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Re: Starship = Submarine

Posted: Mon May 13, 2013 9:31 pm
by McAvoy
Captain Seafort wrote:
McAvoy wrote:Because I sleeper on a steel bed 3 feet wide by 6 six feet long with a locker underneath about a foot deep in a bunk three deep. Not to mention this was with 200 other guys. I never had a cabin. Only high ranking officers get wardrooms.
Were they arranged such that you'd have a six-man cabin if you defined "cabin" as "two stacks of bunks plus a six-foot by three-foot deck space with a curtain at each end"? I suspect that's the sort of arrangement Tyyr's thinking of. Also, I thought the bunks were narrower than you describe, so there's been a slight increase in personal space since the days of sail.
That would be the first time I ever heard someone calling two triple bunks as a cabin.

British ships could have narrower bunks but US ships are three feet wide.

Re: Starship = Submarine

Posted: Mon May 13, 2013 9:34 pm
by McAvoy
Teaos wrote:It is my understanding that some models of Subs have people literally sleeping in anywhere there is 6 feet of horizontal space.
Hot racking is a term that means two people share a single bed at different times. So one is working while the other is sleeping. By the time the guy on duty goes to sleep the other is up and going on duty. The rack can still be warm from body heat.

Hot racking in surface ships means the person did not take a shower before getting the rack.

Re: Starship = Submarine

Posted: Mon May 13, 2013 9:54 pm
by Captain Seafort
McAvoy wrote:That would be the first time I ever heard someone calling two triple bunks as a cabin.
I agree it's stretching the definition somewhat, but it affords a small degree more privacy than a barrack room arrangement, and given how fly-on-the-wall docs are be shot they can look more spacious and enclosed on screen than they actually are.

Re: Starship = Submarine

Posted: Mon May 13, 2013 10:15 pm
by McAvoy
Image

Re: Starship = Submarine

Posted: Mon May 13, 2013 10:22 pm
by Captain Seafort
Ours have got a slightly different arrangement. All the bunks are parallel, with each set of six are closed off with curtains. IIRC - my knowledge is mainly based on a few documentaries and a stay aboard HMS Bristol about a decade and a half ago.

Re: Starship = Submarine

Posted: Mon May 13, 2013 10:44 pm
by McAvoy
In the US Navy, they arrange it so it fits. So this doesn't fully represent every ship. People like the middle rack but I always liked the top. I could sit up if I wanted to. My third deployment had me in between two I beams so I was extra privacy while sitting up.