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Initial formation meeting:
June 1, 2008 at American
Legion Post #200 in Lake Elsinore, California.
Trieste Base Plankowners are:
Mike Bircumshaw, WD6
Commander
Dave Brown
Bob Cox
Dave Eisner
Jim Hayes
Bill Jonker
Keith Newell
Kent Weekly
Mike Williamson
See June 1, 2008 minutes for
more information
Base Charter
meeting:
Trieste Base received its Certificate of Charter dated July 20th, 2008 from Western District Six Commander Mike Bircumshaw. The base is located in Murrieta, California.
Kent Weekly was the first Base Commander.
Bathyscaphe Trieste I
Trieste was a Swiss-designed deep-diving
research bathyscaphe ("deep boat") with a crew of two people,
which reached a record-breaking depth of about 10,900 meters
(35,761 ft), in the deepest part of any ocean on earth, the
Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench, in 1960. The dive has
never been repeated, and presently no crewed or uncrewed craft
exists capable of reaching such depth.
Designed by the Swiss scientist Auguste Piccard and built in
Italy. The pressure sphere, composed of two sections, was built
by Acciaierie Terni, and the upper part was manufactured by
Cantieri Riuniti dell' Adriatico, Trieste; thus the name of the
vessel. The installation of the sphere was done in Cantiere
navale di Castellammare di Stabia, near Naples. The Trieste was
finally launched in 26 August 1953 in the Mediterranean near the
Isle of Capri. The design was based on previous experience with
the FNRS-2, also designed by Piccard and built in Belgium and
operated by the French Navy. After several years of operation in
the Mediterranean the Trieste was purchased by the U.S. Navy in
1958 for $250,000.
The Trieste consisted of a float chamber filled with gasoline
for buoyancy, and a separate pressure sphere. This configuration
(dubbed a "bathyscaphe" by Piccard), allowed for a free dive,
rather than the previous bathysphere designs in which a sphere
was lowered to depth and raised from a ship by cable.
At the time of Project Nekton, Trieste was over 15m (50 feet)
long, the majority of this was a series of floats filled with 85m (22,500 US gallons) of gasoline, and water ballast tanks at
either end of the vessel as well as releasable iron ballast in
two containers along the bottom, fore and aft of the crew
compartment sphere. The crew occupied the 2.16 m (6.5 ft)
pressure sphere, attached to the underside of the floats and
accessed from the deck of the vessel by a vertical shaft which
penetrated the float and ran down to the sphere hatch.
In the Trieste the pressure sphere provided just enough room for
two persons. It provided completely independent life support,
with a closed-circuit rebreather system similar to that used in
modern spacecraft and spacesuits: oxygen was provided from
pressure cylinders, and carbon dioxide was scrubbed from
breathing air by being passed through canisters of soda-lime.
Power was provided by batteries.
Trieste was fitted with a new pressure sphere, manufactured by
the Krupp Steel Works of Essen, Germany, in three
finely-machined sections (an equatorial ring and two caps). To
withstand the high pressure of 1.25 metric tons per cm� (110
MPa) at the bottom of Challenger Deep, the sphere's walls were
12.7 centimeters (5.0 in) thick (it was overdesigned to
withstand considerably more than the rated pressure). The sphere
weighed 13 metric tons in air and 8 metric tons in water (giving
it an average specific gravity of 13/(13-8) = 2.6 times that of
sea water). The float was necessary because the sphere was
dense: it was not possible to design a sphere large enough to
hold a person which would withstand the necessary pressures, yet
also have metal walls thin enough for the sphere to be
neutrally-buoyant. Gasoline was chosen as the float fluid
because it was lighter than water, yet relatively incompressible
even at extreme pressure, thus retaining its buoyant properties.
Observation of the sea outside the craft was conducted directly
by eye, via a single highly-tapered cone-shaped block of Lucite
(Plexiglas) plastic, the only transparent substance identified
which would withstand the needed pressure, at the design hull
thickness. Outside illumination for the craft was provided by
quartz arc-light bulbs, which proved able to withstand the
over-1000 atmosphere pressure without any modification.
Nine tons of iron pellet shot were taken on the craft as
ballast, both to speed the descent and allow ascent, since the
extreme pressures would not have permitted air-ballast tanks to
be refilled with gas at depth. This additional weight was held
actively in place at the throats of two hopper-like ballast
silos by electromagnets, so that in case of an electric failure
the craft would immediately rise to the surface.
Transported to the Naval Electronics Laboratory's facility in
San Diego, the craft was extensively modified and then used in a
series of deep-submergence tests in the Pacific Ocean during the
next few years, including a dive to the Mariana Trench, the
deepest known part of the ocean, in January 1960.
Trieste departed San Diego on October 5, 1959 on the way to Guam
by the freighter Santa Maria to participate in Project Nekton �
a series of very deep dives in the Mariana Trench.
On January 23, 1960, Trieste reached the ocean floor in the
Challenger Deep (the deepest southern part of the Mariana
Trench), carrying Jacques Piccard (son of Auguste) and
Lieutenant Don Walsh, USN. This was the first time a vessel,
manned or unmanned, had reached the deepest point in the Earth's
oceans. The onboard systems indicated a depth of 11,521 meters
(37,799 ft), although this was later revised to 10,916 meters
(35,814 ft), and more accurate measurements made in 1995 have
found the Challenger Deep to be slightly shallower, at 10,911
meters (35,797 ft).
The descent took 4 hours and 48 minutes before reaching the
ocean floor.[1] After passing 9,000 meters one of the outer
Plexiglas window panes cracked, shaking the entire vessel. The
two men spent barely twenty minutes at the ocean floor, eating
chocolate bars to keep their strength. The temperature in the
cabin was a mere 7-C (45-F) at the time. While on the bottom at
maximum depth, Piccard and Walsh (unexpectedly) regained the
ability to communicate with the surface ship, USS Wandank II
(ATA-204), using a sonar/hydrophone voice communications system.
At a speed of almost a mile per second (about five times the
speed of sound in air), it took about 7 seconds for a voice
message to travel from the craft to the surface ship, and
another 7 seconds for answers to return.
While on the bottom, Piccard and Walsh observed small soles and
flounders swimming away, proving that certain vertebrate life
can withstand all existing extremes of pressure in earth's
oceans. They noted that the floor of the Challenger Deep
consisted of "diatomaceous ooze".
After leaving the bottom, they undertook their ascent, which
required 3 hours, 15 minutes. Since then, no manned craft has
ever returned to the Challenger Deep. A Japanese robotic craft
Kaiko reached the bottom of the Challenger Deep in 1995. This
craft was lost at sea in 2003, leaving no craft in existence
capable of reaching these most extreme ocean depths.
In April 1963, Trieste was modified and used in the Atlantic
Ocean to search for the missing submarine USS Thresher
(SSN-593). In August 1963, Trieste found the wreck off New
England, 8,400 feet (2.56 km) below the surface. The bathyscaphe
was then retired and dismantled. The Krupp pressure sphere is
now on display at the Naval Historical Center, Washington D.C.
Her original Terni pressure sphere was incorporated into the
Trieste II, which also conducted some dives to the Thresher site
in 1964.
In 1966, the pressure sphere of the Trieste II was replaced by a
new sphere designed for work at 20,000 ft depth.
Bathyscaphe Trieste
II
Trieste II (DSV-1) was the successor to
Trieste - the United States Navy's first bathyscape purchased
from its Swiss designers. The original Trieste design was
heavily modified by the Naval Electronics Laboratory in San
Diego, California and built at the Mare Island Naval Shipyard.
Trieste II incorporated the original Terni sphere, built in
Italy but cast by the German, Krupp Steelworks, used in Trieste,
but suspended it from an entirely new float, more seaworthy and
streamlined than the original but operating on identical
principles. Completed in early 1964, Trieste II was placed on
board USNS Francis X. McGraw (T-AK241) and shipped, via the
Panama Canal, to Boston.
Commanded by Lt Comdr. John B. Mooney, Jr, with co-pilot Lt.
John H. Howland and Capt. Frank Andrews, Trieste II conducted
dives in the vicinity of the loss site of Thresher - operations
commenced by the first Trieste the year before. She recovered
bits of wreckage, positively fixing the remains as that of the
lost Thresher, in September 1964.
Between September 1965 and May 1966, Trieste II again underwent
extensive modification and conversion at Mare Island Naval
Shipyard, but there is no clear record that she was ever
operated in that new configuration, i.e., the addition of skegs
or outriggers on both sides of the sphere.
During that same time period work was under way on a third
configuration of the bathyscape. This work resulted in yet a new
appearance for the Trieste II, and included the installation of
a new pressure sphere, designed for operation to 20,000 feet.
As the bathyscaphe continued her operations as test vehicle for
the deep submergence program, she qualified four officers as
"hydronauts" - the beginning of a burgeoning oceanographic
operation. Trieste II's valuable experience in deep submergence
operations has helped in the design and construction of other
deep-diving submersibles which could be used in rescuing crews
and recovering objects from submarines in distress below levels
reachable by conventional methods.
This unique craft was listed only as "equipment" in the Navy
inventory until the autumn of 1969. On 1 September 1969, Trieste
II was placed in service, with the hull number X-1. Reclassified
as a deep submergence vehicle (DSV) on 1 June 1971, Trieste II
(DSV-1) continued her active service in the Pacific Fleet into
1980.
The Trieste class DSV were replaced by the Alvin class DSV, as
exemplified by the famous Alvin (DSV-2). The Alvin's were more
capable, more maneuverable, less fragile, but also could not
dive as deep, reaching only a maximum of 20,000 feet (for the
Sea Cliff (DSV-4)).
Trieste II is now preserved as a museum ship at the Naval
Undersea Museum, Keyport, Washington.
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