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Weather Satellites Pilots taking off from
the carriers uss Oriskany (CVA 34) and Constellation (CVA 64) can
be sure they will not run smack into a typhoon right after they are
launched. Reason for their certainty is the carriers' use of orbiting
weather satellites and an Automatic Picture Transmission (APT) system to make
use of the available weather data. The receivers, called readout
stations, are made up of four major components: An antenna control panel, used
to train the ship's antenna on the passing satellite; a receiver to pick up the
satellite's transmission; a tape deck, used to record the incoming signal and
store it on magnetic tape; and a facsimile unit, which reproduces the original
picture taken by the satellite's TV camera. The ship's receiver picks
up signals from two weather satellites, Essa II and Nimbus
II, both launched early this year.
A camera inside each satellite takes pictures of the cloud cover
below it, and this information, in the form of a radio signal, is relayed to
the APT stations aboard the carriers. Essa II orbits the earth
once every hour and 53 minutes, 31 seconds, at an altitude of 750 nautical
miles. Its pictures cover an area 1700 nautical miles wide. Nimbus
II, which is in a slightly lower orbit, incorporates an infrared system so
it can take pictures at night as well as in daylight. The satellite's
position is radioed to the ship each day by the National Weather Satellite
Center in Suitland, Md. Shipboard aerographers use this information to
determine when the satellite will be in receiving range, and then, by means of
the directional antenna, track its course. Each of the satellites is within
receiving range three times a day; one, on an overhead pass, gives the picture
of the ship's immediate operating area, and the other two cover the areas to
the east and west. Once the weather pictures are received and
reproduced, they are "gridded" by adding latitude and longitude lines. Then
they are given to the forecaster/analyst who uses the weather maps in his daily
forecasts. When Oriskany and Constellation pilots take
off, they know what kind of weather they are getting into.
Seventh Fleet
Communications
An important element in any naval operation is fast, effective
communications. The over-all commander of the operation often is far removed
from his deployed forces, sometimes by hundreds or even thousands of miles.
Yet, he must keep, in constant touch with these forces, be kept up-to-date
on their movements, and be able to relay to them any late information or
changes in plans that might be required. This basic need for
communications is nowhere more apparent than in uss Oklahoma City (CLG
5), flagship for Commander U.S. Seventh Fleet. To communicate with the
forces in the Western Pacific area, this guided missile cruiser-flagship
carries one of the most modern communications complexes ever placed on board a
naval ship. Some 180 major pieces of communication equipment handle
the thousands of messages sent daily to and from Commander Seventh Fleet.
This equipment ranges from flaghoist and semaphore, among the oldest forms
of naval communications still in use, to the most up-to date cryptographic,
teletypewriter and radio equipment available. More than a dozen
radioteletypewriter machines are in continuous operation, carrying data to and
from the 175 ships of the Seventh Fleet, as well as keeping the flagship in
touch with Pacific Fleet headquarters in Hawaii, and command activities in the
continental U.S. Seventh Fleet ships and shore stations are only
minutes away from the flagship, thanks to these communication circuits. This
was amply demonstrated off the coast of Vietnam in August 1964. Less than 20
minutes after the destroyers uss Maddox (DD 731) and Turner Joy (DD 951)
reported being attacked by North Vietnamese torpedo boats in the Gulf of
Tonkin, the Fleet commander was reading the message report more than 2000 miles
away. Messages within the Seventh Fleet normally are relayed through
the shore communications stations located at Guam, the Philippines, and Japan.
However, ships such as the major communications relay ship uss Annapolis (AGMR
1) are providing a further extension of command into areas where there are no
shore-based facilities. Other communications improvements have taken
place aboard the flagship itself. A constant voice radio-telephone circuit
allows the Fleet commander or members of his staff to hold conferences with
task force commanders who are miles apart on the high seas. The
communication crew also maintains 10 tactical voice circuits. When the various
Fleet units are engaged in operations such as shore bombardment, amphibious
landings, or anti-air warfare protection off the Vietnam coast, the number of
voice circuits often increases to 17. It takes more than 20 officers
and 165 enlisted men to handle the communications job aboard Oklahoma City.
Understandable, since she claims to process more messages than any other
warship in history.
Sea Survival Course Is Rugged But Popular The
mission was rough, but successful. Now, you're heading home. All's
quiet and serene on the horizon, a setting in distinct contrast to the bursting
flak surround ing the plane above target. It's a relief to know there're only a
few miles left to fly before sighting the carrier, so you settle back and
absorb the impressive vastness of the ocean below. Suddenly, the jet's
instrument panel glows red - a loss of oil pressure. Your speed rapidly
decreases. The engine flames out. The radio doesn't respond. The ultimate
decision. . . eject! This possibility is faced by all our naval
aviators flying sorties over Vietnam. Some of them encounter the
experience. To prepare the pilot for such a circumstance, whether in war or
peace, the Naval Aviation Schools Command at Pensacola places special emphasis
on its Sea Survival course. The student practices freeing himself from
a parachute harness in water and boarding various life rafts. In full
flight gear, he slides down a 50-foot slanting cable into the water. The effect
is similar to a parachute landing. The trainee then releases himself from the
harness while being towed by boat at about seven knots. He must
then swim 300 yards from a whaleboat to an LCM and board it via its Jacobs
ladder. Once be has mastered the escape techniques, his final test is
bow to, remain alive. Four to five hours are spent in a PK2 one-man
life raft where the student uses survival equipment be became familiar with in
the classroom. He prepares fresh water from the sea using a de-salting kit and
solar still and uses signal mirrors, day and night flares, shark chaser and dye
markers. This training, coupled with man's natural instinct of
self-preservation, increases the pilots' confidence in their ability to survive
at sea should ever it become necessary to ditch or eject over water.

Faces in the Fleet...

On and Under the Sea...(Left) And in the
Air Navy...(Right)

GET TOGETHER - uss Jason (AR 8) is joined
by uss Agerholm (DD 826) and uss Shields (DD 596) for family
portrait. For Jason's skipper, Captain George Metze, USN, it was a
nostalgic occasion; he's seen service on all three ships.
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