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USO Canteen FReeper Style....Gunnery Mates....Thank You....June 26,2002
FRiends of the USO Canteen FReeper Style and Snow Bunny
Posted on 06/26/2002 3:48:36 AM PDT by Snow Bunny
USS Bulkeley
The primary job of the Gunnery Division is to maintain and operate all shipboard weapons systems.
Normal day to day tasks include ensuring all weapons systems are functioning properly and prepared for such evolutions as surface and air combat and exercises, as well as ensuring that the weapons are available for any law enforcement need. Gunnery Division is also responsible for providing small arms training to all Boarding Team Members.
Within Gunnery Division there are two different rates...Gunner's Mates (GM) and Fire Control Technicians (FT). Gunner's Mates primarily deal with the actual firing weapons and their associated ordnance while FT's primarily work with radar systems specifically designed for targeting and firing long range weapons.
Chief Gunner's Mate (SW) Virgil Kilpatrick, an instructor at Fleet Combat Training Center (FCTCLANT) Atlantic, has spent the last three years providing Sailors with skills he hoped they would never truly need -- operating and maintaining shipboard weapons systems in war.
Gunner's mates work in almost every kind of Navy environment: ship, shore, in the United States or overseas. Their work and specialties may involve indoor or outdoor situations, clean or dirty work, deck or shop, and any kind of climate or temperature. They work alone or with others, independently or closely supervised. Their work can be both mental and physical.
River Boat Gunnery Mate.......Vietnam
Since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and the campaign against terrorism, training commands like FCTCLANT are at the ground floor of the battle.
Veteran Sailors like Kilpatrick are in classrooms, laboratories and simulators, arming their students with the tools to fight terror.
According to GM1(SW) George Cumings, careless safety procedure can be a gunner's mate's deadliest enemy.
"It is important to take your time and go through all your steps, whether you're operating the gun or performing maintenance," Cumings said. "If you don't, you can get yourself -- and your shipmates -- killed."
Technology has changed the face of naval training during the past two decades. For gunner's mates, computer literacy has become nearly as important as skill with a weapon.
"Gunner's mates do a lot more than just fire guns," said Kilpatrick, a 17-year Navy veteran. "It may not seem like a technical rating, but it is."
Battleship Iowa firing its guns on the starboard side. You can see it shoving the ship sideways thru the water. What power unleashed! For those who don't know about these guns (the 16 inchers) they can fire a shell weighing as much as a VW Beetle 30 miles thru the air with some accuracy. That is awesome! Of course, we no longer have these ships in our naval service. They have all been decommissioned and mothballed or disposed of in some other manner.
What They Do:
The duties performed by GMs include:
operating and maintaining guided missile launching systems, rocket launchers, gun mounts and other ordnance systems and equipment;
training and supervising crews in the use of all types of ordnance equipment, from large caliber guns and missile systems to small arms;
stowing, securing, requisitioning and reclassifying explosives:
operating and maintaining magazine flooding and sprinkling systems;
making mechanical, electrical and electronic casualty analysis using technical publications, circuit diagrams and blueprints;
repairing, maintaining, testing and calibrating ordnance equipment;
servicing hydraulic and pneumatic systems;
repairing, maintaining, testing and calibrating microprocessing equipment;
repairing damaged hydraulic sealing surfaces, mating areas and threads;
performing mechanical wire connections including soldering; operating and maintaining night optical devices;
operating optical scanning and marking devices to label, identify and report explosives' utilization/expenditure.
This 5"/62 caliber gun can be used to defend against ships or planes.
And this big ship has all the latest in weapons technology: Using the MK 41 Vertical Launching System, the ship's crew can launch up to 96 missiles, including Standard surface-to-air missiles, Tomahawk surface-to-surface missiles and VLA antisubmarine missiles--64 from the back of the ship or 32 from the front. USS Bulkeley is also equipped with two MK 15 Phalanx Close-In Weapons Systems and a 5"/62 caliber deck-mounted gun, which uses Extended Range Guided Munitions projectiles and looks like a machine gun on steroids. According to one crewman, the 5"/62 is so powerful that once when it was fired from the front of the ship, he could feel his pant legs shaking, even though he was standing at the stern.
USS Bulkeley's MK 41 Vertical Launching System fires a combination of Standard surface-to-air and Tomahawk surface-to-surface missiles.
There's a story about John Paul Jones' chief gunners mate. It was during the gore and thunder of that most historic battle. He was loading and firing cannon and carrying the wounded to the medical officer, cutting away the tangled rigging. And apparently in the midst of that first fight, John Paul Jones went below momentarily and changed into a new uniform. And as he emerged on deck a voice rang out through the smoke and fire -- it was the British captain asking, ``Have you struck your colors?'' And the gunners mate, sweat and blood dripping from his body, turned and saw Jones now in his fresh uniform reply: ``I have not yet begun to fight.'' And the gunners mate said, ``There's always somebody who didn't get the word.''
The challenge is great. Our Navy is meeting a heavier responsibility than we had in the sixties and meeting it with fewer ships. And that means the officers and crew of every vessel must work harder, carry a heavier load, and endure longer, more strenuous cruises.
Men and women on these and other ships are under great stress, handling advanced weapons systems and sophisticated equipment. And that's all the more reason to salute them after setting a new record for aircraft safety last year. Many who served could easily have better paying civilian jobs. Sailors on the carriers are away from their families 70 percent of the time; yet 60 percent of these fine young people reenlist.
In today's Navy, as with the other services, the Reserves are playing an increasingly important role. Who are they? Citizens concerned about the future of this country and determined to do their part. They share their time, energy, and talent to keep America strong, safe, and free.
TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: usocanteen
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To: SAMWolf
Believe it or not, my brother was once a bouncer at the Thirsty Whale in Desplaines...that was just his fun job, not his regular job..by day he was an accountant at Continental Bank, by night at bouncer at the Thirsty Whale...
I suspect, since he spent so much time there, and was such a big guy, it was natural for him to be one of their bouncers...
Comment #362 Removed by Moderator
To: tomkow6
Skips...the place to be, to show off your car, and grab some food...
To: tomkow6
Russels Bar-B-Q!!!!
Yummmmmm!
To: ClaraSuzanne
Good evening Clara...good to see you...
To: ClaraSuzanne
hard not too. SPent most of my life in or near it.
366
posted on
06/26/2002 3:53:16 PM PDT
by
SAMWolf
Comment #367 Removed by Moderator
To: andysandmikesmom
My mom worked for Continetal Bank, Credit Card Branch.
I still have the Stuffed Kangaroo (It's the Big bank, with the Little Bank inside)
368
posted on
06/26/2002 3:54:33 PM PDT
by
SAMWolf
To: andysandmikesmom
I was only at the Thirsty Whale 2 or 3 times. My haunt was the Walrus and the Carpenter. about 6 blocks west of TW.
To: andysandmikesmom
AHH! Humbolt Park! It was great to be a kid then. We should compare pictures of us on the Buffalos.
My IL's say they're long gone now and the Lagoon is a beach.
370
posted on
06/26/2002 3:56:00 PM PDT
by
SAMWolf
To: 68-69TonkinGulfYatchClub
You are right...talk about Chicago, and I show up...funny, how tho I have been gone for so long, everything in my mind, about Chicago, is still so vivid...
I must admit, growing up in Chicago was just great...have been back only once in 24 yrs, and that was only after having been gone for three yrs...
So, I guess, for me, to go back now, would be quite a shock...dont know if I am ready for that or not...
To: ClaraSuzanne
You bet!
372
posted on
06/26/2002 3:56:24 PM PDT
by
SAMWolf
To: coteblanche
Have you ever been to Western Canada? Like Saskatchewan?
373
posted on
06/26/2002 3:57:23 PM PDT
by
Pippin
Comment #374 Removed by Moderator
To: coteblanche
HAHAHAHAHA! I didn't mean newbie to FR. Good heavens, you've been here years longer than me. I meant new to the Canteen. hehehehe
Jen
375
posted on
06/26/2002 3:57:55 PM PDT
by
Jen
To: ClaraSuzanne
Clara, even the Feds. need a tolken Conservitive. [grin]
To: Mr_Magoo
Tomy's Ribs in Niles. Best BBQ ribs around at the time!
Barneby's Pizza was the best pace to go after a date, Great pizza and a pitcher of Coke. Man oh Man!
377
posted on
06/26/2002 3:58:42 PM PDT
by
SAMWolf
To: Mr_Magoo
"tolkin?" Conservative? LOL!!!
378
posted on
06/26/2002 3:59:50 PM PDT
by
Pippin
To: Mr_Magoo
No, I think Annan Kofi has things severely under control. If a particular building in NYC blew over tonite, I would rejoice, along with every other Christian in the US of A.
379
posted on
06/26/2002 4:00:58 PM PDT
by
B4Ranch
Comment #380 Removed by Moderator
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