we called them "Casualties") are you in, what are your actions and why?" or "List the safety features of System X, what their set-points are and why". If people notice that nukes have a tendency to explain everything verbosely, this is part of the reason.
To contrast, the standard Navy promotion exam is multiple choice bubble sheet tests.