| Career | |
|---|---|
| Ordered: | 15 January 1958 |
| Keel laid: | 28 May 1958 |
| Launched: | 9 July 1960 |
| Commissioned: | 3 August 1961 |
| Fate: | Lost during deep diving tests, 10 April 1963 |
| Stricken from US Navy's ship rolls: | 16 April 1963 |
| General Characteristics | |
| Displacement: | 3540 tons light, 3770 tons submerged |
| Length: | 279 ft (85 m) |
| Beam: | 32 ft (9.7 m) |
| Draft: | 26 ft (8.7 m) |
| Propulsion: | 1 Westinghouse S5W PWR, Westinghouse Geared Turbines 15,000 shp (11 MW) |
| Speed: | 20+ knots (37 km/h) |
| Complement: | 16 officers, 96 men |
| Armament: | Four 21-inch (533 mm) torpedo tubes amidships |
| Motto: | Vis Tacita (Silent Strength) |
She was named for a type of shark, which is harmless to man. It is easily recognizable because its tail is longer than the combined length of its body and head.
The contract to build the Thresher was awarded to Portsmouth Naval Shipyard on 15 January 1958, and her keel was laid on 28 May 1958. She was launched on 9 July 1960, was sponsored by Mrs. Frederick Burdett Warder, and was commissioned on 3 August 1961, with Commander Dean L. Axene in command.
On October 18 Thresher headed south along the East Coast. While in port at San Juan, Puerto Rico on 2 November 1961, her reactor was shut down and the diesel generator was used to carry the "hotel" electrical loads. Several hours later the generator broke down, and the electrical load was then carried by the battery. The generator could not be quickly repaired, so the captain ordered the reactor restarted. However, the battery charge was depleted before the reactor reached criticality. With no electrical power for ventilation, temperatures in the machinery spaces reached 60C (140°F), and the boat was partially evacuated. Cavalla (SS-244) arrived the next morning and provided power from her diesel engines, enabling Thresher to restart her reactor.
Thresher conducted further trials and fired test torpedoes before returning to Portsmouth on November 29. The boat remained in port through the end of the year, and spent the first two months of 1962 evaluating her sonar and Submarine Rocket (SUBROC) systems. In March, the submarine participated in NUSUBEX 2-62 (an exercise designed to improve the tactical capabilities of nuclear submarines) and in antisubmarine warfare training with Task Group ALPHA.
Off Charleston, SC, the Thresher undertook operations observed by the Naval Antisubmarine Warfare Council before she returned briefly to New England waters, after which she proceeded to Florida for more SUBROC tests. However, while mooring at Port Canaveral, Florida, the submarine was accidentally struck by a tug which damaged one of her ballast tanks. After repairs at Groton, Connecticut, by the Electric Boat Company, the ship returned south for more tests and trials off Key West, Florida. Thresher then returned northward and remained in dockyard for refurbishment through the early spring of 1963.
After an extensive underwater search using the bathyscaphe Trieste, oceanographic ship Mizar and other ships, Thresher’s remains were located on the sea floor, some 8,400 feet (2560 m) below the surface, in six major sections. The majority of the debris is in an area of about 134,000 m² (160,000 yd²). The major sections are the sail (the raised tower atop a submarine's main deck), sonar dome, bow section, engineering spaces section, operations spaces section, and the tail section. Deep sea photography, recovered artifacts, and an evaluation of her design and operational history permitted a Court of Inquiry to determine that the Thresher had probably sunk due to a joint failure in a salt water piping system, which relied heavily on silver brazing instead of welding; earlier tests with an ultrasound equipment found potential problems with about 14% of the tested brazed joints, most of which were determined to not pose a risk significant enough to require a repair. High-pressure water from a separated pipe apparently shorted out a nearby electrical panel, which caused a shutdown of the reactor. This casualty, in turn, led to subsequent loss of power and an inability to blow water from the ballast tanks fast enough to prevent the boat from sinking to a depth sufficient to cause a massive implosion. Death would have come instantly to everyone aboard. Over the next several years, the Navy implemented the SUBSAFE program to correct design and construction problems on all submarines (nuclear and diesel-electric) in service, under construction, and in planning. Apart from Scorpion, the U.S. Navy has suffered no further losses of the kind that ended Thresher’s brief service career.
The Navy has periodically monitored the environmental conditions of the site since the sinking and reported the results in an annual public report on environmental monitoring for U.S. Naval nuclear-powered ships. These reports provide specifics on the environmental sampling of sediment, water, and marine life which were taken to ascertain whether the submarine has had a significant effect on the deep ocean environment. The reports also explain the methodology for conducting deep sea monitoring from both surface vessels and submersibles. The monitoring data confirms that there has been no significant effect on the environment. Nuclear fuel in the submarine remains intact.
On April 11, at a news conference at 10:30 AM, the Navy officially concluded the ship lost.
Officers
Enlisted men
|
Enlisted men (continued)
Naval observers
Civilian engineers and technicians
|
United States submarine accidents | Permit class submarines | Lost submarines of the United States | Lost nuclear submarines
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"USS Thresher (SSN-593)".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world