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Submarine escape training facility

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Facility used for training submariners in methods of escape from a sunken submarine

The outside of the Royal Navy SETT atFort Blockhouse

ASubmarine Escape Training Tower is a facility used for training submariners in methods of emergency escape from a disabledsubmarine underwater. It is a deep tank filled with water with at least one underwater entrance at depth simulating anairlock in a submarine. Since the 1930s, towers have been built for use by theRoyal Navy,US Navy,Royal Australian Navy and in several other countries.

Royal Navy SETT

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Divers in the SETT

The Submarine Escape Training Tank (SETT) is a 100-foot (30 m) deep facility primarily operated to conduct training withsubmarine escape equipment, operated by the Royal Navy.[1][2] The facility, located atFort Blockhouse,Gosport oppositeHMNB Portsmouth,[3] includes a fresh, chlorinated water column with a single escape chamber (as fitted to some classes of RN submarines) mounted at the base, through which students can conduct a fully representative escape cycle from 100 feet (30 m), closely replicating actions which would be required if forced to abandon a distressed submarine from depth. The SETT has its own dedicated boiler house to maintain its water temperature at 34 °C (94 °F).[3] The SETT was commissioned in 1954, with the first students trained in July of that year. Since that time completion of ‘the Tank’ has been a rite of passage for all RN Submariners. Training includes ascents from increasing depths as a major element, but in addition is underpinned by lectures and practical training in how to survive within a disabled submarine, operation of emergency equipment and survival techniques on reaching the surface – a package of potentially life saving skills. Over the years, the SETT has been used to train submariners from Italy, USA, Greece, Canada, Israel, Russia, Venezuela, Turkey, Australia and the Netherlands – with the staff and facility enjoying a worldwide reputation for excellence and good practice.[4] Owing to a combination of increased safety associated with modern submarine design, submarines operating in areas where escape would be impossible with current equipment and the risks associated with the conduct of training, the RN discontinued pressurised submarine escape training in March 2009.

The staff at SETT are drawn from the ranks of the UK Submarine Service. All members of SETT staff form part of the SMERAT (Submarine Escape and Rescue Advisory Team),[5] some members form the UK SPAG (Submarine Parachute Assistance Group),[6] and some form part of the UK contribution to the NSRS (LR5) Team.[7] All staff are trained in advanced life-saving techniques and diving medicine.

Other uses

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Top of the SETT pool

The tower was also privately hired to civilian diving clubs for the purpose of recreational diving and dive training. It was a popular 'novelty' dive amongst UKscuba divers since it allowed new trainees to extend their depth experience in a safe, controlled environment with good visibility and warm water temperature – two conditions that are in short supply in the UK. For similar reasons it was also used forfreediving training, with participants including world record-holderTanya Streeter.[8] In addition, the SETT has been used frequently for both underwater equipment testing, and to support media activity – notably hostingBlue Peter on a number of occasions, with some presenters completing ascent training. It has also been used frequently as a situation assessment trials tank (SATT) for technical divers.

US Navy

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US Navy escape towers were known as Escape Training Tanks. From the 1930s through the 1990s, they were used for training inbuoyant ascent, theMomsen lung, and theSteinke hood.

The ETT at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii

The tower on Sub-BasePearl Harbor was used between 1932 and 1983. The U.S. escape tower in Hawaii is not in use. The tower was also used to trainscuba equipped divers (SEALs) orUnderwater Demolition Teams to access or egress the submarine during special operations. The tower once located onNaval Submarine Base New London was in use between 1930 and 1994 and has since been razed.[citation needed] The Submarine Escape Trainer, a 40-foot (12 m) high, 84,000-gallon pool with twoescape trunks was constructed at New London in 2007.[9]

Other facilities

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Submarine Escape Training at Triton 12 in the Netherlands.

Similar facilities are operated by the Royal Australian Navy at theSubmarine Escape Training Facility atHMAS Stirling,[10] in Norway and Sweden, and in Turkey atGölcük Naval Base.[11] TheGerman Navy operates a 36-metre-deep escape training pool, built in 1977, at Einsatzausbildungszentrum Schadensabwehr Marine (Damage Control Training Centre) inNeustadt in Holstein.[12]

Triton 12 at swimmingpool Het Heersdiep
Triton 12, The Netherlands

Since 2013 there is a submarine escape training tank situated next to non-profit swimming poolHet Heersdiep inDen Helder, TheNetherlands. This tank is used by theRoyal Netherlands Navy and also by other navies from all over the world. The tower at Aquacentrum Den Helder can also be used by civilian diving clubs for recreational diving and dive training. It is also used forfreediving training and for fire brigade diving training.

TheSouth African Navy has a submarine escape training tank at the navy diving school at theSAS Simonsberg training unit inSimon's Town on the Cape Peninsula.

References

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  1. ^Elliott, D (1999)."A short history of submarine escape: The development of an extreme air dive".South Pacific Underwater Medicine Society Journal.29 (2).ISSN 0813-1988.OCLC 16986801. Archived from the original on 13 April 2009. Retrieved19 June 2008.
  2. ^House CM, House JR, Oakley EH (2000)."Findings from a simulated disabled submarine survival trial".Undersea and Hyperbaric Medicine.27 (4):175–83.PMID 11419357. Archived from the original on 11 August 2011. Retrieved19 June 2008.
  3. ^ab"Submarine Escape Training Tank". Royal Navy. Archived fromthe original on 31 May 2009. Retrieved22 June 2009.
  4. ^Callow, Ian (2006)."Submarine Escape Training". Archived from the original on 9 July 2007. Retrieved20 January 2011.
  5. ^"ATP-57"(PDF). NATO. Retrieved1 April 2011.
  6. ^"Submarine Parachute Assistance Group (SPAG)". Royal Navy. Retrieved29 March 2011.
  7. ^"NATO Submarine Rescue System". Royal Navy. Retrieved1 April 2011.
  8. ^Farrell, Emma (2006)One Breath: A Reflection on Freediving, photographs by Frederic Buyle, Pynto Ltd., Hatherley, UK:ISBN 0-9542315-2-X
  9. ^Howland, Robert (2 November 2007)."Construction Complete on Unique Submarine Escape Trainer at SUBASE New London". United States Navy. Archived fromthe original on 5 August 2012. Retrieved21 April 2011.
  10. ^Davidson, Jon; Allibone, Tom (2005).Beneath Southern Seas. Crawley, WA: University of Western Australia Press. pp. 165–9.ISBN 1-920694-62-5.OCLC 69242056.
  11. ^"Submarine Escape Training Tank". Turkish Navy. Retrieved22 April 2011.
  12. ^"Tauchtopf". German Navy. Retrieved28 April 2011.

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