- Member since
January 2003
- From: Morris, Illinois
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Posted by dwblackwell
on Wednesday, February 23, 2005 2:01 PM
To add some more details to the good information above, the T-hulls looked really nice when leaving the yards or drydock period. Anti-fouling red was painted up to the middle of the hull. The black paint (it was semi-gloss as described above) was taken down to meet the red. Here's the revelation in all this- after the ship was in service, all this painting was done using rollers (just like painting your house), so the finish was never really "pristine" on an in-service boat. It would get a fresh coat (looked glossy for a few days, actually) before dignitaries were hosted, and generally every availability. The anti-fouling red would look greenish gray until it was powerwashed when the ship was drydocked, then it would go back to a faded red. The fibreglass nose would take on a different shade of black depending on the exposure to sun and time since it was painted. The weathering would consist of streaking (use a dark gray for contrast) and occasionally rust streaks (which would prompt the Chief of the Boat to get some folks armed with rollers to paint again). The diesel exhaust ports (at the aft end of the sail) would acquire a really flat black soot covering if the diesel was run in port for any period of time. The non-skid on the topside surfaces is the only really obvious difference in finish that you'd be able to scale down to 1/350- I don't think the roller marks would be visible. Last time I saw a T-hull in 1995, they did not have the anechoic tiles that are on the fasties (SSN's). If you can find the book Silent Chase by Steve and Yogi Kaufman you will be treated to some truly excellent submarine pictures. Hope this helps you finish your Trident (and I hope you use 728 for the hull number) David Blackwell, MMC(SS), USN, Retired (SSBN 657 Gold, SSBN 728 Gold, AS-31, SSN-660, SSN 755)
D. Blackwell MMC(SS), USN, Retired
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