USS New Jersey (BB-62)

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Discussion

spitfire-ian

Original Poster:

3,892 posts

235 months

Thursday 21st March
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The Iowa class battleship New Jersey will be starting its journey to dry dock for maintenance today leaving its berth and being towed down the Delaware River to a temporary berth at around 4pm GMT. It will be the first time its been dry docked for over 30 years and the first time its moved since 2000.

I think there should be a live feed on their YouTube channel later.

https://www.youtube.com/@BattleshipNewJersey



https://www.battleshipnewjersey.org/

RizzoTheRat

25,995 posts

199 months

Thursday 21st March
quotequote all
First USS Texas, now New Jersey, I know the USN have been berating the Royal Navy for lack of firepower but they're really upping thier game hehe

spitfire-ian

Original Poster:

3,892 posts

235 months

Thursday 21st March
quotequote all
She's on the move.

Alwayzsidewayz2

76 posts

107 months

Thursday 21st March
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Thank you for the post and links. Wow to see the ship move is something else.

Its not hard to almost imagine her now being back in time sailing for a fight in the pacific

Very emotive

FourWheelDrift

89,606 posts

291 months

Thursday 21st March
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Different live camera from helicopter - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zbahiEILxUk

LimmerickLad

2,114 posts

22 months

Thursday 21st March
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FourWheelDrift said:
Different live camera from helicopter -https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zbahiEILxUk
Awesome watch........thanks beer

BrettMRC

4,450 posts

167 months

Friday 22nd March
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The youtube channel they run is great, been following it for some time.

Quite a good one recently about removing the mast in readiness etc.

BrettMRC

4,450 posts

167 months

Wednesday 27th March
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She should be moved into the dry dock today.

spitfire-ian

Original Poster:

3,892 posts

235 months

Wednesday 27th March
quotequote all
BrettMRC said:
She should be moved into the dry dock today.
Around 3pm GMT.

Live stream will be on their YouTube channel.

FourWheelDrift

89,606 posts

291 months

Wednesday 27th March
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RizzoTheRat

25,995 posts

199 months

Thursday 28th March
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You think of her as being massive but it's surprising how small and low in the water she is compared to that support ship.

Is that an Algol class, and if so why the Dutch flag on the funnels?

BrettMRC

4,450 posts

167 months

Thursday 28th March
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I was thinking similar, but then even the Titanic/Olympic class were over 50,000tons in 1911!

Turn7

24,144 posts

228 months

Thursday 28th March
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Given the modern missiles, rockets and fighter bombers, do these kind of ships really have a place now ?

BrettMRC

4,450 posts

167 months

Thursday 28th March
quotequote all
Turn7 said:
Given the modern missiles, rockets and fighter bombers, do these kind of ships really have a place now ?
It's a museum ship....?

Turn7

24,144 posts

228 months

Thursday 28th March
quotequote all
BrettMRC said:
Turn7 said:
Given the modern missiles, rockets and fighter bombers, do these kind of ships really have a place now ?
It's a museum ship....?
Oh ok, I don’t know that….


FourWheelDrift

89,606 posts

291 months

Wednesday 3rd April
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eharding

14,138 posts

291 months

Friday 5th April
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I wonder have much today's East coast earthquake was felt down at the Philadelphia Naval Yard - I certainly wouldn't have cared to have been working underneath the hull if the ground started shaking.

spitfire-ian

Original Poster:

3,892 posts

235 months

Friday 5th April
quotequote all
eharding said:
I wonder have much today's East coast earthquake was felt down at the Philadelphia Naval Yard - I certainly wouldn't have cared to have been working underneath the hull if the ground started shaking.
That thought crossed my mind too.

Edited to add: They've said on Instagram that they didn't feel it at all in the dry dock.

Edited by spitfire-ian on Friday 5th April 17:23

eharding

14,138 posts

291 months

Friday 5th April
quotequote all
spitfire-ian said:
eharding said:
I wonder have much today's East coast earthquake was felt down at the Philadelphia Naval Yard - I certainly wouldn't have cared to have been working underneath the hull if the ground started shaking.
That thought crossed my mind too.

Edited to add: They've said on Instagram that they didn't feel it at all in the dry dock.

Edited by spitfire-ian on Friday 5th April 17:23
That's good to know. I could imagine running out from underneath the thing as fast as my fat little legs could carry me when the ground started shaking, then as things calmed down be slumped against the dock wall having a bit of a minor coronary, and then realising that the dry dock gates had started to creak ominously....


Edited by eharding on Friday 5th April 21:41

essayer

9,605 posts

201 months

Friday 5th April
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What a way to go though! Can’t be many crushed by the keel of a battleship