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-   -   Argentinean Submarine down - USN rescue team mobilised (https://www.pprune.org/military-aviation/602107-argentinean-submarine-down-usn-rescue-team-mobilised.html)

B737C525 1st Dec 2017 21:37

A truly silent submarine is no threat.

Except to submariners’ morale.

The quoted piece makes clear that their deaths were swift; I am glad of that. The anticipation of death may have been terribly, enduringly, real. Those are thoughts best left to quiet.

Trim Stab 2nd Dec 2017 19:06


Originally Posted by Union Jack (Post 9974107)
A very sad and sobering, albeit unconfirmed, account of what is believed to have occurred in the final moments of the loss of the ARA SAN JUAN will be found at:

https://thenewstalkers.com/community...of-a-submarine

Incidentally, for the benefit of those conjecturing on the relative calm to be found when a submarine dives to avoid extreme surface conditions, I have experienced a 26 degree role to either side in a nuclear submarine - at 500 feet keel depth. I can't say where or when, but I was certainly very glad not to be nearer the surface.

Jack

That report has a bit too much pseudo-mathematical waffle to ring true to me. If the report was authoritative, I would not expect such precision about the collapse depth of the implosion, nor a figure of "1800mph" for the "ram-effect" of an implosion.

Moreover, that class of submarine would probably have a collapse depth of more than 1275ft.

I'm a bit sceptical about the expertise of the source of that article.

West Coast 2nd Dec 2017 21:16

The narrative may not be exact but it offers an educated guess into the fate of the sub. If your submarine implosion analysis points towards a different end, then please offer it up.

Trim Stab 3rd Dec 2017 07:01


Originally Posted by West Coast (Post 9976857)
The narrative may not be exact but it offers an educated guess into the fate of the sub. If your submarine implosion analysis points towards a different end, then please offer it up.

I don't deny that the submarine probably imploded, all I am saying is that I doubt that the quoted narrative has much academic credibility. Here is an academic paper on the mechanics of an imploding cylinder which may give you some insight.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3857872/

Heathrow Harry 3rd Dec 2017 07:08

TrimStab - the seismologists who look at this stuff are the worlds greatest experts on detecting & classifying explosions - they have 60 years of experince of N-test, conventional explosions, earthquakes, landslides

from the article:_
ANALYSIS OF ACOUSTIC DETECTION OF THE LOSS OF THE ARGENTINE SUBMARINE SAN JUAN
By Bruce Rule

An analytical review of all information released by the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization on the acoustic signal associated with the loss of the Argentina Submarine ARA SAN JUAN confirms the following:

That acoustic signal originated near 46-10S, 59-42W at 1358Z (GMT) on 15 November 2017. It was produced by the collapse (implosion) of the ARA SAN JUAN pressure-hull at a depth of 1275-feet. Sea pressure at the collapse depth was 570 PSI. The frequency of the collapse event signal (bubble-pulse) was about 4.4 Hz.

The energy released by the collapse was equal to the explosion of 12,500 pounds of TNT at the depth of 1275-feet. That energy was produced by the nearly instantaneous conversion of potential energy (sea-pressure) to kinetic energy, the motion of the intruding water-ram which entered the SAN JUAN pressure-hull at a speed of about 1800 mph.

The entire pressure-hull was completely destroyed (fragmented/compacted) in about 40 milliseconds (0.040s or 1/25th of a second), the duration of the compression phase of the collapse event which is half the minimum time required for cognitive recognition of an event.

Although the crew may have known collapse was imminent, they never knew it was occurring. They did not drown or experience pain. Death was instantaneous.
The SAN JUAN wreckage sank vertically at an estimated speed between 10 and 13 knots. Bottom impact would not have produced an acoustic event detectable at long range.

The open question is: why was no corrective action - such as blowing ballast - taken by the SAN JUAN crew before the submarine sank to collapse depth? According to Argentine Navy spokesman Gabriel Galeazzi, the Commanding Officer of the SAN JUAN reported a "failure" in the submarine's "battery system," The time of that report was 0730 on 15 November, assumed to have been GMT. Subsequently, the problem was reported to have been "fixed." The SAN JUAN intended to submerged and continued its transit north. The SAN JUAN pressure-hull collapsed at 1358 GMT on 15 November.

In the case of the loss of the US nuclear submarine SCORPION (SSN 589), hydrogen out-gassed by the main battery exploded at 18:20:44 GMT on 22 May 1968 incapacitating/killing the crew with an atmospheric over-pressure in the battery well estimated to have been 7-10 times the fatal value. The pressure-hull was not breached. This assessment was based on analysis of acoustic detections of the event and damage observed in pieces of the fragmented battery recovered from the wreckage at a depth of 11,100 feet by the US submersible TRIESTE, e.g., microscopic, spectrographic and x-ray diffraction analyses. (There was no flooding of the pressure-hull before the battery exploded.) SCORPION lost power and sank slowly over nearly 22 minutes to collapse at a depth of 1530-feet at 18:42:34 GMT on 22 May 1968. There is the possibility that a similar sequence of events occurred aboard the SAN JUAN. If the wreck is located and efforts are made to recover components, emphasis should be placed on the battery system.

The author of this assessment was the lead acoustic analyst at the US Office of Naval Intelligence for 42 years, analyzed acoustic detectors of the loss of the USS THRESHER (SSN 593) on 10 April 1963 and testified before that Court of Inquiry. The author expresses his appreciation to those who supported this assessment with research and calculations.
Initial reports from the Argentine Navy indicate that they had a problem with their snorkle which allowed water to enter the hull and shorted out the forward battery. What transpired after that to cause the sub to sink is only speculation at this time. As the author of this report indicates, it's not beyond the realm of possibility that the forward battery exploded. A similarly accident occurred on the USS Bonefish (SS-582) in April of 1988. She was able to surface, and the captain ordered the ship evacuated. Incidentally, the CO, CDR Mike Wilson was my Executive Officer at Trident Training Facility Kings Bay following this incident.

Davef68 3rd Dec 2017 11:59

I still can't find an authoritative published source for that article - it is in the same style as Bruce Rule's other articles on the IUSS link I posted earlier (e.g. IUSSCAA Message Board) but I can't find a first instance of the exact txt.

Some of it (e.g. the implosion/cognitive recognition time) appears in other posts on that site.

Above The Clouds 3rd Dec 2017 12:37


Heathrow Harry
Initial reports from the Argentine Navy indicate that they had a problem with their snorkle which allowed water to enter the hull and shorted out the forward battery. What transpired after that to cause the sub to sink is only speculation at this time. As the author of this report indicates, it's not beyond the realm of possibility that the forward battery exploded.

That acoustic signal originated near 46-10S, 59-42W at 1358Z (GMT) on 15 November 2017. It was produced by the collapse (implosion) of the ARA SAN JUAN pressure-hull at a depth of 1275-feet. Sea pressure at the collapse depth was 570 PSI. The frequency of the collapse event signal (bubble-pulse) was about 4.4 Hz.

The energy released by the collapse was equal to the explosion of 12,500 pounds of TNT at the depth of 1275-feet. That energy was produced by the nearly instantaneous conversion of potential energy (sea-pressure) to kinetic energy, the motion of the intruding water-ram which entered the SAN JUAN pressure-hull at a speed of about 1800 mph.

The entire pressure-hull was completely destroyed (fragmented/compacted) in about 40 milliseconds (0.040s or 1/25th of a second), the duration of the compression phase of the collapse event which is half the minimum time required for cognitive recognition of an event.

What I don't understand is, if the boat took on water through the snorkel which led to a battery short then a possible explosion in the forward battery bay, why would it implode ?

A cylinder filling with water from an explosion is then not going to implode with the force being described in the article, and if filled with sufficient water to over come the blast tanks and sink then the amount of water involved would surely cause the inside hull pressure to start equalising near to the outside pressure.

An explosion in the forward battery bay opening up the hull and sinking rapidly to the bottom would make more sense.

glad rag 3rd Dec 2017 12:40


Originally Posted by Trim Stab (Post 9977070)
I don't deny that the submarine probably imploded, all I am saying is that I doubt that the quoted narrative has much academic credibility. Here is an academic paper on the mechanics of an imploding cylinder which may give you some insight.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3857872/

Bulkheads.

pasta 3rd Dec 2017 14:22


Originally Posted by Above The Clouds (Post 9977339)
What I don't understand is, if the boat took on water through the snorkel which led to a battery short then a possible explosion in the forward battery bay, why would it implode ?

It wouldn't, directly. However it seems plausible that a battery short could, via any number of means, lead to loss of control of the ship. If this loss of control allowed it to sink below the hull's crush depth, it could then implode.

SASless 3rd Dec 2017 14:46


It was produced by the collapse (implosion) of the ARA SAN JUAN pressure-hull at a depth of 1275-feet.
Is that a determined fact....or an assumption based upon the Design Crush Depth for the Boat?

I am still trying to absorb the fact that something serious enough...and sudden enough to prevent the Crew from blowing all tanks using compressed air....and thus take the Boat to the surface....no matter how rough the seas and uncomfortable the ride would be....just what could it have been?

My first guess would be a Hydrogen Gas explosion.

Some of you scoff at surfacing being a valid option.....I very much differ.

If you get enough seawater into a battery compartment to short out the batteries....you would have to fear that it could get into contact with the Battery Acid and that would produce both Hydrogen and Toxic Gases.

Ventilating the Boat becomes the primary preventative measure and that could only be done on the surface.

parabellum 3rd Dec 2017 22:43

I believe that the statement that the hull imploded at 1275 feet is based on the experience of the writer and the fact that the writer has studied the sound recording and compared it to others rather than just quoting a mathematical conclusion.

Pali 4th Dec 2017 04:39

The logical explanation would be that he compared the known intensity of sound with energy needed and calculated the known displacement of the submarine in the equations.

Speed of the final event made me think that instant death was the result in milliseconds however I can’t stop thinking of the sounds which is produced by the hull as it goes over the construction limits. I studied quite some portion of books about submarines and final moments make me sleepless at times. The percentage of losses of the U-boot crews was horrifying and the number of all-hands fatalities in most of the cases popped up in my memory when I heard about this recent tragedy. If they lost control they knew what was coming. That thought is painful and even more for the families. Godspeed.

pzu 21st Dec 2017 13:54

100+ years on - HMAS AE1 located
 
First World War submarine lost with 35 British and Allied crew on board is finally found - ending 103-year mystery

PZU - Out of Africa (Retired)

West Coast 24th Dec 2017 21:09

New contact detected in search for missing Argentine submarine in South Atlantic | Fox News

Fingers crossed.

Heathrow Harry 25th Dec 2017 07:27

An awful Christmas for their famillies.

Hope they get closure soon

Trim Stab 25th Dec 2017 12:43


Originally Posted by Pali (Post 9977944)
The logical explanation would be that he compared the known intensity of sound with energy needed and calculated the known displacement of the submarine in the equations.

Speed of the final event made me think that instant death was the result in milliseconds however I can’t stop thinking of the sounds which is produced by the hull as it goes over the construction limits. I studied quite some portion of books about submarines and final moments make me sleepless at times. The percentage of losses of the U-boot crews was horrifying and the number of all-hands fatalities in most of the cases popped up in my memory when I heard about this recent tragedy. If they lost control they knew what was coming. That thought is painful and even more for the families. Godspeed.

Would agree that the sonic event suggests that the final collapse of any watertight compartments was almost instantaneous, and the german engineers who designed the pressure capsule would also have sought to make collapse depth structurally conformal, so the final moment would have been near instantaneous. But the final moments once buoyancy control was lost must have been terrifying. Am thinking of the families this Christmas.

FanControl 25th Dec 2017 15:42

I am also thinking about the families this Christmas. It looks like the primary focus with the ongoing search is still close to the shelf.

Pontius Navigator 26th Dec 2017 10:45

West Coast, I am appalled by the comments in that Fox link. Clearly they have no idea of the comradeship that exists between Servicemen of all nations that share similar ethos even if on opposing sides.

SASless 26th Dec 2017 20:47

PN,

I just read the linked Fox Article.....exactly what is it you find problematic?

It seemed awfully bland and a mere recitation of facts as known.

As I am a bit sensitive to Sub losses...I knew one of the crew aboard the USS Thresher....Jimmy Musselwhite.....I did not find that article offensive in any way.

Jimmy was older than me but had family in my hometown and I got to know him during his visits there. His family was devastated when the Thresher was lost with him aboard.



James Alton Musselwhite

Rhino power 26th Dec 2017 23:19


Originally Posted by SASless (Post 10002110)
PN,

I just read the linked Fox Article.....exactly what is it you find problematic?

SASless, I suspect PN is referring to some of the cretinous individuals who posted 'comments' in the conversation section below the article, not the article itself...

-RP


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