subcommander
New Member
i mean making a hot bunk with a woman would be a little difficult. 
The rest of the article is on the Navy Times site.SecNav, CNO: Women should serve on subs
Women should be allowed to serve aboard submarines, and the Navy is “moving out aggressively” to make it happen, according to the service’s top civilian.
“I believe women should have every opportunity to serve at sea, and that includes aboard submarines,” Navy Secretary Ray Mabus said Thursday in a statement to Navy Times.
His comment comes one week after Joint Chiefs Chairman Adm. Mike Mullen told congressional lawmakers that he thought it was time to end the ban against women on submarines.
Mullen’s successor, Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Gary Roughead, also said he is “very comfortable” addressing the crewing policy.
“There are some particular issues with integrating women into the submarine force; issues we must work through in order to achieve what is best for the Navy and our submarine force,” Roughead said in a statement. “Accommodations are a factor, but not insurmountable.”
Yes, that is why you want highly skilled people, and the relevance for wether those should be male or female is exactly what?America's nuclear submarines usually do long patrols without ever surfacing. A submarines loses its stealthy characteristics every time it has to surface. Submariners also have to have secondary skills as well, much more so than a surface warship.
Frankly, considering the storage situation aboard, I don't see where there is enough storage to store feminine products....
Store feminine products..?America's nuclear submarines usually do long patrols without ever surfacing. A submarines loses its stealthy characteristics every time it has to surface. Submariners also have to have secondary skills as well, much more so than a surface warship.
Frankly, considering the storage situation aboard, I don't see where there is enough storage to store feminine products....
Maybe you don't realize the scale of three or four or five months of stored products. One doesn't go to the grocery store every week or two to restock. A submariner learns to appreciate powered eggs. A nuclear submarine don't restock eggs every week either.Yes, that is why you want highly skilled people, and the relevance for wether those should be male or female is exactly what?
And yes, surfacing needlessly is bad for submarines, ALL military submarines i might add, your point being again?
nfloorl:
Wow, i mean WOW, how silly can the arguments get?
Ignoring the totally practical suggestion from R.E.B.C. post #45 (confirmed by my wife who is a military Registered Nurse who is also fully qualified to operate as a Reproductive Health specialist - Norplant would work) - my wife reckons she would go through no more than 160 Super sized tampons in 6 months - space required - a rectangle 2 x 4 x 12 inches.Maybe you don't realize the scale of three or four or five months of stored products. One doesn't go to the grocery store every week or two to restock. A submariner learns to appreciate powered eggs. A nuclear submarine don't restock eggs every week either.
Considering how the average male eats more than the average female, the net difference is actually a clear reduction in storage needed.Maybe you don't realize the scale of three or four or five months of stored products. One doesn't go to the grocery store every week or two to restock. A submariner learns to appreciate powered eggs. A nuclear submarine don't restock eggs every week either.
SAME, well of course. But same amount? I very much doubt it. For Europe, men on average eat 20-25% more per day. The difference differs based on what the normal difference in average bodysize between men and women is.well, in the RAN the women eat the same as the men...
My comment was meant to be flippant (just in case you didn't detect it!)SAME, well of course. But same amount? I very much doubt it. For Europe, men on average eat 20-25% more per day. The difference differs based on what the normal difference in average bodysize between men and women is.
Easyyyyyyyyyyyyyy now tiger! Lets not get carried away!....there is a view in some circles that they might be better acoustic warfare officers due to perception senses/sensors (no pun intended)
Agreed.gf0012-aust said:either way, they do the job, and do it well.
on that note, wouldn't the young serve better for acoustics? as hearing damage/freqency cut-off increases with age? is this taken into consideration at all? or does experience of an older submariner negate the (if any) acoustical advantage of the youngMy comment was meant to be flippant (just in case you didn't detect it!)
we've had female submariners since 1999
I'm unsure as to the big deal with having women submariners on board. there is a view in some circles that they might be better acoustic warfare officers due to perception senses/sensors (no pun intended)
either way, they do the job, and do it well.
I would have thought so, except the current generation are generally stuffing up their hearing a lot faster.on that note, wouldn't the young serve better for acoustics? as hearing damage/freqency cut-off increases with age? is this taken into consideration at all? or does experience of an older submariner negate the (if any) acoustical advantage of the young
all that audio compression and cheap earbud headphones don't help, either.I would have thought so, except the current generation are generally stuffing up their hearing a lot faster.
You won't get much on the processes, but the best way is to look up the companies that are typically involved and visit their sites.gf, if you have a moment, is there any material (online) in which i could learn about sonar systems? im just a hobbyist, but im interested in just how much passive "listening" is done by humans today, versus computer systems and algorithms (processing, etc).
It's still a black art - humans stay in the loophow much "listening" is still relied on by humans?
CREF pt 1. you can get better "general" ideas by also visiting the oceanographic reserach sites and deep sea technology sites.im having difficulty finding out the types of processes that are followed on a modern submarine re: sonar.