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If you're referring to Sonar personnel such as myself, Sonar on most Fast-Attacks comprised of a division of about 12-15 Submarine Sonar Techs (STS). All Sonarmen were minimum 6 year enlistees, as Basic Sonar and Advanced Sonar typically took around 18 months from Boot Camp to their first afloat command. That included BT, Submarined School, Basic Sonar, Basic Electricity/Electronics, and Advanced Sonar Maintenance. A Sonarman's desired career path generally chooses which systems he'll train on for advanced training since FBM and Fast-Attacks typically have different systems, and they have different missions. For a true Sonar career, a Fast-Attack is the only real choice.

Sonar watch comprises several crewmembers, who are overseen by a Sonar Supervisor. The Sonar Sup is typically a 2nd or 1st class STS, and has been through advanced acoustic and sonar training, as well as having been a veteran of key deployments. Aside from the Contro Room personnel, the Sonar Supervisor is considered one of the most important underway submerged positions on the boat, being responsible for reporting the acoustic tactical situation to Control.

Under normal watch, Sonar was comprised of the Supervisor, Passive Operator (primary) Passive/Active Operator (normally run in secondary Passive on the Active console), Narrowband and Auxiliary systems Operators. Watch was rotated between personnel so ears remained fresh, and most importantly for coffee runs. For Battle Stations or Tracking Parties (key targets), typically senior Sonarmen were assigned to the main consoles in Sonar, while others were assigned to Damage Control duties. I was the Primary Passive Sonar Stack operator during Battle Stations on my boat for about 2 years, the key operator for the boat. "Hot Seat" doesn't even come close to a description during those days.

If you're referring to Sonar equipment, the Sturgeon class and its variants were initially outfitted with the BQS-11/12/13 Series Sonar suite and BQR-7 as its primary sonar systems. After upgrades, all boats were eventually outfitted with the BQQ-5 Sonar Suite, which was an Analog/Digital hybrid of the original BQS-13 system. The other significant upgrade was a retractable Towed Array - original boats had a fixed TA which had to be deployed by a support Mike boat when the boat left port, and manually hauled in by a support boat when it entered port. This limited a boat's port call choices. LA Class boats were outfitted with the BQQ-5 system from the start, receiving upgrades as time went on. The biggest difference between the BQS-13 and BQQ-5 is that the 13 system was primarily an analog system, with fixed Passive and Active consoles. The Q5 was a computer core driven system that could load any stack program into any one of the consoles, though the configuration was typically standard throughout the fleet based on previous BQS-13 layout.

Few jobs in the Submarine Force at the height of the Cold War were as cool and stressful as being a Submarine Sonarman on board a Fast-Attack. I experienced things before I was 30 that few people ever think about. My own cousin followed in my footsteps about a year after I joined the Navy - he was a Sonar Tech in my Squadron on another boat, and a good one to boot.

To give you an idea of what we were required to learn, aside from the electronics maintenance and repair aspect, I remember going to a class called "Enlisted Sonar Principles". Naturally, those of us who went figured it was going to be a gravy week. That was blown when we walked in and saw 2 notepads, a box of #2 pencils and a Math textbook. As it turned out, the course was how to perform by hand all of the oceanographic geometry and math calculations that the Sonar systems do automatically, accounting for all physics and enviromental variables. To this date it is the hardest course I have ever taken.

If you saw Hunt for Red October, it's not even close to reality as far as Sonar goes. Though I can't confirm or deny any events in Blind Man's Bluff (I'm still bound by security oath), I can say it's a "fairly accurate" account. While I and others of that era aren't happy with how the Submarine community has opened up some of its secrets, there is at least some material that my family can read to get an idea of what I used to do that I've never been able to specifically tell them about.

You should also Google AZORIAN or Project Jennifer, which are the names of the CIA sponsored project to raise the Soviet Golf II submarine K-129 using the Hughes Glomar Explorer. A DVD was released last week documenting the project, which took place in 1974. It shows you the lengths at which our nation was willing to go to maintain the acoustic edge over the Soviet submarine fleet.

If you're wondering, my old boat was USS RAY (SSN-653). Though now gone, it was then the most decorated boat in the Atlantic Submarine Fleet. You can see some pics on my bio page.

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Q: What was the name used in a US Cold War nuclear attack submarine for the sonar controller?
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What are weapons of nuclear submarine?

Modern submarines carry a wide variety of weapons. An example of a U.S. Navy Fast-Attack Submarine weapons capability includes: Homing Torpedoes (Active and Passive Sonar) Tomahawk Land-Attack Missile (Conventional and Nuclear) Tomahawk Anti-Ship Missile Harpoon Anti-Ship Missile Mines Ballistic Missile submarines can carry those weapons as well, but their primary mission is Nuclear Deterrence, and as such their main weapons are Submarine Launched Ballistic Missiles (SLBM's).


What is a sts1 in the us navy?

STS1 is my old rate/rank, and one of the best in the Navy if you're on a fast-attack submarine. The STS stands for "Sonar Technician (Submarines) - the 1 is the rank, for First Class Petty Officer. Submarine and Surface Sonar Techs have different rate designations, as their school training pipeline is different. Surface Sonar designation is STG, for Sonar Technician(Guns).


What does bats and submarine have in common?

SONAR


What is included in the product group Sonar Systems?

airborne, surface ship, and submarine-based sonar systems including depth-finding equipment, guidance hydrophones, sonabuoys, sonar fish finders, navigation and mapping sonar, and anti-submarine sonar equipment


What is the name of instrument use for locate a submarine?

sonar


Can you give me a sentence with the word in it sonar?

A submarine uses sonar, like a bat uses echolocation to see.


What is the Naval abbreviation for Submarine Sonar Technician?

The designation for my old rate is "STS", which literally stands for "Sonar Technician, Submarines". Yours truly was an STS1/SS during the top years of the Cold War. Check my bio page for pics. The Submarine Sonar community is an oddity in the Navy in that it is separate from the Surface Sonar community, though both share the same rate insignia and Naval lineage. Both have similar missions concerning ASW, but Submarine Sonar and Sonar Tech operations aboard a submarine are critical to submarine operations, whereas it's an ancillary function aboard a surface ship. The rate insignia is denoted by a pair of headphones. The surface equivalent, "STG", stands for "Sonar Technician, Guns".


Sonar is used to?

sonar is a device used underwater for locating submerged objects and for submarine communication by means of sound waves.


What did allies used against submarine attacks in World War 1?

sonar


What is a submarine detection system?

a system that detects submarines (under water boats) a sonar


What all are the differences between submarine and adolphin?

A submarine is a machine. It is made of steel. It has people walking around in it, and it runs on nuclear power.A dolphin is a little whale. It is made of dolphin meat. There are no people walking around in it, and it runs on the fish it eats.However, both of them navigate by using sonar and reading their depth and magnetic headings.


How does shutting off submarine engines affect sonar location?

There are several ways in which shutting down the main engines on a submarine (either the target boat or attacking boat) or a surface warship can affect the ability to locate a target with Sonar.The first thing taught at Submarine Sonar school is that the quietest submarine in the ocean is a Diesel-Electric boat running on the battery and its electric motor. Nuclear Powered boats obviously generate more noise (main turbines, engines, and reactor (steam noise), as well as the associated pumps, but submarine noise quieting technology has significantly decreased the range at which boats can be detected by another submarine.Submarine vs. SubmarineSubmarine on Submarine Sonar contacts are difficult at best, even with modern Sonar systems. Since virtually 99% of Submarine Sonar operations are Passive (acoustic signal reception only, not active echo-location and ranging, which is only used for final target range prior to a torpedo shot), and modern submarine acoustic quieting has significantly decreased the range at which they can be detected, shutting down the main engines and associated pumps cuts down most of the generated noise from a nuclear powered submarine. This effectively lowers the Sonar contact detection range to rock-throwing distance between submarines.Ocean Environment ExploitationOne of the key elements of modern Submarine warfare is the ability to use the ocean environment to strategic advantage against both Surface Warships and other Submarines alike. The ocean's sound propagation properties of the boat's current operating area are continuously monitored by Sonar, and provided in real-time to the Officer of the Deck, so that full use of the environment can be utilized if an enemy ship or submarine is in the area. This also allows Sonar to determine the best areas/depths for acoustic reception, and strategic use of the environment can defeat both passive and active Sonar sweeps by any means.Using the environment (e.g., depth and acoustic dead areas) in addition to cutting engine noise, can make a submarine virtually invisible to other submarines, surface warships, and also aircraft (fixed wing and rotor) using Sonobuoys or dipping Sonar.Surface Warships/ASW Aircraft vs. SubmarineSurface Warships and Anti-Submarine Warfare (ASW) aircraft using both active and passive Sonar methods are at a huge disadvantage right off the bat against any Submarine given how quiet modern boats are. Add in a boat's underwater speed and the ability to monitor and utilize the ocean environment to its advantage, and the Submarine already has a major strategic advantage. If necessary, shutting down the engines (on any type of submarine) and utilizing the environment to hide in, will render even modern ASW technology ineffective.