SSN711 Accident
Jan 16, 2005 at 11:02 AM Thread Starter Post #1 of 4

KYTGuy

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this is a note forwarded from a friend of the sender...

(Quote)
Sent: Tuesday, January 11, 2005 7:18 AM

Subject: SSN711

To All,

I thought that I would put out a note since a lot of you have been calling and writing to find out how things are and if I'm OK and what happened. If you hadn't heard, my boat hit a uncharted submerged sea mount at the highest speed we can go at about 500ft below the surface.

There were about 30 of us that were seriously hurt and unfortunately one of my shipmates didn't make it.

First off I am OK. I am pretty beat up with my entire left side and butt as one big bruise. My shoulder is separated and may require surgery. They will evaluate later this week. I am very fortunate that I hit the wall and didn't go down a ladderwell that was right next to where I hit. If I had gone down that, I would have got really messed up. I took a tremendous shot to my left thigh from something. If it had been slightly lower in the knee area it would have been really ugly.

But all in all I am in good shape. We hit it at about noon right after field day (where all of us clean the boat for several hours).

Thank God we didn't hit while we were doing this or it would have been much worse. We would have had flying deck plates through the air and such. Not good. As it was, it happened while chow was going on and most people were either sitting and eating or on watch. I don't remember much of the collision. People describe it as like in the movie the Matrix where everything slowed down and levitated and then went flying forward faster that the brain can process. My mind has blanked it out exactly what happened. Adrenaline kicked in and I have no real memory of how I got down to middle level or what I did immediately following. I helped carry several shipmates to the crew mess deck (adrenaline is a wonderful thing - my shoulder was wrecked and I had no idea until about 4 hours later). I sat with several of my junior guys that had bad head wounds and talked with them to keep them conscious until doc could see them. It seemed like an eternity but I'm sure wasn't that long. For those Navy folks that ever wondered why Chief's stomp around and preach "Stow for Sea" This was a perfect example. It definately saved lives.

I am extremely proud of the crew to do damage control, help the wounded and get the boat safely to the surface (for the boat guys we blew the tanks dry on the emergency blow but unbeknownst to us we were missing some ballast tanks/some didn¹t have integrity). The ship's control party did every thing exactly right even though they were hurt as well.

The Diving Officer of the Watch had just unbuckled his belt to update a status board and hit the Ship's Control Panel hard enough to break some of the gauges. To add insult to injury his chair came up right behind him. Several people were injured in the Engine Room Lower Level area. Lots of metal and sharp edges in the area as well as that's where the boat's smoking area is at. Several crew members are reevaluating that habit now.

Once again we got lucky in the fact that we had an extra corpsman onboard. One of our officer's was a prior enlisted corpsman that was a Fleet Marine Force medic so he was a Godsend for us. Our Corpsman did an outstanding job getting everyone stabilized and did the best he could for our fallen shipmate. I am surprised that he got him to hold on as long as he did. Our corpsman is definitely a hero in my book. He didn't sleep for 2 or 3 days. We finally put him down when the SEAL docs helicoptered in to help. Like I said, I am extremely proud of my crew and how they handled themselves. My Chief of the Boat was an inspiration of what a leader should be and my Captain was as well. My XO took out an EAB manifold with his back but still managed to help coordinate things. No matter what happens later, these men did a superior job under difficult circumstances. I am humbled by the entire crew's performance from the CO down to the Seaman that I was checking in two days before.

For those of you wondering, I am sure there will be an investigation into what happened and no I was not part of the navigation preps for this voyage. I work on the inertial/electronic navigation and interior communications part of my rate and didn't have anything to do with the conventional navigation part of it. I will be lending support to my comrades who were to help them prepare for the pending investigation.

I thank you all for you concern and appreciate your prayers not only for myself, but for my shipmates. We are doing well, we band of brothers and will pull through just fine.

Thanks,

Brian Frie

Chief Electronics Technician Submarines

USS San Francisco SSN 711

(Unquote)

...hit at top speed!!!!! Oh My!!...
 
Jan 16, 2005 at 4:09 PM Post #3 of 4
Wow. Those guys did a great job. Unsung Heroes.

I was in the Sub Service in the early ‘80’s and this definitely struck a chord:
“For those Navy folks that ever wondered why Chief's stomp around and preach "Stow for Sea" This was a perfect example. It definately saved lives.”

Even though you knew why they were barking about it all the time you’d have to say “lighten up Chief it’s not like were at war or anything”. That always set them off.


I’m always reminded of the thousands of our finest people doing an incredible job day in and day out, risking their lives for us with little or no thanks. It sure isn’t the pay that motivates these people.

Thank You!


Mitch
 
Jan 16, 2005 at 4:46 PM Post #4 of 4
braillediver: I am from a US Merchant Fleet experience...I can't possibly imagine what it was like to hit something that took them to a full stop in a yard or so...what a hit!!! I have been on some of the fastest of the merchant fleet, and I know that the subs are faster...I just don't know how much faster...(and we don't need to know) but I try to imagine how the ships I sailed on would handle a full stop in mere feet from full steam (around 40 Kt)...I am sure impressed that they had enough integrity to make it to the surface, let alone steam on home...On a merchant ship, some or all of the main machinery would have ripped from its mountings, sprung leaks, and sunk the engine room at the very least, with the loss of anybody on duty...

The boys in the Silent Service and their boats are junkyard dog tough!!!

In my later career, I had the honor to work with one of the Submariners, he was one of the best electricians I had ever had - he was head and shoulders above anyone else on the job, myself and the boss included.
 

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