Subsea Technology Helps Out on
"The Day We Lost the H-Bomb"
by Barbara Moran, courtesy of Presidio Press
The Day We Lost the H-bomb tells the story of the 1966 search for a lost nuclear weapon in the Mediterranean Sea off the coast of Spain. The mission is widely regarded as the largest salvage effort in Navy history. At this point in the book, the Navy task force under Rear Admiral William Guest has located the weapon, but failed to retrieve it. A prototype torpedo recovery device called CURV (Cable-controlled Underwater Research Vehicle) from NOTS Pasadena has arrived to aid in the recovery.
The CURV team set up shop on the USS Petrel, a submarine rescue ship, on March 29. The Petrel and her commanding officer, Lieutenant Commander Max Harrell, were old hands at Navy salvage, having worked on such operations for years, and the ship proved a good home for CURV. The CURV team set up their gear but had little to do; the bomb was still missing after the failed lift attempt. So for a couple of days, they ran tests. The Navy dropped a dummy bomb into the water with the same dimensions as the missing weapon and sent CURV off to find it. The CURV team operated the device from a small control shack on the deck of the Petrel. It took two people to run the device: one to operate the sonar and read the compass, the other to move the switches and levers that spun CURV's three propellers and sent it swimming. When it came to "flying" CURV, Larry Brady was the undisputed
38 MTR
master. He just imagined himself sitting on the device, sailing happily underwater, and the moves came naturally. Once he found the target, Brady grabbed it with the claw, like a kid in an arcade grabbing cheap toys from a bin. A couple of days after his arrival on the Petrel, Brady dove CURV to 1,050 feet, found the dummy bomb, and recovered it with a special claw the team had built in California. The next day, CURV dove to 2,400 feet and recovered a pinger hidden inside a barrel. The team could have continued performing ever- more- elaborate circus tricks for weeks, but on April 2, Alvin found the bomb resting on the gray bottom 2,800 feet below the surface, just within CURV's reach. As the parachute had wrapped itself completely around the weapon, however, CURV couldn't grab it with its claw. The crew needed another way to snare the bomb.
May 2009
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