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| Orders with radio work are delayed 3 - 14 days | ||||||
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| Orders with radio work are delayed 3 - 14 days | ||||||
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| Orders with radio work are delayed 3 - 14 days | ||||||
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All this stuff had to do with supplying digital navigation data to the Poseidon missiles and to the Submarine navigation division. . I Graduated this school at the top of my class, which once again gave me the first pick of my next duty station. I chose the USS Kamehameha SSBN-642 (Poseidon Missile Nuclear Submarine), she was a Fleet Ballistic Missile Submarine just arriving in Portsmouth, New Hampshire for Overhaul. I chose this of course due to the location near my home town (Manchester, NH) and the chance to attend some college.
| In 1987 I Joined the crew of the USS Daniel Webster SSBN-626 GOLD
For a three month (105 days) long Deterrent Patrol out of Holly Lock Scotland.
This was temporary duty and I was to returned to the Kamehameha after the
patrol. There I earned my Submarine Qualification Dolphins. I learned and qualified
to stand many watch stations. I was trained and designated system
expert on the ships RADAR and Electronic Surveillance Systems.
I later attended three very detailed advanced schools on this equipment as
well. We enjoyed some liberty in Naples Italy for a show of power during A
socialist rally (where we arrived through the Straights of Gibraltar and
through the highly trafficked Mediterranean Sea UNDETECTED) |
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In 1991, after five years with the Kamehameha I was reassigned to shore duty at the Naval Submarine Support Facility (NSSF), New London, Conn. There I was assigned to the Navigation Electronics repair division. Our job was to make repairs that where above the level of technicians aboard the boats (various fast attack SSN submarines). I attended more schools of coarse. For instance the BRD-7 was a high tech communications intercept system (it's job was to scan and listen for enemy communications and give detailed signal information and direction finding). I finished that school in first place out of seven. For this I was rewarded with a nine month relocation to the Nuclear Repair Division (since I was still considered the new guy, they volunteered me). There I became all too familiar with the job of a mechanic and with nuclear energy and radioactivity. I guess I can brag that I have been inside the Reactor Compartment in a canary suit and touched the nuclear reactor itself...ooooooooooo | |
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