Posted on 03/30/2005 4:39:18 PM PST by Righty_McRight
Wonder if it will go through the Discovery Passage on it's way up North...The Discover Passage is the narrows between Vancouver Island and the BC mainland, quite a few vessels go through there on their way North to Alaska...
That's it - tell the world - wanna bet the ChiComs will use this for target practice?
Heh, have a little more faith in the navy.
Well, apparently its not vital to the 'basic missile defense', but I hope it gets there saftely.
U.S. 'can shoot down N. Korea missiles now'
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1364391/posts
If nuclear missiles were suddenly fired at the United States from North Korea, the U.S. is ready to shoot them down.
That's the opinion of Major Gen. John Holly, head of the missile-shield program for the Pentagon's Missile Defense Agency.
"If directed, we could provide a limited defense against an attack out of Northeast Asia," Holly told Alaska lawmakers, according to the Associated Press.
No room on Shemya?
Should be quite exciting in the "Roaring Forties".
" ... Adak, Alaska."
Wonderful place in the Aleutian Islands! It used to be a Naval Air Station -- I was stationed there '83 - '86. Great place to raise a family.
Sure... down at the old dump would be great. Nothing to hit there but the old russian foxes, and a raven or two. After 11 months of work on Shemya, I can speak as an authority on best places to hide it there!
I hope they have a backup, because no matter how seaworthy this platform is, and it sure looks pretty clumsy to me, they could easily lose it going around the Horn. The weather there can be unbelievably nasty.
That looks like a lot of area to expose to the wind.
I was on Shemya, 1960-61. GE
Oh please, it's no freakin secret. Hell, you can't hide something that big even in Texas. Everybody on Padre Island Beach has seen it.
WW
Texas beachcomber.
You are seeing the platform in its port elevation. It floods the legs and settles until the deck is about 30 feet above the water. It has a huge ballast and a center of gravity well below the surface. Won't blow over in a hurricane. It's been tried.
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http://bmdssc.jntf.osd.mil/MDA_Photo_Library/sbx.shtm
Here is a whole website about it.
This sounds like something that ought to not be advertised(?)
Hopefully you're right. I've seen 25 foot waves off the coast of Maine in a small sailboat. Cape Horn can be as bad as it gets.
Mean Annual Temperature 39º F Mean Annual Snow Fall 70" |
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Month |
Mean Temp (º F) |
Min Surface Winds Max |
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Jan |
32 |
16KTS----------100KTS |
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Feb |
31 |
17KTS-----------80KTS |
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Mar |
32 |
16KTS-----------73KTS |
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Apr |
35 |
16KTS-----------82KTS |
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May |
39 |
14KTS-----------66KTS |
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Jun |
42 |
12KTS-----------59KTS |
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Jul |
47 |
11KTS-----------60KTS |
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Aug |
49 |
12KTS-----------63KTS |
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Sep |
48 |
12KTS-----------70KTS |
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Oct |
42 |
15KTS-----------79KTS |
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Nov |
36 |
18KTS-----------77KTS |
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Dec |
33 |
18KTS-----------108KTS |
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