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Пікірлер: 93
@JH-ot5mn2 ай бұрын
Watching this while on the toilet. Toilet inception.
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
Ultra reality!
@richardjohnson4365
2 ай бұрын
😅🤣😂
@johnslaughter54752 ай бұрын
Thanks, Paul. Good presentation. The reason there are officer and enlisted heads is because enlisted s**t stinks and the ossifers wouldn't appreciate walking into a stinky head. During my first cruise, my day job was swabbing the decks and cleaning the head in an officer's area. One time, I had to go, so, rather than take all the time to go to my berthing and then come back, I used one of the officer's commodes. One of them came in, saw my dungarees below the door, and had me write my name, service number and division on a piece of paper. He wrote me up. Fortunately, when it got to my Division, LT(jg) Bob Bergeron, he tore it up. We met a few years ago during a ship's reunion in SF. It was the highlight of my reunion. Bob was then in mid-stage Alzheimer's. He passed away about 4 years ago.
@mrkeiths482 ай бұрын
Nothing like being in Patrol Quiet and someone slams the stainless steel shitter door. Next thing you hear on the 1MC, " The next time I hear that shitter door slam, I will have all the doors removed." Shhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
@65gtotrips2 ай бұрын
One of ‘The Best’ reasons to become an officer on any Navy vessel.
@zxggwrt2 ай бұрын
Hey the COD invented the Squatty Potty 😂
@mikereinhardt48072 ай бұрын
At least you had a door giving you some privacy. Us Army guys had open bay latrines with five or ten thrones that could be used all at once. It was handy if you ran out of TP. All you had to do was ask the guy next to you to pass over his roll when he was done. Let's not even talk about field sanitation, cat holes and slit trenches and waste burning detail. Ah the fond memories of military service, how I wouldn't give anything to live them again. LOL!...
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
And a major reason many draft age men chose the Navy!
@randyogburn2498
2 ай бұрын
I don't know. Some older Navy ships had open, mulit-occupant heads too.
@markwilliams2620
Ай бұрын
@@randyogburn2498 The USS North Carolina still has the flush troughs that could seat 8 at a time. It wasn't unusual for some joker to light crumbled up newspaper and drop it at the water inlet and give the current users a hot bottom or unexpected Brazilian.
@bigsarge20852 ай бұрын
I got to tour USS Cheyenne (SSN 773) circa 1998 or 1999 when I was first in the Army and on exercises on Oahu. They told a bunch of us from Wyoming that if you were from the state or town that a Navy ship/boat was named for you had preference for a tour if it was in port, so we all went! We pointedly DIDN'T get to use the head (nor enter the reactor compartment). 😄
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
NOBODY ENTERS THE ENGINEERING SPACES!!!! 😢😮😂
@BB12659
2 ай бұрын
@@paulfarace9595 Snipes have been off limits for years. My dad had a similar story. While in the Pacific he heard that the USS Pennsylvania was in port, he requested a visit, and it was granted. He met several friends from his hometown of Reading. They compared notes since he was on a destroyer (Radford 446).
@earlyriser89982 ай бұрын
never seen the detail procedure. But did see the movie when the Niuses were informed how to use the head. Operation Petticoat as I recall.
@stevewindisch74002 ай бұрын
I couldn't make heads or tails out of that, but thank you for sharing your throne room with us. Many years ago pleasure boats had a similar rig (before the laws against direct discharge), using the same kind of manual rocker arm pump but no air tank pressure. Its 3 valves had to be manipulated in sequence and it was a nightmare. Also, the through-hulls were a common fail point that could lead to sinking. All in all pumping out at a honey barge is much safer and better for the environment.
@billkallas17622 ай бұрын
I spend the night on the Silversides in 1978 or 1979, with my son, when it was in Chicago.
@Name-ot3xw2 ай бұрын
I'm sure I missed our host mentioning it, but I recall that one of the U-Boats sunk due to a poorly executed flush.
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
Yes you missed it...
@Name-ot3xw
2 ай бұрын
@@paulfarace9595 Told you so.
@patalexander19652 ай бұрын
Knowing about the Head is a pretty smart thing!You sure know your business when in comes to the use of a Head down under. 👍
@jaylayne-jy2hn2 ай бұрын
The USS Monitor turret and guns and other artifacts are located at the Mariners Museum In Newport News Virginia.
@richardjohnson43652 ай бұрын
Always wondered about this... Worthy of watching on the Throne😂
@BELCAN572 ай бұрын
As the neck with it ! I'm volunteering for "Tin Can" duty !!!! Great video.
@FrancSchiphorst2 ай бұрын
@21:30 perfect "rijsttafel" Well done Paul! :D
@lelandkelley21992 ай бұрын
Monitor turret is at the Mariners Museum in Newport News Virginia.
@robertroth2872 ай бұрын
Thank you for fulfilling my request for a video on this topic. I must say my head is full of interesting facts.
@billclarke59162 ай бұрын
"That did happen on some boats where the officers were jokers" Well that's one descriptor for them.
@robertporterfield95782 ай бұрын
Very informative. Never served aboard a boat with an air expulsion head. Even so, there were from time to time "accidents" with the gravity flush heads.
@The_DuMont_Network2 ай бұрын
Either booby trapping the flapper valve or leaving the can full and pressurized, or getting the sequence wrong, you could end up sitting on a column of water and detritus at sea pressure. We called it the "submariner's bidet" or "diver's douche". Hilarity reigned. I, of course, never participated in such shenanigans, I heard it from a shipmate.
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
Yea... we believe you😅
@The7humpwump2 ай бұрын
It was a true mark of saltiness to spend time on the crapper wearing an EAB at test depth. Many stories of blowing sanitary tanks and some NUB getting sprayed with the contents when someone forgot to hang the chains in the head. Interesting that the stainless steel bowls look the same as what we had. Rather than a flapper there was a ball valve that dropped your deposit in a San tank below which, when full, was pressurized with air to discharge overboard. If you used the toilet when the tank was pressurized the results were pretty ugly.
@jrmotorsports55322 ай бұрын
Those very important little things that you don't think about.
@briansaxton89732 ай бұрын
I wonder if that is the origin of “shit storm”
@peterharband3262 ай бұрын
Thanks for the "Heads up" Paul. Good info buddy.
@michaelyounger44972 ай бұрын
Paul, this video is for Shots and Giggles😮. Still, important to document how everything works since the knowledge will be lost in time. On a lighter note, I would love to see a video about working a simpler mechanism than the head.. how about the TDC?
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
In time!
@scottrok132 ай бұрын
Let’s get a nice tight slow Zoom on that toilet bowl😅😂🎉🚽
@tattmanndann2 ай бұрын
better video than ryan's hot seat
@nerodcs30872 ай бұрын
probably the most important video he every made!
@donfrank44292 ай бұрын
This is great talking about "shit"!!!!
@davidneel83272 ай бұрын
There is a classic scene in Operation Petticoat about using the head.
@xbubblehead2 ай бұрын
Took me about five years after I left the Navy to learn to say "close" instead of "shut".
@larrydemaar4092 ай бұрын
If you have problems on the toilet in a sub, is that considered a headache?
@user-cm8co5nx4k
2 ай бұрын
🥴
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
Ba-dump TING!!!! 😂
@jeffsr83002 ай бұрын
Thank you, great job,,,I think.👍👍🇺🇸🇺🇸
@Ganiscol2 ай бұрын
You got to take good care of the sailors intake and outlet - good food and good sanitary facilities make sailors happy!
@davidstrother4962 ай бұрын
That was very interesting, now I can see why there are some stories about toilet horrors on submarines. I do have a question though. Were the holding tanks for the gravity flush toilets big enough to contain the waste for an entire patrol, or did they also have a procedure for emptying them while underway? If so, was there a manual of emptying for the tanks as well?
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
Not that big. I'm told they were blown about two or three times week on patrol.
@The_DuMont_Network
2 ай бұрын
The blown tank had to be vented afterward, so you wanted to blow it while surfaced, and vent overboard. Venting the sanitary tank inboard was quite unpleasant.
@stevepotthast4911
2 ай бұрын
@@The_DuMont_Network Venting the tanks inboard was done through charcoal filters so most of the time it wasn't noticable.
@mikepelland441Ай бұрын
Great video, one of you best.
@haunter_18452 ай бұрын
This videos shows that on a WWII fleet submarine, S hitting the fan is a real and legitimate possibility.
@Russojap22 ай бұрын
Very interesting! 👍
@kevinkoepke83112 ай бұрын
Never knew how they worked, thanks. But I could tell you how to use the head on the space shuttle.
@exsubmariner2 ай бұрын
On occasion you would get a blockage between the trap and the gravity tank we would have to plastic sheet the whole of the head with the door's closed and back blow the sewage tanks this would result in many gallons of crap coating the inside of the head space the job of clearing out fell to the greenhornes
@b1laxson2 ай бұрын
@06:40 ahahah.... look at the size and number of the bolts on that baby compared to your at home!
@stevehall50002 ай бұрын
did you seriously give us a virtual swirley
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
Blame Evan!
@BB126592 ай бұрын
Paul, thanks for this. Have you ever heard of the red toilet? I'd never heard of it until a few years back. Asked my dad about it, (W.W.II) vet, and he said he'd never heard of it either. Seems the seat was painted red for those that had contracted a venereal disease. I know, seems like an antiquated thought, but in the 1940s medicine was still in an experimental state, especially regarding the transmission of VD. Probably on larger vessels as a sub couldn't accommodate such an inconvenience.
@jawharpist
2 ай бұрын
They were called "The Hot Seat" Several videos on KZread about them.
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
Yes it was a thing on surface shops. Woth only three enlisted heads on a sub it wasn't practical.
@BB12659
2 ай бұрын
@@jawharpist Thanks!
@JoshuaTootell
2 ай бұрын
USS New Jersey channel has a video about it filmed from on the USS Kidd (I think).
@BB12659
2 ай бұрын
@@JoshuaTootell Thanks!
@allmac75042 ай бұрын
I’ll just wait till I’m home thanks
@randyogburn24982 ай бұрын
Did Cod have a connection to pump sewage ashore when she was docked?
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
Absolutely no need! Until 1972 when the EPA made overboard discharge on the Great Lakes illegal. Navy ships blew sanitaries in port until recently.
@DonWarfield2 ай бұрын
And no handwashing facility?
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
The sink is across the room.
@st3v3n602 ай бұрын
How did a fleet submarine smell after a patrol?
@michaelyounger4497
2 ай бұрын
It is indescribable, after a long dive when the hatch was opened assuming a bit of pressure had built up, a yellowish fog escaped till the engines had started and vented the boat. The smell was unwashed bodies, diesel vapors, cooking, toilet, and frequently rotting food. Our boats were relatively clean, the German and Japanese not so much, however the old S, R and O class subs (leftovers from WW1) were worse...called "pig boats" for a reason.
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
@michaelyounger4497 bad after a long five as stated earlier by our poster... but remember these boats were surfaced 95% of the time and the ventilation system was powerful.
@slotcarfan2 ай бұрын
Curious why they didn't add a toilet seat cover. At least any reverse pressure would keep it off your face, the overhead, etc.
@nicolesisson48722 ай бұрын
What if you do all the “pre” work and realize you gravely mistook your um calculations. And realized you should’ve used option for #2 but you chose option #1? Do you hold the lava flow as you start over or could you just add more water to be the correct amount for #2
@John_Be2 ай бұрын
Did Evan get a new camera? I see there are resolution levels above 1080p now.
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
We shoot everything in HD... but KZread’s in charge...
@paulstan98282 ай бұрын
Ha!!! I hope modern subs aren’t that complicated.
@Lion_McLionhead2 ай бұрын
Simpler than modern composting toilets.
@hawkmaster381Ай бұрын
That was some pretty tame reading material. More likely it was GQ, Tijuana bibles or Esquire. Back then, they were far, far racier than the watered-down versions of today.
@chriskucia8348Ай бұрын
Just curious - was the water pumped in for the heads fresh water or sea water? I could see reasons for both - using sea water to conserve fresh water or using fresh water to prevent corrosion of piping.
@jrmotorsports55322 ай бұрын
LOL, pressurized crap bomb!
@connorkilpatrick62832 ай бұрын
Well this the probably the smelliest on yet.
@buzz59692 ай бұрын
Don’t ask me why Im here, I seen the title and clicked.
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
Welcome aboard, shipmate!😂
@65gtotrips2 ай бұрын
I don’t think that’s funny at all…the washers on the flapper😮
Пікірлер: 93
Watching this while on the toilet. Toilet inception.
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
Ultra reality!
@richardjohnson4365
2 ай бұрын
😅🤣😂
Thanks, Paul. Good presentation. The reason there are officer and enlisted heads is because enlisted s**t stinks and the ossifers wouldn't appreciate walking into a stinky head. During my first cruise, my day job was swabbing the decks and cleaning the head in an officer's area. One time, I had to go, so, rather than take all the time to go to my berthing and then come back, I used one of the officer's commodes. One of them came in, saw my dungarees below the door, and had me write my name, service number and division on a piece of paper. He wrote me up. Fortunately, when it got to my Division, LT(jg) Bob Bergeron, he tore it up. We met a few years ago during a ship's reunion in SF. It was the highlight of my reunion. Bob was then in mid-stage Alzheimer's. He passed away about 4 years ago.
Nothing like being in Patrol Quiet and someone slams the stainless steel shitter door. Next thing you hear on the 1MC, " The next time I hear that shitter door slam, I will have all the doors removed." Shhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
One of ‘The Best’ reasons to become an officer on any Navy vessel.
Hey the COD invented the Squatty Potty 😂
At least you had a door giving you some privacy. Us Army guys had open bay latrines with five or ten thrones that could be used all at once. It was handy if you ran out of TP. All you had to do was ask the guy next to you to pass over his roll when he was done. Let's not even talk about field sanitation, cat holes and slit trenches and waste burning detail. Ah the fond memories of military service, how I wouldn't give anything to live them again. LOL!...
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
And a major reason many draft age men chose the Navy!
@randyogburn2498
2 ай бұрын
I don't know. Some older Navy ships had open, mulit-occupant heads too.
@markwilliams2620
Ай бұрын
@@randyogburn2498 The USS North Carolina still has the flush troughs that could seat 8 at a time. It wasn't unusual for some joker to light crumbled up newspaper and drop it at the water inlet and give the current users a hot bottom or unexpected Brazilian.
I got to tour USS Cheyenne (SSN 773) circa 1998 or 1999 when I was first in the Army and on exercises on Oahu. They told a bunch of us from Wyoming that if you were from the state or town that a Navy ship/boat was named for you had preference for a tour if it was in port, so we all went! We pointedly DIDN'T get to use the head (nor enter the reactor compartment). 😄
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
NOBODY ENTERS THE ENGINEERING SPACES!!!! 😢😮😂
@BB12659
2 ай бұрын
@@paulfarace9595 Snipes have been off limits for years. My dad had a similar story. While in the Pacific he heard that the USS Pennsylvania was in port, he requested a visit, and it was granted. He met several friends from his hometown of Reading. They compared notes since he was on a destroyer (Radford 446).
never seen the detail procedure. But did see the movie when the Niuses were informed how to use the head. Operation Petticoat as I recall.
I couldn't make heads or tails out of that, but thank you for sharing your throne room with us. Many years ago pleasure boats had a similar rig (before the laws against direct discharge), using the same kind of manual rocker arm pump but no air tank pressure. Its 3 valves had to be manipulated in sequence and it was a nightmare. Also, the through-hulls were a common fail point that could lead to sinking. All in all pumping out at a honey barge is much safer and better for the environment.
I spend the night on the Silversides in 1978 or 1979, with my son, when it was in Chicago.
I'm sure I missed our host mentioning it, but I recall that one of the U-Boats sunk due to a poorly executed flush.
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
Yes you missed it...
@Name-ot3xw
2 ай бұрын
@@paulfarace9595 Told you so.
Knowing about the Head is a pretty smart thing!You sure know your business when in comes to the use of a Head down under. 👍
The USS Monitor turret and guns and other artifacts are located at the Mariners Museum In Newport News Virginia.
Always wondered about this... Worthy of watching on the Throne😂
As the neck with it ! I'm volunteering for "Tin Can" duty !!!! Great video.
@21:30 perfect "rijsttafel" Well done Paul! :D
Monitor turret is at the Mariners Museum in Newport News Virginia.
Thank you for fulfilling my request for a video on this topic. I must say my head is full of interesting facts.
"That did happen on some boats where the officers were jokers" Well that's one descriptor for them.
Very informative. Never served aboard a boat with an air expulsion head. Even so, there were from time to time "accidents" with the gravity flush heads.
Either booby trapping the flapper valve or leaving the can full and pressurized, or getting the sequence wrong, you could end up sitting on a column of water and detritus at sea pressure. We called it the "submariner's bidet" or "diver's douche". Hilarity reigned. I, of course, never participated in such shenanigans, I heard it from a shipmate.
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
Yea... we believe you😅
It was a true mark of saltiness to spend time on the crapper wearing an EAB at test depth. Many stories of blowing sanitary tanks and some NUB getting sprayed with the contents when someone forgot to hang the chains in the head. Interesting that the stainless steel bowls look the same as what we had. Rather than a flapper there was a ball valve that dropped your deposit in a San tank below which, when full, was pressurized with air to discharge overboard. If you used the toilet when the tank was pressurized the results were pretty ugly.
Those very important little things that you don't think about.
I wonder if that is the origin of “shit storm”
Thanks for the "Heads up" Paul. Good info buddy.
Paul, this video is for Shots and Giggles😮. Still, important to document how everything works since the knowledge will be lost in time. On a lighter note, I would love to see a video about working a simpler mechanism than the head.. how about the TDC?
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
In time!
Let’s get a nice tight slow Zoom on that toilet bowl😅😂🎉🚽
better video than ryan's hot seat
probably the most important video he every made!
This is great talking about "shit"!!!!
There is a classic scene in Operation Petticoat about using the head.
Took me about five years after I left the Navy to learn to say "close" instead of "shut".
If you have problems on the toilet in a sub, is that considered a headache?
@user-cm8co5nx4k
2 ай бұрын
🥴
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
Ba-dump TING!!!! 😂
Thank you, great job,,,I think.👍👍🇺🇸🇺🇸
You got to take good care of the sailors intake and outlet - good food and good sanitary facilities make sailors happy!
That was very interesting, now I can see why there are some stories about toilet horrors on submarines. I do have a question though. Were the holding tanks for the gravity flush toilets big enough to contain the waste for an entire patrol, or did they also have a procedure for emptying them while underway? If so, was there a manual of emptying for the tanks as well?
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
Not that big. I'm told they were blown about two or three times week on patrol.
@The_DuMont_Network
2 ай бұрын
The blown tank had to be vented afterward, so you wanted to blow it while surfaced, and vent overboard. Venting the sanitary tank inboard was quite unpleasant.
@stevepotthast4911
2 ай бұрын
@@The_DuMont_Network Venting the tanks inboard was done through charcoal filters so most of the time it wasn't noticable.
Great video, one of you best.
This videos shows that on a WWII fleet submarine, S hitting the fan is a real and legitimate possibility.
Very interesting! 👍
Never knew how they worked, thanks. But I could tell you how to use the head on the space shuttle.
On occasion you would get a blockage between the trap and the gravity tank we would have to plastic sheet the whole of the head with the door's closed and back blow the sewage tanks this would result in many gallons of crap coating the inside of the head space the job of clearing out fell to the greenhornes
@06:40 ahahah.... look at the size and number of the bolts on that baby compared to your at home!
did you seriously give us a virtual swirley
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
Blame Evan!
Paul, thanks for this. Have you ever heard of the red toilet? I'd never heard of it until a few years back. Asked my dad about it, (W.W.II) vet, and he said he'd never heard of it either. Seems the seat was painted red for those that had contracted a venereal disease. I know, seems like an antiquated thought, but in the 1940s medicine was still in an experimental state, especially regarding the transmission of VD. Probably on larger vessels as a sub couldn't accommodate such an inconvenience.
@jawharpist
2 ай бұрын
They were called "The Hot Seat" Several videos on KZread about them.
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
Yes it was a thing on surface shops. Woth only three enlisted heads on a sub it wasn't practical.
@BB12659
2 ай бұрын
@@jawharpist Thanks!
@JoshuaTootell
2 ай бұрын
USS New Jersey channel has a video about it filmed from on the USS Kidd (I think).
@BB12659
2 ай бұрын
@@JoshuaTootell Thanks!
I’ll just wait till I’m home thanks
Did Cod have a connection to pump sewage ashore when she was docked?
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
Absolutely no need! Until 1972 when the EPA made overboard discharge on the Great Lakes illegal. Navy ships blew sanitaries in port until recently.
And no handwashing facility?
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
The sink is across the room.
How did a fleet submarine smell after a patrol?
@michaelyounger4497
2 ай бұрын
It is indescribable, after a long dive when the hatch was opened assuming a bit of pressure had built up, a yellowish fog escaped till the engines had started and vented the boat. The smell was unwashed bodies, diesel vapors, cooking, toilet, and frequently rotting food. Our boats were relatively clean, the German and Japanese not so much, however the old S, R and O class subs (leftovers from WW1) were worse...called "pig boats" for a reason.
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
@michaelyounger4497 bad after a long five as stated earlier by our poster... but remember these boats were surfaced 95% of the time and the ventilation system was powerful.
Curious why they didn't add a toilet seat cover. At least any reverse pressure would keep it off your face, the overhead, etc.
What if you do all the “pre” work and realize you gravely mistook your um calculations. And realized you should’ve used option for #2 but you chose option #1? Do you hold the lava flow as you start over or could you just add more water to be the correct amount for #2
Did Evan get a new camera? I see there are resolution levels above 1080p now.
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
We shoot everything in HD... but KZread’s in charge...
Ha!!! I hope modern subs aren’t that complicated.
Simpler than modern composting toilets.
That was some pretty tame reading material. More likely it was GQ, Tijuana bibles or Esquire. Back then, they were far, far racier than the watered-down versions of today.
Just curious - was the water pumped in for the heads fresh water or sea water? I could see reasons for both - using sea water to conserve fresh water or using fresh water to prevent corrosion of piping.
LOL, pressurized crap bomb!
Well this the probably the smelliest on yet.
Don’t ask me why Im here, I seen the title and clicked.
@paulfarace9595
2 ай бұрын
Welcome aboard, shipmate!😂
I don’t think that’s funny at all…the washers on the flapper😮
Whale of a video. Thar she blows!
informative lol