16in Turrets: What Do All 77 People Do?

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Battleship New Jersey

Battleship New Jersey

Күн бұрын

This episode is a deep dive into the various jobs inside the ship's main battery.
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Пікірлер: 522
@IstasPumaNevada
@IstasPumaNevada Жыл бұрын
You know, I bet with lots and lots of takes and some camera trickery, you could make it look like there are 77 Ryans manning the entire gun turret simultaneously. :D
@ghost307
@ghost307 Жыл бұрын
I think the camerawoman would have nightmares if she saw 77 Ryans.
@nightfury1318
@nightfury1318 Жыл бұрын
Do it.
@silverpairaducks
@silverpairaducks Жыл бұрын
​@@ghost307 or wet dreams
@RuralTowner
@RuralTowner Жыл бұрын
With clips of all of them trying to speak over one another per station cluster...
@maxcaysey2844
@maxcaysey2844 11 ай бұрын
That would be so cool!
@dabsyy
@dabsyy Ай бұрын
My left ear really enjoyed this.
@mustang5132
@mustang5132 3 күн бұрын
I’m only watching with my left earphone in. Should I try with just the right?
@robertlian2009
@robertlian2009 Жыл бұрын
This is how we generally manned in the 1980’s. TO booth: no talkers, no local range Keeper operator, no range Finder operators. Just one sight setter, no other positions except on occasion a check sight officer at a sight pointer position. The reason for sights on both sides of the turret is because of where your LOS is in relation to the LOF. The TO had the job to designate which sights were to be used. 0:02 😊 Gun rooms as you said. Electric deck as you said. We generally did not have an electrician assigned, although we often needed one. (It was an ongoing battle with engineering dept.) Shell decks: We only manned one deck at a time. from a practical standpoint I don’t see how you could ever man them both at the same time. The upper deck hoists have a door that is lowered into the floor so the shells can be smoothly parbuckled into the hoist. If you were to move shells into a hoist at both levels at the same time I don’t believe you could then move that door out of the way so the shell from the lower deck could move up the hoist. Powder deck as you said.
@olivialambert4124
@olivialambert4124 Жыл бұрын
Great to have things verified/tweaked by a first hand account. Love the added detail, it really helps to understand the logic behind it all.
@johnthomas2485
@johnthomas2485 Жыл бұрын
Which BB were you on?
@robertlian2009
@robertlian2009 Жыл бұрын
@@johnthomas2485 BB 62 Turret Two Officer October 1981 to November 1984.
@robertlian2009
@robertlian2009 Жыл бұрын
@@MrJedi5150 There are six gypsy heads in each shell deck , one by each projectile hoist and three opposite the hoists. You have 4 parbuckling teams. One for each hoist, and one team that moves projectiles from outer storage to the inner ring. The team moving projectiles from the outer to inner ring has the hardest job, as it requires a senior PO to ensure that when the inner ring is moved the correct shells are in front of all three hoists at the same time. (Learned that the hard way!). Sometimes this team will use a pulley block to put the parbuckling line in the best place. The gypsy heads have slip clutches that are designed to move the 2700 lb AP’s with up to a 15 degree list of the ship.The polished steel deck is coated with mineral oil which of course reduces friction considerably. The hoist teams are just two men. The parbuckling line has a hook at one end. The hook is connected to a pad eye near the bottom of the hoist, then around the projectile below the rotating band, and two turns on the gypsy head. The second man disconnects the lashing chain and steadies and guides the projectile by holding onto the nose. If you have loaded the inner rotating ring properly the shell doesn’t have to move very far to enter the hoist. The hoist doors are spring loaded so once the shell moves through the doors it’s not going anywhere but up and out the barrel.
@spvillano
@spvillano 11 ай бұрын
@@robertlian2009 didn't know the mineral oil coating, but it makes sense both from a friction and spark control. But then, I never was very trusting of comp B. The Forestfire wouldn't have escalated so badly, save for those leaking, unstable, thin skin comp B bombs that were on deck. (For those unfamiliar, Comp B, properly known as Composition B is a formable ("plastic") explosive that's 60% RDX and 40% TNT (subtract 0.5% of each to leave 1% for paraffin wax to stabilize it). When not properly stored or it gets ancient, the RDX degrades and becomes sensitive. Sensitive explosives are just evil. C-4, which is Composition C-4 (the 4th generation of C composition explosives) being 91% RDX and infamous for turning brown when ancient or improperly stored and well, ever see Star Trek TOS, when a red shirt kicked a rock and it blew up? Yeah. I saw Comp B leaking wax once, called EOD and nobody flinched, as when I called EOD, it was bad.) Curious though, wasn't fire control direction and ranging fed by radar as a preferred mode? If so, how did the radar data get sent to the computer? Oh, Army, retired here. Dec '81 to Dec 2009. Just started hurting too much to keep putting all that crap that kept me alive on in the morning. Huge respect for anyone working a gun that fires rounds with a 2 km danger close!
@Sleep-is-overrated
@Sleep-is-overrated Жыл бұрын
I work over at the USS Pampanito SS-383 museum in SF, it’s fascinating to see that it’s takes pretty much the same amount of crewmen to operate the whole turret system, as it does to operate our submarine
@JoshuaTootell
@JoshuaTootell Жыл бұрын
I have a small attachment to the Pampanito since she A: has virtually the same powerplant as my last ship (the Fairbanks) and of course B: Staring in one of the best naval documentaries ever 😂
@Whatsinanameanyway13
@Whatsinanameanyway13 Жыл бұрын
Approximately similar tonnage as well from what I've read. Not belittling the Pampanito in any way, would love to check out the museum some time, just pointing out how unbelievably massive the Iowas' turrets are.
@TheTransporter007
@TheTransporter007 Жыл бұрын
Pampanito? I do believe her real name is *THE STINGRAY!* 😅
@TheTransporter007
@TheTransporter007 Жыл бұрын
@@JoshuaTootell I came here to say this. 😂😂
@Eric_Hutton.1980
@Eric_Hutton.1980 Жыл бұрын
@@TheTransporter007 The real SS-161 was USS S-50.
@Jolclark
@Jolclark Жыл бұрын
I'd love to see 77 volunteers standing in their spots
@ROBERTN-ut2il
@ROBERTN-ut2il 10 ай бұрын
Back in the Sixties, the Royal Artillery was hosting a conference of NATO gunners. Part of the program was demonstrations out on the ranges of all teir various types of weapons. One of these was their 105mm Pack Howitzer. After it's performance, a German colonel raised his hand, "I understand what everyone does, except for the man who just stands at attention about 10 yards behind the piece and does nothing else. What is his purpose?" His British hosts looked at each other in confusion and had no idea. He stood there because the drill manual said he should. "We'll have to get back to you, Herr Oberst". The next morning, as the conference got going for the day, they announced they had the answer. He was there to hold the horses, of course.
@kasauerkrautimgulasch
@kasauerkrautimgulasch 7 ай бұрын
​@@retiredbore378In the 60's the Bundeswehr would probably no longer have any horses and why should the German know this if he wasn't already in the Wehrmacht? All that tells me is that these Brits do things without question, which isn't very smart.
@johnmacdonald1878
@johnmacdonald1878 4 ай бұрын
@@kasauerkrautimgulasch They do a lot of odd things just because it’s a tradition. Like standing or changing guard at the Palace.
@paultreiber5597
@paultreiber5597 Жыл бұрын
I worked with a man who was a powder man. i can say that for his size and how old he would have been at the time those powder bags were nearly the same weight as him. That man well into his elderly years could stack hay bales better and faster then my college athlete cousin.
@nicholascarpenter6682
@nicholascarpenter6682 11 ай бұрын
My grandfather was a powder man. At a towering 5' 3" and 170 lbs I struggled to see how he could throw those bags all day long.
@jamesbond8608
@jamesbond8608 11 ай бұрын
I hope you are listening as I will be asking questions later?
@genespell4340
@genespell4340 9 ай бұрын
The elderly man probably had decades of experience hoisting hay Bales into place.
@genespell4340
@genespell4340 9 ай бұрын
​@@nicholascarpenter6682he was what was referred to in his youth as "stout". Vertically challenged and probably a bit bigger boned than the average 5 ft 3 in male. Also a bit more muscular.
@tumblevveed3586
@tumblevveed3586 9 ай бұрын
I’m 5.8 @ 130 lbs. I have pitched my fair share of alfalfa bales. I think those 110 lb powder bags wouldn’t be to bad since you don’t have to pitch them up several feet on the trailer to be stacked although being round with no handles might be a bit challenging in itself. At almost 40, I’d rather camp out in the electronics bay and let all the younger bucks pitch the powder but I’d still be capable of jumping in if the moment calls for it.😂
@didgerb72
@didgerb72 10 ай бұрын
My great uncle was a Royal Marine Colour Sgt on Hms Rodney. He was part of the Royal Marine 16" turret crew during WW2. Esp at Normandy. They fired so many rounds the breaches distorted..
@brianjarvis313
@brianjarvis313 3 ай бұрын
I just want to say, that I LOVE this channel. I grew up in RI, and visited Battleship Massachusetts many times. Sadly she is currently in a sad state of repair, and the last time I was aboard, she needed a lot of repair both above and below decks. Keep creating this content. It is very much appreciated!
@brandondimmitt8467
@brandondimmitt8467 11 ай бұрын
The fact hood was able to fire her guns while blown in 2 and going down vertically amazes me. All those young men killed in those turrets but had the heart to still fire a salvo before slipping beneath the waves.
@bobbyrayofthefamilysmith24
@bobbyrayofthefamilysmith24 10 ай бұрын
It was most likley the turret cooking off inside and the flames exiting through open gun breaches.
@TheTh903
@TheTh903 Жыл бұрын
I’ve been following this channel for some time and it has aged like a fine wine. Ryan speaks like teacher that everyone enjoys and each video this channel produces is always fascinating
@karelvandeschoor6313
@karelvandeschoor6313 10 ай бұрын
I'd rather say Ryan has aaalll theeee tiiiimeee iin theee woooorld......You feel like "when is he gonna say it " all the time.
@792slayer
@792slayer Жыл бұрын
Shellman Parbuckler. Sounds like a door to door vacuum salesman.
@terrylong8894
@terrylong8894 Жыл бұрын
Sounds like the name of a 19th Century con man.
@792slayer
@792slayer Жыл бұрын
@@terrylong8894 same thing, mate. Lol
@ghost307
@ghost307 Жыл бұрын
Sounds like a name intended to impress the women. How proud of you would your girlfriend be if your job was officially "guy who slides bullets around the floor with a rope'. 😂?
@792slayer
@792slayer Жыл бұрын
@@ghost307 honestly, she would probably be pretty stoked, lol. She's just that kind of lady.
@greendoodily
@greendoodily Жыл бұрын
I’d love to see a more detailed version of this that went through all of the positions from the spotters right through to the person who fires the gun, to understand the whole sequence of how the gun was aimed and fired.
@BeKindToBirds
@BeKindToBirds 8 ай бұрын
There are some period films that are used for training that explain everything. (This video includes tons of clips from that film, it's the black and white clips.)
@downedaviator
@downedaviator 10 ай бұрын
So complex and labour intensive. The advent of ship-borne guided missiles must have come as a blessing.
@nogoodnameleft
@nogoodnameleft Ай бұрын
Thank you for this demonstration, Ryan. So this was how the interior looked like for the poor 47 sailors lost in the destruction of Turret 2 on USS Iowa in 1989. All sailors on station in Turret 2 were killed. RIP.
@garrettbright6586
@garrettbright6586 29 күн бұрын
I was a G2 gunners mate on BB-63 during desert shield/storm. My GQ station was on the shell decks but I always wanted to be in the primer man’s spot for at least one shoot. According to my shipmate, he had “the best seat in the house”. When the gun fires, it recoils back ~6 ft right toward his face! Remember that when the gun elevates on the outside, its back end is dropping into the pit.
@legonaut001
@legonaut001 Жыл бұрын
I suspect that the duplication for sight setter, pointer, and trainer also has to deal with the required lead of targets. If the turret has to lead a target towards the port, the port side sight operators may have their line of sight to the target blocked by the turret itself, and vice versa for starboard.
@spvillano
@spvillano 11 ай бұрын
The computer calculates the elevation and lead. We also had one advantage over the Japanese fleet, radar direction. They aimed purely by sight, we had radar, so smoke and fog didn't degrade our accuracy. But, we denied Japan as many fleet battles as possible. Initially, due to a shortage of ships after Pearl Harbor, but later, because such wasn't necessary, as air power did the job far more effectively, with fewer casualties than a naval dogfight would've brought.
@danielbeck9191
@danielbeck9191 9 ай бұрын
Considering the massive amounts of money and time each world power dedicated to developing the fleets of battleships which they anticipated would be necessary, there certainly were not very many battleship-on-battleship match-ups in WW II, especially in the Pacific! @@spvillano
@matasa7463
@matasa7463 Ай бұрын
@@spvillano Plus, Japan had no answers. After Midway, they basically lost the naval battle, and it was a clean up operation from there on. They had to punch hard and win early, before the US production capacity ramped up to wartime levels, and get their wins through concessions. A victory at Midway, or destruction of fuel and repair facilities, as well as carriers at Pearl Harbour, could've done that for them... but most likely, the US would've kept the fight up anyways, and eventually outproduce Japan, even if at great costs.
@IconProduction01
@IconProduction01 Ай бұрын
My left ear loved this video.
@kickingitwiththekerofskys8476
@kickingitwiththekerofskys8476 11 ай бұрын
The job I wanted to do in the turret was the powder hoist operator. I became the Left Lower Powder Door Operator for Turret 3 instead. Another great video. Keep up the good work and sharing the greatest Battleship videos. And was, also, the greatest ship on which I served on.
@robstafford8306
@robstafford8306 Жыл бұрын
From the uk. That presentation was really informative. Not a Military person, but know a lot of people who have or are serving in our armed forces. As a civilian I struggle to get head around how the majority of those guys could be serving food/cleaning decks/ doing laundry one minute and the next they become part of a highly ‘efficient machine’ delivering the main purpose of the ship!
@jonathanbair523
@jonathanbair523 11 ай бұрын
They have 2 jobs... Normal day to day job, then combat job.. So sailing in friendly waters here in the states would be like going from California to Hawaii where they could be scrubbing the decks and just keeping the ship in good shape. Then when it is time for actions, they go to there battle stations like the guns.... That is what I understand tho like you I am not in the military.
@robstafford8306
@robstafford8306 11 ай бұрын
@@jonathanbair523 Jonathan, good point. Had a friend who was in the Royal Marines. While he did the full selection/training he was a bandsmen. But when it kicked off he was a highly trained medic.
@ephphatha230
@ephphatha230 Жыл бұрын
my left ear enjoyed this
@jayteegamble
@jayteegamble Жыл бұрын
660lbs (300kg) of powder shoots a 2700lb (1225kg) shell 1700mph (2750 km/h). It's basically throwing Toyota Corollas filled with explosives at targets.
@RememberTurret2
@RememberTurret2 3 ай бұрын
We never had a full crew for a turret manup . But we handled our jobs and did them very well ..my 47 Brothers were lost because of a bad chain of command and who's blood is on the hands of Moosesally and Kelly. Never forget
@sgtcote1
@sgtcote1 11 ай бұрын
I just toured my first Battleship, the USS North Carolina and I'm very thankfull for your detailed explanation of where all the crew were. As I live in New England, I'm hoping to tour the USS Massachusetts and New Jersey sometime soon. Being a USCG vet and a US Army vet I was honored to walk the decks of one of our amazing Battleships.
@richardfrye2592
@richardfrye2592 10 ай бұрын
As a fellow vet from VT when you go to Fall River, Ma you may want to take the time and visit the USS Joseph P. Kennedy Jr DD-850 which is also there. It is almost the same as the destroyer I was on as a FTG2 for 4 years. USS John R. Craig DD-885 that is now at the bottom of the ocean used as an artificial reef.
@jasoncarswell7458
@jasoncarswell7458 Жыл бұрын
4:37 - Ryan failing to conceal that he is actually a Terminator.
@DSiggy1
@DSiggy1 11 ай бұрын
I was assigned the IC/Gyro Room which was on the lowest deck and had only one way out, upward. I considered this billet as expendable since I had to destroy the system if instructed to. Unlike the Powder deck that had two ways of getting out.
@robertsmith4681
@robertsmith4681 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting, I often wondered what a complete "employment cycle" (for lack of a better term) would look like from beginning to end or something that large and complex, this plugs quite a few holes in my "missing knowledge". Thank you.
@squangan
@squangan 11 ай бұрын
All these people, multiplied by the number of turrets is mind boggling. Everything seems so solid and indestructible in the turret but it brings to mind when the HMS Hood blew up and only 3 people (I think) survived from that entire ships crew. It’s a very sobering thought.
@danielbeck9191
@danielbeck9191 9 ай бұрын
Apparently the secondary battery was hit by Bismarck, the shell going through the hull below the armor belt. That magazine exploded, causing the adjacent turret magazine to explode, cutting Hood in two. That hit would have been just outside of the powder deck of that turret. Hood sank very quickly, with less than a handful of survivors, as you have noted.
@clinthowe7629
@clinthowe7629 11 ай бұрын
What brave guys! there’s no way I’d want to serve in a dangerous claustrophobic metal can that could sink anytime, massive respect for these boys who protect us by putting their own lives on the line.
@jamesmterrell
@jamesmterrell 10 ай бұрын
Wonderful ships. Too bad they are gone. Thank you for keeping the BB-61 Class alive.
@trafficsignalman
@trafficsignalman 10 ай бұрын
All 4 BB 61s are museums. 61 is in LA, 62 right here, 63 in Honolulu, 64 in Norfolk. Apex of battleship design. Go visit one.
@ghost307
@ghost307 Жыл бұрын
Imagine the mad dash between your rack and your battlestation on the upper shell handling level when GQ is sounded. That's a whole lot of ladders to climb while the clock is running...along with being one of several dozen sailors going through the door at the bottom of the turret.
@spvillano
@spvillano 11 ай бұрын
I'd render the ship NMC, due to slamming my head on hatch tops, preventing them from sealing again. ;) Probably why I stayed Army. Well, that and people didn't try to shoot me with shit that could chase me around.
@turretman1st
@turretman1st 9 ай бұрын
It was!!!! there was only two entrances to turret 2 one under the rotating turret, another thru hatches from 2nd deck down ladders to the magazines by the at the bottom of the turret at the powder deck. had 4 minutes to do it. hit the top of an armored hatch 1Inch steel did not make my station in time as was found knocked out at the hatch, laying on the deck by the person who had the job to secure the hatch.
@FIREBRAND38
@FIREBRAND38 Жыл бұрын
Great video. It makes me want to renew my question of how the turret crews were trained by the Navy in WW2 and then when the Iowa class ships were recommissioned. I mean, I never heard of the Navy having a 16 inch gun turret on land at a naval base to allow trainees to learn the drills and practice them. That would mean, however, that turret crews would have to be trained in the turrets of their assigned ships. For the recommissioning that begs the question who did the initial training? And when replacements came in as people left how did they get trained?
@johnmacdonald1878
@johnmacdonald1878 4 ай бұрын
Probably the same way Navy always trained gun crews. On the job from the bottom up. On board by senior crew.
@FIREBRAND38
@FIREBRAND38 4 ай бұрын
@@johnmacdonald1878 Maybe so, however I just find it hard to believe that back when battleships were the capital ships of the Navy that there wasn't a complete turret and magazine built on land at a Training Facility to initially drill guncrews _before_ they reported to their ships. I've never heard of any facility like that in Naval history, though. When the Iowa class ships came out of mothballs how many of the senior crew knew how the turrets worked?
@danielbeck9191
@danielbeck9191 9 ай бұрын
Very nice explanation of the various duty stations within the turret. Thank you!
@Flintlock1972
@Flintlock1972 Жыл бұрын
I just back from visiting USS Wisconsin over the weekend, number one turret's house was open and there was a video display inside that explained the internals of the turret. Unfortunately, there is no entrance into the turret beyond that point due to oil and grease that still needs to be cleaned up. But, now I can explain to my wife what the different seats we saw are. I would not want to be in any one of those positions, it reminds me of being inside of a tank and I was trained to kill tanks in the Army so I never felt comfortable to be inside anything like that. Thank you for the video and one day I will get up to New Jersey.
@spvillano
@spvillano 11 ай бұрын
I visited the New Jersey not long after she arrived in Camden. A lot wasn't open yet. Still, just viewing that armor thickness impressed me with the sheer immensity of power that it took to shove it around! And those main guns had a danger close range for troops on the ground of 2 km. That's around one and a quarter miles from impact where you have a fair chance of getting killed if exposed and closer, to survive, you'll need a battalion of angels protecting you.
@Kevin-lo7se
@Kevin-lo7se Жыл бұрын
Thanks for all the work it took to put this video together!!!! It was great!!!
@russellgough7801
@russellgough7801 Жыл бұрын
Looking forward to finding out what those very high-ranking foreign (I think Australian) officers do in a US battleship turret 🙂!!
@Masada1911
@Masada1911 Жыл бұрын
Just doing an allied nation visit I expect
@dazzamac70
@dazzamac70 Жыл бұрын
It was taken in 1986 on the USS Missouri during the Royal Australian Navy's 75th Anniversary Naval Review in Sydney. The Rear Admiral is Sir David Martin who was a very much respected (and loved) Naval Officer who then moved on to become the Governor of New South Wales before he died from Asbestosis. The Vice Admiral is Michael Hudson (Chief of Naval Staff). The officer in the background is Rear Admiral Ian Knox who was the Flag Officer Commanding HM Australian Fleet.
@richardflanagan6357
@richardflanagan6357 Жыл бұрын
The civilian in front is the Australian Minister of Defence at the time Kim Beazly
@stuartmidgley1
@stuartmidgley1 Жыл бұрын
Who went on to be Australia's Ambassador to the United States from 2010 to 2016.
@garbo8962
@garbo8962 Жыл бұрын
Aussie have one of the most important jobs on the ship. To make sure they do not run out of Foster beer.
@tonydugal5275
@tonydugal5275 5 ай бұрын
Ryan, I’ve watched many dozens of your videos and loved them all. But, this video is the best! Thanks.
@roncalverley
@roncalverley Жыл бұрын
A very interesting episode! Thank you Ryan!
@eliasthienpont6330
@eliasthienpont6330 Ай бұрын
I always worked in the ship's bakery. I did not have a separate general quarters station, because I was not ship's company: I was assigned to the air squadrons, my shoulder patch read "VF 161". So I just kept the crew fed as best we could. Each embarked squadron provided two cooks, and any number of mess cooks. Ships company personnel ran off to their GQ station, and we stayed behind to feed the ship.
@localcrew
@localcrew 11 ай бұрын
My gf and I love visiting naval shipyards. We saw the North Carolina and we thought it was pretty cool. The thing that struck me was that like two thirds of the personnel on board were devoted to the big guns. Of course, we were all up in the turrets & stuff. It’s amazing. Maybe we can check out the New Jersey one of these days. Until then - I just subscribed!
@matthewbeasley7765
@matthewbeasley7765 Жыл бұрын
In the explosion on the Iowa, some of the men on the powder flat managed to escape from the bottom of the turret, so it wasn't all of those in the turret.
@idontcare9797
@idontcare9797 Жыл бұрын
Did the men in turret 2 powder magazine survive? Iam guessing that they did otherwise the magazine would have gone up
@matthewbeasley7765
@matthewbeasley7765 Жыл бұрын
@@idontcare9797 I'm unclear on how many. There are multiple stops to prevent turret explosions from making it to the magazines. First are the doors at the top of the elevators. The explosion took at that one for sure. The second are the doors at the bottom of the elevator. I think those were damaged and some fire got out. The third is the pass throughs between the powder flat and the powder passing ring. It didn't get in there for sure. The fourth is the pass throughs from the passing ring to the magazines. Crew in the passing ring and magazines got out for sure. As you note, if it got in the magazine, the whole ship would have been lost.
@PostalWorker14
@PostalWorker14 8 ай бұрын
Used to keep doors open in combat in WW2 very dangerous
@SomeRandomHuman717
@SomeRandomHuman717 6 ай бұрын
No one in Turret 2 at the time of the explosion survived. The annular space shown by Ryan between 3:03 and about 4:12 is a narrow compartment that separates the adjacent magazine spaces from the powder flat, which is at the bottom level of the rotating turret assembly. There were powder men in the annular space and the magazines, and as soon as they realized that an explosion had taken place inside the turret, evacuated up the vertical ladder trunks to decks above. The first people to enter the lowest deck (aka powder flat) of Turret 2 saw several dead sailors lying very close to the hatches that seal off Turret 2 from the annular space. These sailors were trying to make their way to the hatches to escape but were overcome and died from inhaling the poison gas created by the explosion and the combustion of the modern-era polyurethane sleeves encasing the powder bags (see video at the 18:50 mark). Turret 1's Turret Officer was one of the first to enter Turret 2 from the bottom, and he saw several powder bags smoldering and off-gassing. It appeared that the powder flat crew decided to have the magazines send in all of the powder needed for that day's planned shoot, and they had stacked up the powder bags around the powder flat, which seemed to be a HUGE safety violation. Another HUGE safety violation observed was that the powder flat crew never connected the ship's fire main to the turret fire main----you can see what that is supposed to look like at the 4:45 mark of the video by noting the coiled but connected fire hose on the deck as the sailors in the training video enter the powder flat.
@adrianking8538
@adrianking8538 Жыл бұрын
Off topic question for you Ryan. I am from the UK and was wondering what your opinion is off the war graves off HMS Prince of Wales and HMS Repulse wrecks being totally salvaged by third parties destroying the war graves and how protected are American war graves in the pacific having the same impact on them??
@handymandev03
@handymandev03 Жыл бұрын
Personally anyone who messes with a war gave should suffer the full ramifications of that country.
@jpotter2086
@jpotter2086 Жыл бұрын
Sounds like an episode for a naval channel ...
@wastelander89
@wastelander89 Ай бұрын
Thanks for making theae videos and thanks for all the time and effort in making the content. Thanks for another great video. I love learning about ww2 ships. I love American warships and im not able to visit battleship nj yet .i do live in nj i hope i can visit her sometime soon. Im really thankful that you make videos of the ship so we get to see the ship its so cool Its amazing how much cooperation you need from many sailers just to operate one barrel. Men from the powder room to the shell room to the range finders to the shell loaders plus the commanders and officers. Its so amazing getting so many men to cooperate and stay in time to the system keeps moving smoothly.
@rossbabcock3790
@rossbabcock3790 4 ай бұрын
Great video! All of this series has been informative and entertaining. Ryan, it's good to see you getting much more comfortable with the camera.
@KodakRose
@KodakRose Жыл бұрын
one of your best great work as always
@abobymous
@abobymous 3 ай бұрын
Really great info on how complicated it must have been to operate the guns. Thank you for what you do!
@frisk151
@frisk151 9 ай бұрын
Thanks for a great piece of coverage on WW2 turrets
@soloosu1789
@soloosu1789 5 ай бұрын
My father served during WWII as a gun captain in turret number one of the Battleship Washington.
@zeedub8560
@zeedub8560 Жыл бұрын
The primer setter was cheerful-looking. That looks like a good job for me.
@JackThelRipper
@JackThelRipper 11 ай бұрын
Few years back me & the family were in Gulfport on vacation, but had to drive thru Alabama around Mobile and swung in to see the USS Battleship Alabama and do the self guided tour, it was worth every penny, if your a history guy or gal or a ship person then this is a must see! The ship was amazing and massive and they also have a submarine on the premises that’s included with your ticket and was very cool! So if your ever in a area where one of the remaining Battleships rest and your allowed to walk around & explore on your own, then do it!
@peteleoni9665
@peteleoni9665 6 ай бұрын
You have inspired me to find somewhere that they explain how these turrets work and why they needed so many men. Thanks
@richjg3049
@richjg3049 Жыл бұрын
Great video, thank you
@huibertlandzaat1889
@huibertlandzaat1889 9 ай бұрын
You made a very nice and interesting video. Thank you for upoading.
@Dave_Outside
@Dave_Outside 2 ай бұрын
I participated in a complete battery alignment on that ship back in the 80s. I think it was. When it was in Long Beach. That was a pain in the butt. Took about a week at night all night. I actually had to climb up and lay on top of those 16 inch gun breeches. lol.
@davidschick6951
@davidschick6951 Жыл бұрын
I believe I would have been qualified to be a medical corpsman in sick bay. Turret Captain actually used to be a rating of its own. My uncle was a Gunner's Mate 2nd Class then struck for and got Turret Captain 1st Class (TC1c) and then Chief Turret Captain (CTC). I believe he was a Chief on USS North Carolina. I know he later went Warrant Officer as Gunner and then was commissioned Ensign and eventually made Commander. I wish I'd really known him.
@saltydawg1793
@saltydawg1793 4 ай бұрын
In Iowa in the 1984 commissioning, we counted close to 100 people manning the turret because we counted the magazine people. As you noted, with time we began to use less people. We probably never used the pointer and trainer positions in either side of the gun house, or if we did it was only on one side. We never used the range finders in TII and TIII.
@selastester1977
@selastester1977 9 ай бұрын
Very interesting. Great video, subscribed!
@kevinstonerock3158
@kevinstonerock3158 Жыл бұрын
With the reduction in turret manpower I can’t help thinking it might be at least a partial cause for the turret explosion on Iowa. It’s been my experience in manufacturing jobs that when management tinkers with man power levels they fail to take into account the hidden tasks that aren’t readily apparent. When a position is taken away there’s confusion about who has each responsibility or task as the operation progresses. I’m thinking somewhere in the process there’s missing steps between cleaning the barrel and the order to fire. If due to a missing member it delays the normal order of operations then it exposes a vulnerability of an open breach. I’ve also learned that when you’re trained to follow a certain sequence you naturally follow it due to mental and muscle memory. When there’s a change in sequence someone may naturally revert to the previously learned sequence unintentionally. This would be especially dangerous with explosives or nuclear applications but could also be hazardous in even mechanical situations. Probably the only way to determine this is to observe the turret crews from the past and compare them to the crews of the explosion era and see if a step is possible to be missed. You’d also have to look at sequence by rates of fire as well. I think Iowa was at training level staffing, were they not? It would be nice for the crewmen being blamed to have closure and hopefully be exonerated. Great video Ryan even if it is rather technical.👍
@fukkitful
@fukkitful 3 ай бұрын
I seen a video recently covering the incident on the Iowa. The most likely cause was the powder being over-rammed and/or to fast. The rammer being new along with no way to limit the rammers speed when switching between a shell and powder bags.
@BrettonianKnight
@BrettonianKnight 4 ай бұрын
my left ear LOVED this. shame my right couldn't
@btmonz8383
@btmonz8383 4 ай бұрын
Your thumbnail picture is very cool! It includes RADM Sir David Martin(Royal Australian Navy), later governer of the Australian state of NSW, Kim Beazley (then Australian Defence Minister) and Vice Admiral Micheal Hudson (then Australian Chief of naval staff) on board the USS Missouri in 1986. RADM Martin was one of the most popular governers we had in NSW, but sadly, he died of mesothelioma in 1990, which he contracted due to asbestos exposure earlier in his naval career. Asbestos lagging was used as insulation around steam pipes on ships in our navy back in the day.
@Floods-uy6tl
@Floods-uy6tl Жыл бұрын
That thumbnail has the crew addressing (then) Australian Defence Minster Kim “Bomber” Beazley They called him Bomber because he was famously interested (obsessed) with military hardware lol Great video as always
@trafficsignalman
@trafficsignalman 10 ай бұрын
My uncle was a plank owner on BB 61 in 1943 to his dying day, he loved that ship. Seeing this video makes you realize just how dangerous these ships were for their crews.
@kplante7881
@kplante7881 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing…!
@haljames624
@haljames624 Жыл бұрын
Thank you.
@bobm2331
@bobm2331 9 ай бұрын
Ryan, I'm the corpsman waiting outside the turret for a med call. Great video, well done Sir.
@williesnyder2899
@williesnyder2899 11 ай бұрын
The “parbuckle,” a great old rope technique from the days of bringing cylindrical objects up a ramp onto a ship. If a cool word fits, use it!! Great episode here!!
@paulbeaney4901
@paulbeaney4901 Жыл бұрын
What a feet of engineering. That turret weighs almost the same as a ww2 destroyer, with almost the same crew compliment. Amazing.
@hawkmoon419
@hawkmoon419 11 ай бұрын
I remember crawling into that last position on the port side of one of the forward turrets of the USS Massachusetts and looking through the periscope. Very cramped even when I was a kid.
@SteamboatWilley
@SteamboatWilley Жыл бұрын
It's incredible just how labour intensive these ships were to operate. I think if you were to build a battleship today, most of the shell handling would be automated.
@andrewr2650
@andrewr2650 Жыл бұрын
I’m sure they could have reduced some of it, but part of the resilience of the design is that the mechanisms used are isolated and relativly simple. Additionaly all the sailors act as fuzzy logic points to deal with any issues that might arise in the handling process. If the whole thing was automated, it would be much easier for 1 failure to take down an entire turret.
@Heidelaffe
@Heidelaffe Жыл бұрын
@@andrewr2650 You could easily automate the entire loading process and therefore lose most of the crew involved. As each turret would still need three independent systems this risk is clearly trumpd by the benefits. My guess is that you could operate a modern version with maybe 10-15 people in a safer, more comfortable environment and the results would be even better.
@glennmcgurrin8397
@glennmcgurrin8397 11 ай бұрын
I was thinking the powder door 3 people seemed entirely extra, if you did this at all recently it would be a button the person who pushed the powder in would push to close and they would open automatically, which would still be incredibly simple mechanisms. If you did it today you might required two buttons so you ensured no hands were ever caught and crushed without needing a somewhat more error prone in combat system to detect hands where they shouldn't be, just require both hands ho,ding in the buttons and you then know they can't be reaching in.
@nicksivert5431
@nicksivert5431 Жыл бұрын
Wow. Very complex and informative. The movie Battleship left *MOST* of that out. lol.
@williestyle35
@williestyle35 7 ай бұрын
(1:42) Thank you and cudos to Ryan and Battleship New Jersey, for mentioning the turret explosion on the USS Iowa. It is shameful piece of US Navy history that they tried to blame on the actions of one enlisted man, not the slightly more complicated truth (probables include ; the powder bag tearing or being "over rammed", stress of the extended training cycle the crew was on, over zealous "testing" of the main guns use and range by the gunnery officers, even bad mixing when the powder bags were "reloaded" for use after reactivation, etc...). This is a great video description of what the sailors did when manning the main gun turrets.
@c.hundley9714
@c.hundley9714 8 ай бұрын
I can't stop watching these! I have to wonder about the climate inside while firing.
@adcjj
@adcjj 6 ай бұрын
My favorite position…ice cream tester in the Wardroom!!😂
@keithrosenberg5486
@keithrosenberg5486 Жыл бұрын
There is the concept of "oh bog, the ship is sinking!" to give a sailor a little encouragement to get out of the turret.
@phillipgraves248
@phillipgraves248 Жыл бұрын
My father was a Turret Officer on the port side fwd 5in turret aboard the Mighty Mo in the early 50's, so that's where I would be.
@gradystegall4911
@gradystegall4911 11 ай бұрын
There are only two ways into the turret. One is through a hatch at the back of the turret gun house, entered from the main deck. The other is down a vertical ladder 4 decks to the powder flats. The guys on the projectile decks had to go down four and up two to get to their stations.
@larryperry2094
@larryperry2094 18 күн бұрын
Never underestimate yourself or others. When you're backed against the wall and everything is on the line you will find a way to get the jobs done. Failure is not a option.
@baronpen
@baronpen Жыл бұрын
I would not be able to carry the powder bags. I literally would not be able to physically lift them at 110 lbs - that's over 2/3 of my weight (I'm about 160). As for what job I'd like to do, I think it would be cool to operate the shell hoist or the rammer.
@JoshuaTootell
@JoshuaTootell Жыл бұрын
I'm 150 😂
@PeterG1975
@PeterG1975 Жыл бұрын
I’m 170 lbs and I couldn’t lift that amount even when I was young.
@KennyCnotG
@KennyCnotG Жыл бұрын
I was able to lift the 110lb training bags onboard during my last visit without too much trouble at an out of shape 190, in shape im more 180, but I also have worked manual labor the majority of my life so 110 isn't much higher. A big part of it is just getting lots of training/exercise in on all your small supporting muscles/core/flexibility, and also learning how to use your whole body to move the things. Give it a few months time & honest effort & i bet all of you could do it :)
@Internutt2023
@Internutt2023 Жыл бұрын
Back in my 20's, I often bought 1/2 barrel's of beer for parties, which weighed at least 160 lbs full, and I carried them myself, sometimes up to 100 ft from a car to the barrel of ice where they would be chilled in. I only weighed 160~170 lbs, so, its not impossible, but its definitely a young man's posting to take on that task.
@Melody_Raventress
@Melody_Raventress 7 ай бұрын
My right ear loved this.
@johnparker221
@johnparker221 Жыл бұрын
A very interesting video!
@TJeffersonForPresident2024
@TJeffersonForPresident2024 9 ай бұрын
I wish we had real combat footage from the battleship operations in Guadalcanal or Surigao Strait with these guys under fire and working as hard as possible to get their shells fired. It must have been epic.
@HoodandBismarckswetpowderbags
@HoodandBismarckswetpowderbags Жыл бұрын
Great video. I know it's a stretch but I'm sure there are some volunteers that could have filled in as 'extras' as a demonstration. At least at each level so you wouldn't need all rought 80 people. Just a thought. I know that is easier said then done. Great video as always. Thanks!
@cmcb7230
@cmcb7230 Жыл бұрын
So the Iowa turret explosion killed the sailors way down there at the bottom of the turret? For some reason I always though it was confined to just the upper portion of the turret.
@us-unclesam6566
@us-unclesam6566 8 ай бұрын
Reminds me oy '67-'68, at PNSY, when job was pocking the holes clear in the sprinkler piping. Pipe was galvo steel and rusted beyond repair
@fire304
@fire304 Жыл бұрын
So I'm curious on what the site setters do. In the big picture what information are they putting into the firing solution. Also how to the pointers know where to aim, they don't have sights or anything.
@rogerwachal3718
@rogerwachal3718 10 ай бұрын
Great video,I had no idea,it took so many men to do this. when watching war movies,now I'll be looking at them differently
@andrewm3210
@andrewm3210 10 ай бұрын
This really puts the movie Battleship into perspective haha.
@ChrisSzulwach
@ChrisSzulwach Жыл бұрын
Is it me or audio is only on left channel?
@bumblebeebob
@bumblebeebob Жыл бұрын
Left channel for me, as well.
@Masterman274
@Masterman274 Жыл бұрын
Windows has a mono audio option if anyone watching wants to do that
@JoshuaTootell
@JoshuaTootell Жыл бұрын
Working with headphones
@mykofreder1682
@mykofreder1682 Жыл бұрын
How did the people on the lower level on the other side of the blast proof doors get blown up in the turret explosion? And you have other isolation of munitions from the source of the explosion that also didn't work, about all you can say is the magazine didn't go up.
@robertsmith4681
@robertsmith4681 Жыл бұрын
I assume that even though the hardware survived relatively unscathed, the soft and squishy men did not fare so well from the overpressure.
@kevinkilleen6375
@kevinkilleen6375 Жыл бұрын
Was it a design flaw? Was it a work around to hurry things up? Or were the crew killed from the concussion or vacuum?
@robertsmith4681
@robertsmith4681 Жыл бұрын
@@kevinkilleen6375 I assume just plain overpressure, it would only take a spike of a few PSI tot really mess up a man's lungs in an enclosed space, for example.
@SomeRandomHuman717
@SomeRandomHuman717 Жыл бұрын
I don't know if there is an official account, but based on the book "A Glimpse Of Hell," the sailors in the upper decks of the turret (gun house, electrical deck and maybe shell decks) were victims of blast and fire, while sailors in the powder flats (bottom deck of the turret) were victims of smoke and poisonous fume inhalation. The sailors working outside of the turret in the annular spaces (the place where Ryan started the video) survived with relatively minor injuries, some from poisonous gas inhalation when they entered the powder flats after the last explosion. There were at least two secondary explosions reported after the propellant bags ignited in the center gun room. All the safety features in the world aren't going to help if the people that are supposed to use them don't. For example, many of the compartments and deck levels have strong doors to isolate them from each other, but if no one bothers to close the doors, they aren't going to protect anyone or prevent the propagation of blast, fire, and fumes. There were supposed to be enough OBAs (Oxygen Breathing Apparatus) for each turret duty position, but if they are not there, or not working, they're not going to help anyone.
@markzarraonandia6975
@markzarraonandia6975 9 ай бұрын
As a Veteran of the USS Iowa BB-61 - Turret 2. I held the following jobs. 1) Powder Man - Left 2) Shellman 3) Parbuckler 4) Local Control - Rangefinder Operator Remember the Iowa 47
@whatever8282828
@whatever8282828 Жыл бұрын
I think we're missing the right-side audio track
@andrewbarrigar178
@andrewbarrigar178 11 ай бұрын
Thanks for making the comparison to the NC class ships. I’m more familiar with BB55
@charlestoast4051
@charlestoast4051 Жыл бұрын
Great video. Didn't seem to show loading the shells into the breach, tho it must be the same rammer as used to insert the powder. I'm visiting the Massachusetts in a couple of weeks, hope to get a turret tour.
@HoldenOversoul
@HoldenOversoul 11 ай бұрын
Yes, it is. The shell cradle and spanning tray are that folded up device you see close to the end of the video when ryan is in the gun pit. The shell comes up into the folded up cradle/spanning tray. The cradle operator unfolds the cradle/spanning tray into the open breach of the gun, rotating the projectile to horizontal, and the rammer man rams the project into the breach. The rammer man then retracts the rammer, the powder elevator doors open and three bags roll out. The cradle operator and the gun captain push two bags forward and one bag back while the powder elevator changes position to release the other three bags. Those are lined up and the rammer man slowly rams all six bags into the breach. Breach is closed. Wham! See a decent video here: kzbin.info/www/bejne/g4W6kKumgJKHrcU
@TheHylianBatman
@TheHylianBatman Жыл бұрын
Really highlights how much of a group effort it was. Kinda wish I could see it in action!
@ghost307
@ghost307 Жыл бұрын
There's a good training film on it on several KZbin channels.
@TheHylianBatman
@TheHylianBatman Жыл бұрын
@@ghost307 Thanks! I'll have to look that up!
@georgewolfiii1170
@georgewolfiii1170 9 ай бұрын
What a high-quality video.
@user-mr8ij8gi7c
@user-mr8ij8gi7c 4 ай бұрын
Except that there is no audio for right ear in this video. My Bluetooth was only playing right ear till I disconnected, and I thought there was NO sound for a while.
@docsnavely1010
@docsnavely1010 Жыл бұрын
The periscope sights are duplicated for the same reason rangefinders have two sights, to provide binocular vision and therefore more accurate range estimations (look at the FC rating badge for an historical example). They likely weren't manned in the 80s because range finding was dramatically improved with radar and therefore manual options were left for contingency only.
@Jesseingham
@Jesseingham Жыл бұрын
It's really cool to see what duties all the sailors performed inside each of the batteries!!! Did they use the main hoists to transfer shells back and forth from the shell decks; would there ever be a need for them to transfer the shells between the shell decks? Also, was the projectiles loaded into the magazines from Broadway, or was there another way to load the shells (more efficiently)? 😊
@earlyriser8998
@earlyriser8998 Жыл бұрын
sorry i missed this 2 days ago ! this was the best explanation I have ever seen Donated an extra $$
@DeliveryMcGee
@DeliveryMcGee 9 ай бұрын
On the question posed at the end, and Ryan's comment on not liking the tight spaces because difficulty of getting out: And I thought @TheChieftainsHatch 's "Oh bugger, the tank is on fire." bit was unsettling. 😱 My Vietnam veteran Green Beret father has always been clear about his distrust of crew-served weapons as a job (from infantry machine-gunner team on up to tanks and ships), and ... I see his point.
@420glass
@420glass Жыл бұрын
Great video. You all deliver awesome vids all the time. Your camera and sound folks do such a great job. I really enjoy all the great stuff on Battleship New Jersey channel. I will get the sometime.
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