Posted on 07/13/2017 6:02:04 AM PDT by artichokegrower
The USS Fitzgerald has entered dry dock at a United States Navy base in Yokosuka, Japan to continue repairs and assess damage following its June 17 collision with a merchant vessel off the coast of Japan.
The Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Fitzgerald (DDG 62) entered dry dock July 11 at the Fleet Activities (FLEACT) Yokosuka base.
(Excerpt) Read more at gcaptain.com ...
The USS Fitzgerald is a different class of ship, a guided-missile destroyer, DDG-62. The USS New Jersey was a battleship, BB-62.
There are only so many numbers available, without getting too much into 4 and 5-digit ones. Re-using more "famous" numbers isn't overly common, but it happens.
Don't tell that to DDG-100 USS Kidd through DDG-112 USS Michael Murphy, and especially don't mention it to DDG-1000 USS Zumwalt.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_current_ships_of_the_United_States_Navy
The Spruance-class destroyers had 3-digits, starting with 963.
The one elephant in the room everyone is ignoring and not talking about, including the USN, is the OOD......why. Was it a mooselimb? a female with hormone issues, or a guy taking a nap or watching porn on his i phone? The captain was asleep at 2:30 am in the smashed up quarters in the pic, so we know he’s innocent. Everything points to the OOD.
OOD, helmsman, lookouts, CIC, there's lots of blame to go around, and like most accidents there had to be an entire chain of failures for the collision to occur, not just one weak link.
Yes, that is some awesome work!
My guess is that Obama was down with that.
Nothing down there a bit of Splash Zone and plywood (two layers, one inside, one outside) couldn't have fixed. ;^')
As a helpful hint -- cover both sides of outside, of the outside ply, and at least the side that goes against the inside hull of the inside sheet entirely with the compound --through bolt using marine stainless bolts and quality fender washers, make sure to cover the end grain of the ply, smoothing & tapering the splashzone compound onto the steel around all edges, and it could last for years (if it had to)...seriesly... In emergency situations it's faster than waiting around for underwater welders to show up. Just saying.
I wonder if that is from the “bulbous bow” of the container ship?
Yes, the OOD was responsible for "driving the ship" at the time of the accident, and I'd eventually be interested in knowing a little bit about their background, strictly from a curiosity standpoint.
While the CO was apparently asleep at the time of the accident, the CO is ultimately responsible for signing off on the OOD's qualifications; i.e., showing his confidence in that officer's ability to drive the ship. The demographic background of that officer shouldn't have factored into the accident, only their qualification and skill in handling the ship.
For the time being, I understand why the Navy would keep that officer's identity protected. Revealing their name would only create a highly-public pre-trial, with all sorts of speculation if the officer was anything other than a white male. If the final report preserves anonymity of that officer, I would find it very disturbing, even to the point of calling it a cover-up. We shall see.
Probably a rude awakening for the starboard watch.
My guess as to what happened is that there were initially two tankers in the picture (fact) and that the other tanker (the Wan Hai, I believe) was the perceived threat to the Fitzgerald. In avoiding the Wan Hai, the crew of the Fitzgerald set a course across the bow of the second tanker, the Crystal, which went undetected by the bridge until the collision, or was detected so close to the time of the collision that they couldn’t take action to avoid it.
It’s also possible that someone on board relayed the existence of the Crystal and the approaching threat but their message was interpreted as referring to the Wan Hai, which the Fitzgerald was already avoiding. This is speculation, of course, but the potential role of the Wan Hai has gotten little notice and is, I think, worth considering.
Something similar happened to the Porter years ago. It was in the process of avoiding one tanker when it was surprised by the existence of a second one, and collided with it.
“Probably a rude awakening for the starboard watch.”
They were probably playing hopscotch.
Yup.
I was invited to join a navy dive team when I was in the reserves. I felt I already had too much time away from family going to sea, so declined.
This is why it is important we have our own US Flag merchant ships and yards.
I had not heard of other ships in the vicinity, but a third ship in the mix would definitely complicate matters. It wouldn't remove blame, but would at least explain that the situation was more complex than many know.
Still, if the tactical situation was that tenuous, the OOD should've had strict standing orders from the Captain to wake him immediately, and should have done so. Ship collisions in the open sea don't happen quickly; the situations that lead to them evolve over time, even dozens of minutes. The OOD (and bridge and CIC crews) should've recognized the potential for a dangerous encounter, and the OOD should've taken the ship out of harm's way.
What I want to know is, what was the dialog on the bridge between the OOD (possibly JOOD), quartermaster of the watch and the lookouts? Also, what was CIC telling the bridge? Did anyone identify a close-in CPA? Did anyone on the Fitzgerald try to contact the Crystal via bridge-to-bridge comms? Signal lights?
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Almost certainly so. And, as I expected, the sub-surface damage is forward of the upper hull / superstructure damage --- as predicted by this collision positioning study:
rlmorel and I did matching studies -- and (IIUC) we reached, essentially, the same conclusions:
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I fully expect that, if rlmorel has any disagreement with the above analysis, he will "set me straight"... '-)
For example: USS Harry W. Hill (DD-985), USS Fitzgerald (DDG-62), USS Los Angeles (SSN-688), USS Ronald Reagan (CVN-76), USS North Carolina (BB-55).
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