Reminds me of a southern joke I heard a long time ago. Seems a wildlife officer was invited to go fishing with his country uncle, and when they got to the middle of the lake, the officer pulled out his rod and reel, but the uncle pulled out a stick of dynamite, lit it, and threw it about 50 ft out.... BOOM! and fish were coming to the surface stunned. The wildlife officer said, "Uncle, don't you know that's illegal??!!"
And the uncle lit another stick of dynamite, handed it to the officer, and said, "You gonna talk or you gonna fish?"
Just could have been a non-Iranian sub or an underwater installation or an installation under the sea bed. Nothing would surprise me. Didn't a Russian sub go missing?
Are they allowed to just do shit like that? Must have screwed every fish in a million square miles. Hopefully there was some good reason like the DS had an undersea base down there.
I would assume, unless you are going to go tell them, they can do about whatever they want. ?
Seriously though, all these military com's are getting me jazzed up. Keep it up boys!
Next we need to start hearing about a few DS Mia's, tragically lost at sea, or kidnapped by aliens, or crushed by rocks on a climb. DUMB busting will do that to you....
Looks pretty cool, I wonder if the shock wave traveled faster in the water or in the air? A slomo capture would be great.
Also the camera shake is probably due to the flimsy mounting - could a 100,000 ton warship really vibrate and shake like that from a blast so small in the grand scheme of things? I suspect not.
Edit - 100k tons fully loaded. So likely a smaller fraction of this given its being run through tests and trials currently and hence is missing what would be a normal operational loadout.
Yep, hence my asking the question. I figure a slower capture would show a delta between the progress of shade / coloration of the shockwave in the water, and when the camera rattles from the air wavefront, which would also provide an answer.
Reminds me of a southern joke I heard a long time ago. Seems a wildlife officer was invited to go fishing with his country uncle, and when they got to the middle of the lake, the officer pulled out his rod and reel, but the uncle pulled out a stick of dynamite, lit it, and threw it about 50 ft out.... BOOM! and fish were coming to the surface stunned. The wildlife officer said, "Uncle, don't you know that's illegal??!!" And the uncle lit another stick of dynamite, handed it to the officer, and said, "You gonna talk or you gonna fish?"
??????
I'm sure that something was down there.
In one of the still shots pieces of the Iranian submarine target can be seen in the explosion water column.
You think it's an Iranian submarine?
Why waste a Earth Shattering Kaboom on a bunch of fish?
Just could have been a non-Iranian sub or an underwater installation or an installation under the sea bed. Nothing would surprise me. Didn't a Russian sub go missing?
https://twitter.com/warship_78/status/1406601477435576321?s=21
That's how you catch a tuna.
Are they allowed to just do shit like that? Must have screwed every fish in a million square miles. Hopefully there was some good reason like the DS had an undersea base down there.
Wonder how many deaf whales there are now! :(
I would assume, unless you are going to go tell them, they can do about whatever they want. ?
Seriously though, all these military com's are getting me jazzed up. Keep it up boys!
Next we need to start hearing about a few DS Mia's, tragically lost at sea, or kidnapped by aliens, or crushed by rocks on a climb. DUMB busting will do that to you....
First Reported As A Eath Quake. Then Later an Experimental Explosion. I wonder if it is the same event? https://greatawakening.win/p/12j0HtHwCU/first-reported-as-a-earthquake-o/c/
Think some peaceful placid sea life had a monster headache? You'd be correct.
Wow. Shook things up a bit.
Not unusual to use a drill or a test to cover a live operation,
was something hiding undersea in that area ?
“Ever wonder”(?)!
Looks pretty cool, I wonder if the shock wave traveled faster in the water or in the air? A slomo capture would be great.
Also the camera shake is probably due to the flimsy mounting - could a 100,000 ton warship really vibrate and shake like that from a blast so small in the grand scheme of things? I suspect not.
https://armedforces.eu/navy/aircraftcarrier/Gerald_R_Ford-class
Edit - 100k tons fully loaded. So likely a smaller fraction of this given its being run through tests and trials currently and hence is missing what would be a normal operational loadout.
Sonar thumbrule; 1000 fps in air, 5000 fps in water, 150000 fps in steel.
Your ‘wonder’ suggests that you don’t know what you are on about.
Yep, hence my asking the question. I figure a slower capture would show a delta between the progress of shade / coloration of the shockwave in the water, and when the camera rattles from the air wavefront, which would also provide an answer.
"Watch the water"