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Wednesday, June 4, 2014

CREW OF BRITISH SUBMARINE ALMOST DIED IN 140F WHEN AIR CONDITIONING MALFUNCTIONED - AC system got clogged with crabs and barnacles

This is a nuclear submarine. 

Daily Mail - Astonishing close shave revealed by retired Commander Ryan Ramsey.   He was sailing HMS Turbulent away from the United Arab Emirates in the Indian Ocean in 2011.
HMS Turbulent - Photo SWNS - Daily Mail

The astonishing near-miss was revealed three years on by retired Commander Ramsay, 44, who described it as the biggest crisis he faced in 25-years' service. 

'Walking around the boat I saw true fear in my crew's eyes', he says.  'People were crying - it was all about survival.'

The knock on effect of losing the air conditioning also meant other vital systems had begun to fail - but the boat was still able to dive.

Commander Ramsay said the incident began at 10.30am on May 26, 2011, three hours after Turbulent had left Fujairah in the United Arab Emirates.
 
The boat was surfaced and the decorated officer was on the bridge when he received word the air conditioning units had failed.  Soon afterwards the first of dozens of 'pipe' sounds - signalling a casualty - rang out.Commander Ramsay arrived in the sailor's cabin to find him crying and shaking, clearly suffering from heat exhaustion.
 
Within hours almost every free space on board the 275ft submarine had become a makeshift sick bay.  
 
Commander Ramsay, a married father of two from Plymstock, Devon, said: 'I came down below and I was met with this incredible blast of heat.  I genuinely thought there was going to be a loss of life on board. People were going to die. People were just collapsing everywhere, many at their work stations.  We had casualties in the control room, the engine room, the bridge, the wardroom, cabins, and the toilets and showers.  It was absolutely terrifying, and I'm not afraid to say I was scared.
 
'I remember looking at a picture of my family quickly thinking "we need to pull through this".  Walking around the boat I saw true fear in my crew's eyes.   I saw genuine concern because we simply did not know how we were going to get through it.  I felt like the world was against us. I was looking up and asking "when are you going to give me a break to gain the upper hand here?" People were crying - it was all about survival.'
 
Commander Ramsay had never heard of a similar malfunction and to make matter worse his repair crews could not get close enough to the faulty equipment because it was too hot to touch.
With a fifth of this staff now ill he ruled out a return to Fujairah and instead ordered two of the submarine's hatches to be opened to vent some of the heat. 
 
A number of the casualties were taken outside but with the air outside measuring a sweltering 42 degrees there was little respite.
 
The knock on effect of losing the air conditioning also meant other vital systems had begun to fail - but the boat was still able to dive.  Sinking to a depth of more than 200 metres, the temperatures finally began to drop.  Just 24 hours later, with systems all returned to normal and the crew having recovered, HMS Turbulent continued on with its deployment.
 
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