What is special about those 3 particular U-boats that makes them "The Trifecta"? There are more U-boats sunk along the coast. I know of the U-1105 and U-853, at least.

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What is special about those 3 particular U-boats that makes them "The Trifecta"? There are more U-boats sunk along the coast. I know of the U-1105 and U-853, at least.
I specifically said "change to my pony, for whatever reason" on purpose - so as to not give any basis to just assume I ran out of gas. I was specifically thinking of other possibilities like 1st stage failure or a blown HP hose.
Think about it - I am in NC. There are three diveable U-boats off the NC coast, all sitting where they ended up after being sunk in hostile action. People coming to my office, in NC, could more readily relate to something off the NC coast than they could to a boat off the Rhode Island coast, or something that had been sunk, then raised, repositioned, sunk again etc, up in MD. I would like to dive the 853 as a matter of fact.
answering your question with another: What is your gas plan for this (you and your buddy)? What are the reserves and how are they managed?
If you want to ride that NDL that tight, you should have a lot more into a plan than "I'll switch to my pony"... as said right after my post, you are realistically bordering a technical dive.
What is the deco requirement (and the quantity of gas needed) if you trip that NDL? Do you have have it?
U-869, but that's not a recreational dive
Your earlier post pretty strongly implied that there is NO dive plan that would work given the 3 parameters I originally posited (depth, time, gas mixture), so why don't you justify that instead of trying to get me to throw out some half-thought-through plan that you can poke a hole in and use to vindicate your insult?
Doing some quick calculations, based on my average SAC from my last few dives (i.e. calculating based on RMV of .6 cu ft/min), it looks like I would consume 92 cu ft of gas. Are you suggesting that there is no safe Rec dive plan that involves using 92 cu ft and getting out with an adequate reserve? Because, otherwise, your "nice dive plan" passive-aggression just comes across as implying that you think I'm too stupid to develop such a plan.
Now, obviously (well, it's obvious to me, anyway), whatever plan I dive with would include "if I use my air faster than I planned for, then I'll get out sooner." Is there something wrong with making a plan based on a best-case for air consumption and then vetting it and planning contingencies for worst-case consumption also? E.g. "I'll assume SAC=.6 and plan to stay down for 29 minutes. But, if I'm down to 1000 psi after 15 minutes, then I'll start my ascent immediately."
---------- Post added February 27th, 2015 at 02:08 PM ----------
I see that that is in 240' of water. Okay, I'll put it on my list for last, after I dive the other 5 and have a few hundred dives and a crap-ton more training in my log.![]()
Your earlier post pretty strongly implied that there is NO dive plan that would work given the 3 parameters I originally posited (depth, time, gas mixture), so why don't you justify that instead of trying to get me to throw out some half-thought-through plan that you can poke a hole in and use to vindicate your insult?
Doing some quick calculations, based on my average SAC from my last few dives (i.e. calculating based on RMV of .6 cu ft/min), it looks like I would consume 92 cu ft of gas. Are you suggesting that there is no safe Rec dive plan that involves using 92 cu ft and getting out with an adequate reserve? Because, otherwise, your "nice dive plan" passive-aggression just comes across as implying that you think I'm too stupid to develop such a plan.
Now, obviously (well, it's obvious to me, anyway), whatever plan I dive with would include "if I use my air faster than I planned for, then I'll get out sooner." Is there something wrong with making a plan based on a best-case for air consumption and then vetting it and planning contingencies for worst-case consumption also? E.g. "I'll assume SAC=.6 and plan to stay down for 29 minutes. But, if I'm down to 1000 psi after 15 minutes, then I'll start my ascent immediately."
---------- Post added February 27th, 2015 at 02:08 PM ----------
I see that that is in 240' of water. Okay, I'll put it on my list for last, after I dive the other 5 and have a few hundred dives and a crap-ton more training in my log.![]()
Your earlier post pretty strongly implied that there is NO dive plan that would work given the 3 parameters I originally posited (depth, time, gas mixture), so why don't you justify that instead of trying to get me to throw out some half-thought-through plan that you can poke a hole in and use to vindicate your insult?
Doing some quick calculations, based on my average SAC from my last few dives (i.e. calculating based on RMV of .6 cu ft/min), it looks like I would consume 92 cu ft of gas. Are you suggesting that there is no safe Rec dive plan that involves using 92 cu ft and getting out with an adequate reserve? Because, otherwise, your "nice dive plan" passive-aggression just comes across as implying that you think I'm too stupid to develop such a plan.
Now, obviously (well, it's obvious to me, anyway), whatever plan I dive with would include "if I use my air faster than I planned for, then I'll get out sooner." Is there something wrong with making a plan based on a best-case for air consumption and then vetting it and planning contingencies for worst-case consumption also? E.g. "I'll assume SAC=.6 and plan to stay down for 29 minutes. But, if I'm down to 1000 psi after 15 minutes, then I'll start my ascent immediately."
OK, a reasonable question, and - for me at least - the answer is, 'Yes, there is something wrong with it.' The dive 'mission' should be defined on the basis of how much time you can reasonably expect to spend at depth (among other things). While 'mission' is usually associated with technical diving, it really is, or should be, part of good recreational dive planning as well. If you set a mission goal on the basis of an optimistic SAC, there may be a psychological impetus to stay 'just a few minutes longer' in order to do what you planned, rather than begin your ascent when you realize that your gas supply is being consumed faster than anticipated. Admittedly, that is a 'soft' assessment - a disciplined diver would, of course, never find them selves doing that.Is there something wrong with making a plan based on a best-case for air consumption and then vetting it and planning contingencies for worst-case consumption also? E.g. "I'll assume SAC=.6 and plan to stay down for 29 minutes. But, if I'm down to 1000 psi after 15 minutes, then I'll start my ascent immediately."
As rivers mentioned, the U-869 is dievable, for those with technical training. I am not aware of others beyond those 6.Gotcha. I gather that those are the only 3 off NC that are diveable and sunk in action. That makes sense. Are those 3 plus the 2 I mentioned the only diveable U-boats on the whole East Coast?