"....fictionalized but realistic sub equivelant to Delta or Aquarius that
would triple their depth numbers..."
"....but they aren't oil
field tough...."
Vance,
I've seen your references to
the oil industry on a number of occasions. Given a hypothetical certification
of something like your recipe there, is it safe to say that both oil and
academia, would provide enough work to keep the boat, "afloat",..so to
speak?
Joe
To:
personal_submersibles@psubs.orgSubject:
[PSUBS-MAILIST] Idabel and HY-100
Date: Fri, 9 Jan 2009 09:52:59
-0500
From:
vbra676539@aol.comSzbowski (If
that's you, then who is Brent?),
I guess my question is still: Why not
build the whole thing in HY-100, rather than deal with the change in
strengths? I've been talking to Karl, developing a lightweight, fictionalized
but realistic sub equivelant to Delta or Aquarius that would triple their
depth numbers. Karl has proven that it can be done reasonably (or as
reasonable as these things ever get). However, the fictional version would
need certification, and there are some things about Idabel they probably
wouldn't pass. So, I'm thinking a witch's brew: take a little Perry, add a
pinch of Nuyton, salt with some Delta and bring to a boil with a little
Idabel.
The Tritons are pretty and the Seamagines are...well,
imaginative, but they aren't oil field tough, and so I'm sticking with steel
and guard rails. Besides, even an HY-100 hull would be cheaper than a 5 1/2
foot acrylic ball with hatch and penetrator plate built and tested. I'm
guessing this little book sub could be built for about what a Triton 1000
meter pressure hull costs--a quarter million, say, or a little better. And a
completed 2-passenger 1000 meter Triton goes for over $2 million, according to
the web page.
Phil says an HY-100 Aquarius hull could conceivably do
1km, give or take. That gives me a 7000# sub able to do a LOT! And remember,
it's fiction, so I can do what I want. The problem is that the psubs community
and the professionals out there will tear strips off me if I take any
liberties with what they know to be true, or even nearly true. They don't
suffer fools lightly. And besides, my mind doesn't work that way. I want the
thing to be accurate, however fanciful it might seem to an
outsider.
Vance
-----Original Message-----
From:
Brent Hartwig <
brenthartwig@hotmail.com>
To:
PSUBSorg <
personal_submersibles@psubs.org>
Sent:
Thu, 8 Jan 2009 6:53 pm
Subject: RE: [PSUBS-MAILIST] Jurassic Shark will
air soon on National Geographic
Hi Vance, They are 3/4" thick, with some
thickness changes in some areas do to hot stamping them. I'm looking for
that data now so I can run some additional FEA work on Idabel for Karl when I
get a couple other projects finished. Steel plate grain direction may
also be a factor. The previous FEA work done for Karl some time back, had used
a perfect 3/4" thickness through out, and a pretty large element size.
Depending on the size of the assembly, and the number of different materials
in the assembly, I can pars a pretty small element size with my current CAD
computer, which in turn will produce more accurate results. I'm getting ready
to switch over to Windows 64 Bit XP, so I can increase my CAD computers RAM to
8 Gigs. Then I can run much larger assemblies with out having to leave it to
pars all night, then just crash near the end of it. "They were built using HY-100 steel rather than HY-80 steel which is what previous
classes had used."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seawolf_class_submarine
"HY-80 is a high
yield strength (minimum of 80 ksi) , low carbon, low alloy steel with nickel,
molybdenum and chromium. It has excellent weldability and notch toughness
along with good ductility even in welded sections. "
http://www.suppliersonline.com/propertypages/HY80.asp
Regards,
Szybowski
To:
personal_submersibles@psubs.orgSubject:
Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] Jurassic Shark will air soon on National
Geographic
Date: Wed, 7 Jan 2009 07:24:10 -0500
From:
vbra676539@aol.comHY-80? Any idea
how thick? Thanks for the update.
Vance
-----Original
Message-----
From: Brent Hartwig <
brenthartwig@hotmail.com>
To:
PSUBSorg <
personal_submersibles@psubs.org>
Sent:
Tue, 6 Jan 2009 8:31 pm
Subject: RE: [PSUBS-MAILIST] Jurassic Shark will
air soon on National Geographic
Hey Vance, Karl likes
an adventure so he might let you drive. You'll just have to ask him. I know
there are a couple areas where he dives that have some serious entanglement
issues, but he would be able to tell you were those are, so you can stay
clear. I only know of one veiwport failure on Idabel. The lower flat
window had at first a bad design and it caused the window to flex unevenly.
That was changed in the last refit. There were a couple other viewports
that failed in the C-BUG. One reason for those Karl said the conning
tower bases needed more reinforcement, so there wouldn't be as much flex as
there was. The conning towers will be upgraded in the C-BUG 102
model. The main
large dome window has another thinner dome over it the serves as a front MBT
and dome protector. So the scratches to the dome the guy talks about are on
the outer MBT dome. I'll have to double check my data when I get
on my other computer, but I pretty sure all three spheres are made from hot
stamped HY-80. I don't know about the connecting rings. All the weldments
were stress relieved twice.
Regards,
Szybowski
To:
personal_submersibles@psubs.orgSubject:
Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] Jurassic Shark will air soon on National
Geographic
Date: Sun, 4 Jan 2009 21:16:17 -0500
From:
vbra676539@aol.comThe narrator
is right (eventually!) about the shark's sensitivity to a sub's electrical
field. They just don't act like that normally. I've spent thousands of hours
underwater in subs and can count on my hands the number of sharks that I have
seen close up through a viewport. If they had hair, I'd suspect it would be
standing up like a static charge will do to a mammal. The light blinds them,
and the bait saturates their smell-o-vision, so I'd suspect the behavior
filmed is a result of that land critter that Karl talks about baiting with.
Otherwise, the sharks would be getting the heck out of Dodge, and
pronto.
They baited 6-gills off Bermuda for a couple of years, using a
Pisces to do direct observation, but they kept the sub back a bit. Then HBOI
ran into one, or rather it ran into them, a couple of years back, and had kind
of the same experience with the animal blundering around and hitting stuff.
Those folks were some rattled at the time, and maybe still are. Still, it
would be seriously cool to see those big dummies down there. And mostly you
ain't going to do it any other way except in the Stanleymobile.
What
worries me is that the web page says Idabel has had four port failures,
fractures large enough to spurt water onto the paying customers. I'd be
renting me some strain gauges and a test tank, if it was me. Something is
moving too much in there. It seems like I read that the forward sphere is
HY100 and the other two are something else. The only thing I know about that
is that the Navy refused to classify the old Deep Diver because of disparate
metals in the aft DLO compartment, and the sub never worked again in anything
deeper than about 300'.
Still, I'd love to see those sharks... Wonder
if Karl would let me drive?
Vance
-----Original
Message-----
From: Brent Hartwig <
brenthartwig@hotmail.com>
To:
PSUBSorg <
personal_submersibles@psubs.org>
Sent:
Sun, 4 Jan 2009 7:00 pm
Subject: [PSUBS-MAILIST] Jurassic Shark will air
soon on National Geographic
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