Argentine Navy changes from rescue to "search" mission

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  • subdude
    Official Peon
    • Feb 2003
    • 682

    #1

    Argentine Navy changes from rescue to "search" mission


    By Associated Press November 17 at 11:42 AM
    BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — Argentina’s navy said Friday it has lost contact with a submarine off the country’s southern coast, but doesn’t consider it lost.

    The navy’s Twitter feed said that communications were lost Wednesday with the ARA San Juan, a German-built diesel-electric vessel with 44 crewmembers aboard.

    It said navy ships and aircraft were searching near the last known location of the vessel off the province of Chabut. It also said it was scanning all possible radio transmission frequencies for a sign of the San Juan.

    Navy spokesman Enrique Balbi told the Todo Noticias channel that there was no indication of problems from the submarine and said it couldn’t yet be termed lost.

    “It’s not that it’s lost, because to be lost, you have to look for it and not find it,” he said.

    Adm. Gabriel Gonzalez, chief of the Mar del Plata base that was the submarine’s destination, said the vessel had sufficient food and oxygen.

    “We have a loss of communications; we are not talking of an emergency,” he said.
    Last edited by subdude; 11-30-2017, 09:52 PM.
    SubCommittee member #0069 (since the dawn of time.....)
  • seaman hornsby
    SubCommittee Member
    • Aug 2015
    • 575

    #2
    The U.S. Navy announced Friday it will deploy its P-8A Poseidon maritime aircraft to assist in the search for the ARA San Juan, a missing Argentine submarine with 44 crew members aboard.
    Last edited by seaman hornsby; 11-18-2017, 08:50 AM.

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    • seaman hornsby
      SubCommittee Member
      • Aug 2015
      • 575

      #3

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      • Ralph --- SSBN 598
        Junior Member
        • Oct 2012
        • 1417

        #4
        Us to help search for lost submarine.
        There is an ad video but let it run and then a news article will start.

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        • southern or
          Junior Member
          • May 2014
          • 484

          #5
          Update: USN rescue assets deployed.
          The U.S. Navy has ordered its Undersea Rescue Command (URC) based in San Diego, Calif., to deploy to Argentina, Nov. 18 to support the South American nation’s ongoing search for the Argentinean Navy

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          • subdude
            Official Peon
            • Feb 2003
            • 682

            #6
            Not sounding good. Argentine navy says that a noise detected in the vicinity of the San Juan's last known location on the day it vanished was "consistent with an explosion".

            http://www.cnn.com/2017/11/23/americ...ine/index.html
            SubCommittee member #0069 (since the dawn of time.....)

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            • seaman hornsby
              SubCommittee Member
              • Aug 2015
              • 575

              #7
              I'm sorry for the loss of the Argentine Submarine ARA San Juan.

              Comment

              • seaman hornsby
                SubCommittee Member
                • Aug 2015
                • 575

                #8
                BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) — Water entered the snorkel of an Argentine submarine and caused one of its batteries to short circuit before the vessel went missing 12 days ago, a navy spokesman said Monday.

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                • subdude
                  Official Peon
                  • Feb 2003
                  • 682

                  #9
                  Now officially changed from a rescue mission to a search mission.

                  (CNN)The rescue operation to find a missing Argentine submarine has now changed to a search mission, navy spokesman Enrique Balbi told reporters Thursday.

                  Balbi said the navy had allowed nearly double the amount of time it would have been possible for the crew to stay alive if the submarine was under water. He didn't discuss what he thinks happened to the 44-person crew.
                  The search mission would involve a reorganization of the vessels and other assets that have been deployed, and the operation will continue until the submarine is found, he said.
                  http://www.cnn.com/2017/11/30/americ...ine/index.html

                  And from another site:

                  ANALYSIS OF ACOUSTIC DETECTION OF THE
                  LOSS OF THE ARGENTINE SUBMARINE SAN JUAN By Bruce Rule

                  An analytical review of all information released by the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization on the acoustic signal associated with the loss of the Argentina Submarine ARA SAN JUAN confirms the following:

                  That acoustic signal originated near 46-10S, 59-42W at 1358Z (GMT) on 15 November 2017. It was produced by the collapse (implosion) of the ARA SAN JUAN pressure-hull at a depth of 1275-feet. Sea pressure at the collapse depth was 570 PSI. The frequency of the collapse event signal (bubble-pulse) was about 4.4 Hz.

                  The energy released by the collapse was equal to the explosion of 12,500 pounds of TNT at the depth of 1275-feet. That energy was produced by the nearly instantaneous conversion of potential energy (sea-pressure) to kinetic energy, the motion of the intruding water-ram which entered the SAN JUAN pressure-hull at a speed of about 1800 mph.

                  The entire pressure-hull was completely destroyed (fragmented/compacted) in about 40 milliseconds (0.040s or 1/25th of a second), the duration of the compression phase of the collapse event which is half the minimum time required for cognitive recognition of an event.

                  Although the crew may have known collapse was imminent, they never knew it was occurring. They did not drown or experience pain. Death was instantaneous.

                  The SAN JUAN wreckage sank vertically at an estimated speed between 10 and 13 knots. Bottom impact would not have produced an acoustic event detectable at long range.

                  The open question is: why was no corrective action - such as blowing ballast - taken by the SAN JUAN crew before the submarine sank to collapse depth? According to Argentine Navy spokesman Gabriel Galeazzi, the Commanding Officer of the SAN JUAN reported a "failure" in the submarine's "battery system," The time of that report was 0730 on 15 November, assumed to have been GMT. Subsequently, the problem was reported to have been "fixed." The SAN JUAN intended to submerged and continued its transit north. The SAN JUAN pressure-hull collapsed at 1358 GMT on 15 November.

                  In the case of the loss of the US nuclear submarine SCORPION (SSN 589), hydrogen out-gassed by the main battery exploded at 18:20:44 GMT on 22 May 1968 incapacitating/killing the crew with an atmospheric over-pressure in the battery well estimated to have been 7-10 times the fatal value. The pressure-hull was not breached. This assessment was based on analysis of acoustic detections of the event and damage observed in pieces of the fragmented battery recovered from the wreckage at a depth of 11,100 feet by the US submersible TRIESTE, e.g., microscopic, spectrographic and x-ray diffraction analyses. (There was no flooding of the pressure-hull before the battery exploded.)

                  SCORPION lost power and sank slowly over nearly 22 minutes to collapse at a depth of 1530-feet at 18:42:34 GMT on 22 May 1968.

                  There is the possibility that a similar sequence of events occurred aboard the SAN JUAN. If the wreck is located and efforts are made to recover components, emphasis should be placed on the battery system.

                  The author of this assessment was the lead acoustic analyst at the US Office of Naval Intelligence for 42 years, analyzed acoustic detectors of the loss of the USS THRESHER (SSN 593) on 10 April 1963 and testified before that Court of Inquiry. The author expresses his appreciation to those who supported this assessment with research and calculations
                  May God grant them peace.
                  SubCommittee member #0069 (since the dawn of time.....)

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                  • seaman hornsby
                    SubCommittee Member
                    • Aug 2015
                    • 575

                    #10
                    http://www.cnn.com/2017/12/05/americ...ter/index.html

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