I feel like this stern down-nose up is purposefully set to be, so that in case of a blackout the submarine can easily do an emergency blow.IMHO, Because of the propeller had stopped rotating then the stern went down and nose went up without any force to ascend, thus it only depends on how much was its buoyancy . If the buoyancy was very less...the sub can start sinking, or if the buoyancy was just enough to maintained it float at a certain depth but an internal solitary wave does exist at the time of the incident, it will just brought down the sub, drifted deeper and deeper
Lifting a submarine which has lost structural integrity is not same as lifting something else from bottom of the ocean. They will focus on explosives and critical parts initially, they will discuss the remaining later. It is an expensive business to lift the remaining parts of whole of the structure.SKK Migas: Kapal KRI Nanggala 402 Akan Diangkat Pakai Kapal Timas ENI Merakes
SKK Migas mengumumkan bahwa kapal timas DSV 1201 yang kini bekerja untuk ENI Merakes, bakal dipakai untuk mengangkat KRI Nanggala 402.m.kumparan.com
KRI Nanggala might be recovered using underwater construction vessel according to SKK MIGAS (Special Agency for Oil and Gas works), that ship is able to laying pipe and concrete construction in the deep of 3000 meters.
But still there is no official confirmation from the navy
Honestly, I'm split.The interview I posted earlier said it can cost up to 200 million USD (IIRC) to raise/salvage the nanggala.
The Aussie expert said that money is better used on the living (i.e current fleet of sub safety program etc) and leave nangalla to be as memorial....and designate the spot as such.
What are members views on this?
The cause won't be revealed by taking the sub out as well, they should (or probably have already done) start investigation from the maintenance center,dockyard and related personnel. The crew was also taking logs of what has gone wrong or malfunctioned. They can use collective information and investigation to figure out the cause.On the other, I still think that we need to know exactly what happened, and I don't think that sending ROVs to the wreckage of Nanggala will be sufficient for this purpose.
The interview I posted earlier said it can cost up to 200 million USD (IIRC) to raise/salvage the nanggala.
The Aussie expert said that money is better used on the living (i.e current fleet of sub safety program etc) and leave nangalla to be as memorial....and designate the spot as such.
What are members views on this?
The cause won't be revealed by taking the sub out as well, they should (or probably have already done) start investigation from the maintenance center,dockyard and related personnel. The crew was also taking logs of what has gone wrong or malfunctioned. They can use collective information and investigation to figure out the cause.
It will cost something to recover the sub, then cost something more to figure out the reason. the parts will be shipped abroad to investigate or decode information as well, hull and piping probably will be investigated by whomever has constructed those, or by a 3rd part who specializes on investigation like a classification society or experts.
Considering all these it can cost even more than the recovery itself.
Does submarine have someting like airplane's blackbox? or something that records any critical log's?The cause won't be revealed by taking the sub out as well, they should (or probably have already done) start investigation from the maintenance center,dockyard and related personnel. The crew was also taking logs of what has gone wrong or malfunctioned. They can use collective information and investigation to figure out the cause.
It will cost something to recover the sub, then cost something more to figure out the reason. the parts will be shipped abroad to investigate or decode information as well, hull and piping probably will be investigated by whomever has constructed those, or by a 3rd part who specializes on investigation like a classification society or experts.
Considering all these it can cost even more than the recovery itself.
Here a few reasons more why it is not reasonable:
- the only sistership is Cakra, which is also going to retire soon. So discovery of the reason does not introduce a new safety for a class of the ships or for the future hulls.
- Crew of Cakra has already experienced similar issues, or they are already aware of it. They will conduct a few more exercises and be adjusted with it or get it fixed.
- not all of the bodies will be recovered intact, some may not be found at all, which will make some families even more sad.
- the recovery process itself will be advertisement of some people with influence, will be more emotionally oriented than being technically oriented.
No, but I believe they have Log book. the book for record all important thing that happen in 24 hours a day , ussually it called buku harian kapal and other the one is Engine Log book , the one that used to record all thing happened inside engine room.Does submarine have someting like airplane's blackbox? or something that records any critical log's?
As I had stated earlier in this thread. Its worth every money, coin, dime, or whatever one use as currencyThe interview I posted earlier said it can cost up to 200 million USD (IIRC) to raise/salvage the nanggala.
The Aussie expert said that money is better used on the living (i.e current fleet of sub safety program etc) and leave nangalla to be as memorial....and designate the spot as such.
What are members views on this?
What make you think the Navy brass haven't already have really good idea as the cause of the accident Recovering the crew and the boat are not about investigationHonestly, I'm split.
In one hand, I agree with his point. Our navy is already having a hard time maintaining its current fleet, so that amount of money (which most likely are going to be far more than that) could be used to improve the safety of the remaining subs.
On the other, I still think that we need to know exactly what happened, and I don't think that sending ROVs to the wreckage of Nanggala will be sufficient for this purpose.
But on the other hand again, if, and that's a big bold IF, IF it turns out that the real cause of the accident was some kind of foul play, then...
I don't know anymore...
It's called Log book (handwritten)Does submarine have someting like airplane's blackbox? or something that records any critical log's?
With a honour no grave better than their duty post on the deepThe interview I posted earlier said it can cost up to 200 million USD (IIRC) to raise/salvage the nanggala.
The Aussie expert said that money is better used on the living (i.e current fleet of sub safety program etc) and leave nangalla to be as memorial....and designate the spot as such.
What are members views on this?
For what its worth, what I meant with "we" was actually about all of us: Indonesians at large. I won't be surprised if the reality is actually just like what you wrote.What make you think the Navy brass haven't already have really good idea as the cause of the accident Recovering the crew and the boat are not about investigation
That's just how submarine surfacing normally right? Using propulsion to reach the surface rather than using their ballast tank, after confirming everything around the surface is clear (using periscope) then they will blow the ballast tank. But if suddenly the boat lost propulsion power then the boat would keep descending while in this angle up position, isnt submarine have neutral or a bit less buoyancy so they can stay submerged and when submarine move/manoeuvre up and down it basically just like airplane that use horizontal stabilizer (elevator).I feel like this stern down-nose up is purposefully set to be, so that in case of a blackout the submarine can easily do an emergency blow.
In emergency submarines do emergency blow, which immediately empties the main ballast tank using pressurized air, to surface the submarine as soon as possible. It is routine for submariners they do it a few times during each voyage to practice. This doesn't work if there has been a flooding exceeding capacity of the ballast tanks which is usually 1/10-1/20th of the displacement.That's just how submarine surfacing normally right? Using propulsion to reach the surface rather than using their ballast tank, after confirming everything around the surface is clear (using periscope) then they will blow the ballast tank. But if suddenly the boat lost propulsion power then the boat would keep descending while in this angle up position, isnt submarine have neutral or a bit less buoyancy so they can stay submerged and when submarine move/manoeuvre up and down it basically just like airplane that use horizontal stabilizer (elevator).
Does submarine have someting like airplane's blackbox? or something that records any critical log's?
that reminds me of marine's KIA jeep during Aceh OpsPreparation before deployment
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This kind of one time improvement only happened before big military operation happened