Dispatch 7a

The Pampanito WW II submarine

    11 Feb 2012

 
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You sleep near where you work in the Navy and sometimes with interesting bed mates.

Notice the bunks just above the torpedoes on either side. 
 
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WW II subs ran mostly on the surface and charged batteries with diesel generators. The diesel could not run submerged and battery power was very limited. This station managed battery power resources.
 
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All of these indicators had to be green before you could dive.
 
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Driving the boat . . .

 Well  . . . OK ,

Pretending to drive the boat.
 
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This torpedo has been cut away to show the works. Quite a complicated gadget in it's own right.
 
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The forward torpedo room
 

 

 

As with the Hornet these photos in higher resolution and others are on my Web Photo Album page



 

 

 
 

 

 
A few photos from our visit to 
      de Young Art Museum in
              Golden Gate Park

 

 

 
On 11 Feb 2012 I visited the Pampanito, a WWII Submarine turned museum.


 

 

 
Here I am with one of the Docents. As you might imagine he is a former submariner himself and full of information about this boat and life on a submarine. I must stand in awe of the men who built these ships. And what can you say about the men who served on them? It's one thing to walk through as a tourist; I still can't imagine what it was like to live and serve on this boat in war time and face the terrible odds they lived, and many died, with.
 

 

 
Musee Mecanique and the Seals of Fisherman's Wharf


A few photos from our visit to 
      de Young Art Museum in
              Golden Gate Park