When the Navy comes to Town
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Sometimes good things happen to people who create web sites. In Jan, 1997 the following message popped up in my email:
Hello Henry and Nadine. My name is Terry Hyland. I an Operations Specialist in the US Navy. In FEB the 7th to be exact the ship I'm on will be visiting Mazatlan. And while looking for information I came across your web page. I loved it and would like to share some of the valuable info I gained from it. I do intend on doing it but would like to know if you have a FTP site available so I can get some files I could print out on the ship. If not I'll print up the info manually. ...
Terry went on to invite us to take a tour of his ship. We agreed with enthusiasm, and as you can see in the photo at the right, Terry, his buddy Dale, Nadine, and I (behind the camera) are about to board the USS Rentz, a guided missle frigate.
To prove we actually got on board, here is a shot of Nadine
with a handsome young sailor near the bow of the ship. The
funny looking contraption just above the sailors right shoulder
is a missle launcher
. The missles are stored below deck. The Rentz's main mission
is anti submarine warfare, but it can also shoot missles at
other surface ships in a pinch. Let me say here, that I would like to thank Terry and his friend Dale for accompanying us on this wonderful tour, and we wish both of them health and happiness in their future careers. Muchas Gracias.
Here we have a picture of the Rentz's antimissle defense. It is
called a CIWS
which stands for Close In Weapons System. It shoots a square
pattern of uranium bullets at a rate of 50 rounds per second
into the path of an oncoming missle. To give you an idea of how
fast that is, not even Nadine mother can can talk at that rate
over a sustained period of more than 2 or 3 hours. (She's going
to kill me if she ever reads that.) It has its own power
supply, in case the main power of the ship is knocked out.
Pretty impressive technology. I'm just glad its on our side.
You are looking at an SH-60
Mark III
Sea Hawk helicopter. Here is the real reason for this ship,
namely to launch a helicopter to go out and look for
submarines. The idea is this: If you think there is a sub in
the area, you send your helicopter out to look for it. The
helicopter and the ship communicate on a very narrow
(physically) radio beam, so that none of the communication can
be intercepted, and the enemy doesn't have any idea where the
ship the helicopter is talking to is. The helicopter looks for
the sub's general location using special microphone buoys, that
it drops overboard. Once it has the general area, it tows a
highly sensitive magnetometer, (a device that is good at
finding large pieces of steel) behind itself for a more
accurate fix. All of this information is fed back to the ship,
which can respond accordingly.
By the way, I should mention that Terry's ship, the USS STETHEM wasn't able to dock this day, so Terry arranged for us to visit the Rentz. His ship is the navy's newest Guided Missle Destroyer. If you would like to learn more about the Arleigh Burke class destroyer, Navy is only too happy to oblige.