submarine alarm sounds and warnings
Help me reach 50,000 subscribers! Click here😍
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCi-lXbS_lFKxo20uxnzAAng
Nasa Antares Rocket Launch Failure (4 angle) :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=frAymWDiBRc
Cockpit Alarm Sounds And Warnings :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TFJQAoQlfoc
submarine alarm sounds and warnings :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dv20toO_ddM
Six standardized alarms are used on submarines to alert the crew to situations that require immediate actions to be taken without waiting for specific orders. A higher priority alarm will silence an already-sounding lower one; in order of priority, they are:
_Collision Alarm
_Diving Alarm
_Missile Emergency Alarm
_Missile Jettison Alarm
_General Alarm
_Power Plant Casualty Alarm
- Collision/Flooding Alarm :
The collision alarm is used to warn of imminent collision or actual flooding and is accompanied by a succinct statement of the emergency such as "flooding in engine room lower level" (if possible; flooding is deafeningly loud).
The alarm is a slowly rising and falling siren, rather like a stereotype American police car siren, which sounds continuously as long as the switch is held on.
- Diving Alarm:
The diving alarm is sounded twice to signal a dive and three times for emergency surfacing, and is accompanied by either the announcement "dive, dive" or "surface, surface, surface."
The alarm is usually described as "ah-OOG-ah." On early submarines, it was an actual motor-driven vibratory horn (called a klaxon after the popular Klaxon Horn used on automobiles); later classes used electronic signal generators in the General Announcing System (1MC) that did not sound much like a klaxon but were variously described as "blats," "honks," or "cow farts." Motor-driven horns supplied by Benjamin Electric (Type H-9 horn) were installed in WW2 fleet submarines. Later motor-driven horns were mostly supplied by Federal Electric (later Federal Sign and Signal, changing finally to Federal Signal - Type H-8 horn) and are still found in certain applications today. Many modern submarines still have Klaxon diving alarms (mostly supplied by crew members or unofficial sources, usually not NAVSEA) paying homage to USN submarine tradition.
- Missile Emergency Alarm:
The missile emergency alarm is used to warn of any emergency involving ballistic or cruise missiles, and is found on Ohio-class submarines and on Los Angeles-class submarines with VLS tubes.
The alarm is a fast jump tone, two high-pitched notes repeated several times a second. People asked to imitate the alarm often say "deedle-leedle-leedle" in a falsetto voice as rapidly as they can.
- Missile Jettison Alarm:
The missile jettison alarm is used to warn of the imminent jettisoning (not launching) of a ballistic missile, and is currently found only on an Ohio-class submarine.
The alarm is a repeating rapidly rising tone, often compared to the "Red Alert" alarm from the original Star Trek series.
The missile jettison alarm on Ohio-class submarines does not have a handle like other submarine alarms. It is a key-activated alarm that only sounds upon energizing the missile jettison panel located in the Missile Control Center.
The Wolf's Call
Le chant du laup
Видео submarine alarm sounds and warnings канала Air Max
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCi-lXbS_lFKxo20uxnzAAng
Nasa Antares Rocket Launch Failure (4 angle) :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=frAymWDiBRc
Cockpit Alarm Sounds And Warnings :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TFJQAoQlfoc
submarine alarm sounds and warnings :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dv20toO_ddM
Six standardized alarms are used on submarines to alert the crew to situations that require immediate actions to be taken without waiting for specific orders. A higher priority alarm will silence an already-sounding lower one; in order of priority, they are:
_Collision Alarm
_Diving Alarm
_Missile Emergency Alarm
_Missile Jettison Alarm
_General Alarm
_Power Plant Casualty Alarm
- Collision/Flooding Alarm :
The collision alarm is used to warn of imminent collision or actual flooding and is accompanied by a succinct statement of the emergency such as "flooding in engine room lower level" (if possible; flooding is deafeningly loud).
The alarm is a slowly rising and falling siren, rather like a stereotype American police car siren, which sounds continuously as long as the switch is held on.
- Diving Alarm:
The diving alarm is sounded twice to signal a dive and three times for emergency surfacing, and is accompanied by either the announcement "dive, dive" or "surface, surface, surface."
The alarm is usually described as "ah-OOG-ah." On early submarines, it was an actual motor-driven vibratory horn (called a klaxon after the popular Klaxon Horn used on automobiles); later classes used electronic signal generators in the General Announcing System (1MC) that did not sound much like a klaxon but were variously described as "blats," "honks," or "cow farts." Motor-driven horns supplied by Benjamin Electric (Type H-9 horn) were installed in WW2 fleet submarines. Later motor-driven horns were mostly supplied by Federal Electric (later Federal Sign and Signal, changing finally to Federal Signal - Type H-8 horn) and are still found in certain applications today. Many modern submarines still have Klaxon diving alarms (mostly supplied by crew members or unofficial sources, usually not NAVSEA) paying homage to USN submarine tradition.
- Missile Emergency Alarm:
The missile emergency alarm is used to warn of any emergency involving ballistic or cruise missiles, and is found on Ohio-class submarines and on Los Angeles-class submarines with VLS tubes.
The alarm is a fast jump tone, two high-pitched notes repeated several times a second. People asked to imitate the alarm often say "deedle-leedle-leedle" in a falsetto voice as rapidly as they can.
- Missile Jettison Alarm:
The missile jettison alarm is used to warn of the imminent jettisoning (not launching) of a ballistic missile, and is currently found only on an Ohio-class submarine.
The alarm is a repeating rapidly rising tone, often compared to the "Red Alert" alarm from the original Star Trek series.
The missile jettison alarm on Ohio-class submarines does not have a handle like other submarine alarms. It is a key-activated alarm that only sounds upon energizing the missile jettison panel located in the Missile Control Center.
The Wolf's Call
Le chant du laup
Видео submarine alarm sounds and warnings канала Air Max
Показать
Комментарии отсутствуют
Информация о видео
Другие видео канала
Submarine Dive • U.S. NavyThe Wolf's Call (sonar sound)Submarine diving from the outside using a couple of GoPro camerasDive Alarm aboard the U.S.S. Razorback Submarine | MOOSEWORKS PLASTIC SOLDIERS5 Most Mysterious Underwater Sounds Ever RecordedMorse Code Alphabet TappingKlaxon, Alerts and Alarms Sound FXUSS Razorback Submarine Dive AlarmSubmarine Diving Alarm | Sound Effect | The Best Sound EffectsSubmarine surfacingModern Sonar Sounds and other Sounds of the SeaTop 5 SUBMARINE CRASHES Through Polar IceUSS Kentucky submarine crew demonstrates emergency blowSubmarine Relaxing Sleep and Nature Sounds 2 HoursTorpedo POV launched from SUBMARINEDive! Dive! Dive! US Submarine Goes Down UnderCaught on Satellite - North Korea's Secret ShipsWhy Britain's $ 2.2 Billion Astute-Class Nuclear Submarine Is Its Most Dangerous Naval AssetSubmarine goes under diverAlarms tones on Ship [Ship Alarm With Sound Effect]