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US Navy redesigning its submarines to accommodate women

  

Category:  Health, Science & Technology

Via:  randy  •  7 years ago  •  1 comments

US Navy redesigning its submarines to accommodate women


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FILE - In this Dec. 5, 2012, file photo, released by the U.S. Navy, Lt j.g. Marquette Leveque, left, and Lt. j.g. Kyle McFadden, both of the USS Wyoming, receive their pins to indicate that they're qualified to serve on submarines in a ceremony at Naval Submarine Base Kings Bay in Georgia. With women now serving on submarines, future subs are being built to specifically accommodate gender differences including height, reach and strength. The first vessel built with some of the new features is expected to be delivered in 2021. (James Kimber - U.S. Navy via AP)

 

 

By JENNIFER McDERMOTT

From Associated Press

April 18, 2017 11:41 PM EST


PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) — Every submarine in the U.S. fleet was designed with the height, reach and strength of men in mind, from the way valves are placed to how display screens are angled.

That's going to change.

With women now serving aboard submarines, defense contractor Electric Boat is designing what will be the first Navy subs built specifically to accommodate female crew members.

The designers are doing the obvious things, such as adding more doors and washrooms to create separate sleeping and bathing areas for men and women and to give them more privacy. But they are also making more subtle modifications that may not have been in everyone's periscope when the Navy admitted women into the Silent Service.

 

For example, they are lowering some overhead valves and making them easier to turn, and installing steps in front of the triple-high bunk beds and stacked laundry machines.

The first vessel built with some of the new features is expected to be delivered to the Navy in 2021, the future USS New Jersey.

The Navy lifted its ban on women on submarines in 2010, starting with officers. About 80 female officers and roughly 50 enlisted women are now serving on subs, and their numbers are expected to climb into the hundreds over the next few years.

For now, the Navy is retrofitting existing subs with extra doors and designated washrooms to accommodate women. But Electric Boat in Groton, Connecticut, is at work on a redesign of the Navy's Virginia-class fast-attack subs and is also developing a brand-new class of ballistic-missile submarines, relying on body measurements for both men and women.

"We have a clean sheet of paper, so from the ground up, we'll optimize for both men and women," said Brian Wilson, Electric Boat director of the new ballistic-missile sub program.

Electric Boat officials had no immediate estimate of how much the modifications will cost.

As anyone who watches war movies knows, submariners are always turning valves, whether to operate machinery, redistribute water between tanks or isolate part of a system that has been damaged.

On the Columbia-class boats, valves will generally be placed lower, Wilson said. Sometimes there will be an extension handle, and some will be easier to turn. Sailors will be able to connect their masks into the emergency air system at the side of passageways, instead of overhead.

Emergency air masks are being moved on fast-attack submarines, too, but the bulk of the changes on those subs are to ensure privacy.

Seats in the control room on the ballistic-missile submarines will adjust forward a little more so everyone can touch each display and reach every joystick. Steps will be added so shorter people can climb into the top bunk or see into the washers and dryers, since clothes that get stuck in the machines are a fire hazard.

The first Columbia-class ballistic-missile sub is scheduled to join the fleet in 2031.

At 5-foot-6, Lt. Marquette Leveque, one of the first women to serve on a submarine, said that she didn't have any trouble reaching valves and other equipment but that the ergonomic changes will be helpful for shorter crewmates.

Leveque was assigned to a compartment with two other female officers on the USS Wyoming. They shared a washroom with male officers. A sign on the door could be flipped to show whether a man or woman was using it.

With so few women on board, the timesharing worked, she said. But with more on the way, the need for separate spaces is greater, she added.

"Privacy is important anywhere you are," she said. "We live on this boat, as well as work there."




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Randy
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link   seeder  Randy    7 years ago

As anyone who watches war movies knows, submariners are always turning valves, whether to operate machinery, redistribute water between tanks or isolate part of a system that has been damaged.

In absolutely every movie ever made with submarines in it there is always and I do mean always, a steam pipe running along the ceiling of the Control Room. Even in "The Hunt for Red October" it's there. Every one. And in absolutely every movie with submarines in any kind of combat at all, that pipe bursts and live steam comes out.

Now, first of all, no one ever gets hurt by this live steam. Ever. It is so hot it should burn the skin and flesh off from anyone near it, but no one gets hurt. Ever. Second of all, since this this steam pipe has been getting burst ever since submarines have ever been built in the history of submarines, every single time (according to the movies), why hasn't the Electric Boat Company figured out a better damned place to put that pipe and why is it so defective that it keeps rupturing?! Can't they fix this? Can't they make a stronger steam pipe!? If it keeps bursting there, then move the damned thing! Damn!

But that's not even the worst of it. In every movie someone always reaches up for a valve, usually right into the live steam (again without getting hurt) and turns the valve that just happens to be right there in just the exact right place and turns it and the steam stops. Now. Once the valve is closed the dialog starts again and nothing concerning the steam pipe is ever heard from again! I mean one would expect that the steam in that pipe is powering something, somewhere on the boat? Something! Somewhere! It has to be or why else is the damned thing there? So why is there never a call on the boat's radio from some other part of the boat to the Control Room with someone saying "Hey! Who in the hell turned off my steam? How can I be expected to operate my machinery without that steam? God-damn it will someone turn it back on before we end up in an uncontrolled dive to the fucking bottom? Do you think that steam pipe was there just for show!"

I hate that cliche and it is in EVERY movie with submarines in it. Just watch anyone and you'll see it. Scheeeesch!

 
 

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