Matrix Games Forums

Forums  Register  Login  Photo Gallery  Member List  Search  Calendars  FAQ 

My Profile  Inbox  Address Book  My Subscription  My Forums  Log Out

Hi From Abe

 
View related threads: (in this forum | in all forums)

Logged in as: Guest
Users viewing this topic: none
  Printable Version
All Forums >> [New Releases from Matrix Games] >> War in the Pacific: Admiral's Edition >> Hi From Abe Page: [1] 2   next >   >>
Login
Message << Older Topic   Newer Topic >>
Hi From Abe - 3/19/2012 8:05:45 PM   
TheElf


Posts: 3870
Joined: 5/14/2003
From: Pax River, MD
Status: offline
I thought you all would be interested to hear that I am typing this from the USS Abraham Lincoln, somewhere in the Arabian Gulf. The last night recovery is in process. Hornets and Super Hornets are smacking the deck rigth over my head as I watch The latest Pirates of the Carribean movie on the ship's TV. I will be feet dry in a day or so but am enjoying being back in the fleet if only for a couple nights.

~Elf

_____________________________

IN PERPETUUM SINGULARIS SEDES


Post #: 1
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/19/2012 8:07:11 PM   
Terminus


Posts: 41459
Joined: 4/23/2005
From: Denmark
Status: offline


_____________________________

We are all dreams of the Giant Space Butterfly.

(in reply to TheElf)
Post #: 2
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/19/2012 8:07:13 PM   
Chickenboy


Posts: 24520
Joined: 6/29/2002
From: San Antonio, TX
Status: offline
Hi back, TheElf. Always good to see you on the forums.

_____________________________


(in reply to TheElf)
Post #: 3
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/19/2012 8:14:56 PM   
USSAmerica


Posts: 18715
Joined: 10/28/2002
From: Graham, NC, USA
Status: offline
Things have changed just a bit since my days on CV-66. We didn't have email, we had to number our letters so the recipient could tell if they arrived weeks later out of order.

Snail mail aside, I did enjoy my time at sea to a great extent.

_____________________________

Mike

"Good times will set you free" - Jimmy Buffett

"They need more rum punch" - Me


Artwork by The Amazing Dixie

(in reply to Chickenboy)
Post #: 4
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/19/2012 8:17:11 PM   
witpqs


Posts: 26087
Joined: 10/4/2004
From: Argleton
Status: offline

(in reply to Chickenboy)
Post #: 5
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/19/2012 8:26:06 PM   
Sardaukar


Posts: 9847
Joined: 11/28/2001
From: Finland/Israel
Status: offline
Nice!

_____________________________

"To meaningless French Idealism, Liberty, Fraternity and Equality...we answer with German Realism, Infantry, Cavalry and Artillery" -Prince von Bülov, 1870-


(in reply to witpqs)
Post #: 6
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/19/2012 8:27:09 PM   
nashvillen


Posts: 3836
Joined: 7/3/2006
From: Christiana, TN
Status: offline


Elf - Thank you and your other military comrades for what you do for our country!

< Message edited by nashvillen -- 3/19/2012 8:29:10 PM >


_____________________________


(in reply to Sardaukar)
Post #: 7
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/19/2012 8:35:48 PM   
CT Grognard

 

Posts: 694
Joined: 5/16/2010
From: Cape Town, South Africa
Status: offline
I have it on good authority that your Taliban opponents have on a number of occasions complained that the RL Air Model (TM) is BORKED!

They claim that there is no way that American aircraft can be that accurate in delivering strike packages.

What do you say to these allegations?


(in reply to TheElf)
Post #: 8
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/19/2012 8:42:29 PM   
mdiehl

 

Posts: 5998
Joined: 10/21/2000
Status: offline
Obviously the USN IRL aren't designed by Matrix Games.

_____________________________

Show me a fellow who rejects statistical analysis a priori and I'll show you a fellow who has no knowledge of statistics.

Didn't we have this conversation already?

(in reply to CT Grognard)
Post #: 9
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/19/2012 9:18:40 PM   
LoBaron


Posts: 4776
Joined: 1/26/2003
From: Vienna, Austria
Status: offline
Best of luck Iain!

_____________________________


(in reply to TheElf)
Post #: 10
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/19/2012 10:25:55 PM   
Bullwinkle58


Posts: 11302
Joined: 2/24/2009
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: TheElf

I thought you all would be interested to hear that I am typing this from the USS Abraham Lincoln, somewhere in the Arabian Gulf. The last night recovery is in process. Hornets and Super Hornets are smacking the deck rigth over my head as I watch The latest Pirates of the Carribean movie on the ship's TV. I will be feet dry in a day or so but am enjoying being back in the fleet if only for a couple nights.

~Elf


Staff puke!!!!!

_____________________________

The Moose

(in reply to TheElf)
Post #: 11
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/19/2012 10:29:05 PM   
Bullwinkle58


Posts: 11302
Joined: 2/24/2009
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: USS America

Things have changed just a bit since my days on CV-66. We didn't have email, we had to number our letters so the recipient could tell if they arrived weeks later out of order.

Snail mail aside, I did enjoy my time at sea to a great extent.


Mail? What's that? Looxury!!

We got 40 words, six times a patrol, if the Blue crew radiomen were sober enough to type. And two of them had to be the sender's name.

Although it was amazing how dirty some Navy wives could be in 38 words when anything overt got edited out by the Blue crew CO before the 'grams went to squadron for transmission.

_____________________________

The Moose

(in reply to USSAmerica)
Post #: 12
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/20/2012 12:00:14 AM   
John 3rd


Posts: 17178
Joined: 9/8/2005
From: La Salle, Colorado
Status: offline
Good Thoughts to you and the Abe!


_____________________________



Member: Treaty, Reluctant Admiral and Between the Storms Mod Team.

Reluctant Admiral Mod:
https://sites.google.com/site/reluctantadmiral/

(in reply to Bullwinkle58)
Post #: 13
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/20/2012 12:21:38 AM   
PaxMondo


Posts: 9750
Joined: 6/6/2008
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: USS America

... We didn't have email, we had to number our letters so the recipient could tell if they arrived weeks later out of order.

Yep. I got to use the telex once in a while, but mostly just surface mail.

_____________________________

Pax

(in reply to USSAmerica)
Post #: 14
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/20/2012 1:23:59 AM   
ny59giants


Posts: 9869
Joined: 1/10/2005
Status: offline
We had a ham radio on board to help out at time.
FF-1079 Bowen (81 -83)

_____________________________


(in reply to PaxMondo)
Post #: 15
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/20/2012 1:33:38 AM   
Commander Stormwolf

 

Posts: 1623
Joined: 2/19/2008
Status: offline
quote:

I thought you all would be interested to hear that I am typing this from the USS Abraham Lincoln


Happy the fleet is out there

but.. i hope they don't repeat what happpened to USS Liberty








Attachment (1)

_____________________________

"No Enemy Survives Contact with the Plan" - Commander Stormwolf

(in reply to TheElf)
Post #: 16
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/20/2012 4:21:50 AM   
mdiehl

 

Posts: 5998
Joined: 10/21/2000
Status: offline
Things that make you say "hmmm." Yer post, if technically accurate, is kind of inyaface and OT, doncha think, Commander?


< Message edited by mdiehl -- 3/20/2012 4:23:18 AM >


_____________________________

Show me a fellow who rejects statistical analysis a priori and I'll show you a fellow who has no knowledge of statistics.

Didn't we have this conversation already?

(in reply to Commander Stormwolf)
Post #: 17
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/20/2012 4:24:16 AM   
UniformYankee


Posts: 84
Joined: 7/7/2007
Status: offline
A "merchant ship" took some hits ... a rather different scenario than the "fleet" in the Persian Gulf ... but time will tell ...

(in reply to mdiehl)
Post #: 18
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/20/2012 4:39:14 AM   
mdiehl

 

Posts: 5998
Joined: 10/21/2000
Status: offline
Yep.

_____________________________

Show me a fellow who rejects statistical analysis a priori and I'll show you a fellow who has no knowledge of statistics.

Didn't we have this conversation already?

(in reply to UniformYankee)
Post #: 19
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/20/2012 5:05:22 AM   
crsutton


Posts: 9590
Joined: 12/6/2002
From: Maryland
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: ny59giants

We had a ham radio on board to help out at time.
FF-1079 Bowen (81 -83)



Well in my day, we just scratched a greeting out on any old wooden plank and then tied it to a sperm whale in the hopes it would head in the right direction.

Actually, what I would not give to spend 48 hours on a modern carrier. That is as long as they don't turn me to with a hurdy gurdy to chip paint. Have a good voyage.

_____________________________

I am the Holy Roman Emperor and am above grammar.

Sigismund of Luxemburg

(in reply to ny59giants)
Post #: 20
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/20/2012 8:13:56 PM   
JWE

 

Posts: 6580
Joined: 7/19/2005
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: TheElf
I thought you all would be interested to hear that I am typing this from the USS Abraham Lincoln, somewhere in the Arabian Gulf. The last night recovery is in process. Hornets and Super Hornets are smacking the deck rigth over my head as I watch The latest Pirates of the Carribean movie on the ship's TV. I will be feet dry in a day or so but am enjoying being back in the fleet if only for a couple nights.

~Elf

Howdy Elf. Never been on a ship named for Abraham. Closest I ever got was a Mull 44 named Promised Land. Fast boat, but did you ever try to do a Bris when it's blowing 26 knots (true) and the skipper wants to crack-off and put up the reaching kite? Woof !!


Know what you mean about hornets smacking the deck overhead. For some strange reason, David always cooks and I always put him on the B watch. He always cooks something up for dinner with lots beans and chipotle chilies, and when I'm off-watch trying to get some shuteye, he lets out these thunder farts that vibrate the whole deck (probably 'cause he snores as well as farts in his sleep, and it does get a trifle close below decks in a race boat, so I banished him to B watch).

Yeah, being on boats is way cool. But getting feet dry every now and again is good.

Spring is here and everybody is up in the air with their experimentals. Was bike riding with a friend out by Summerdale and we got a sweet ride in a Stearman from a very friendly Ensign. P'cola is still the same place. So come see an old man, sometime.

Stay safe Bro. John


Attachment (1)

< Message edited by JWE -- 3/20/2012 8:34:47 PM >


_____________________________


(in reply to TheElf)
Post #: 21
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/20/2012 8:27:44 PM   
BigBadWolf


Posts: 584
Joined: 8/8/2007
From: Serbia
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: crsutton



Actually, what I would not give to spend 48 hours on a modern carrier.


This. Kid in a candy store? Yea, right...

_____________________________


(in reply to crsutton)
Post #: 22
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/20/2012 8:33:37 PM   
Mac Linehan

 

Posts: 1484
Joined: 12/19/2004
From: Denver Colorado
Status: offline
Elf -

You are always missed when gone. I do hope that you get some serious filight time - cause that's what you live for, Sir!


Be safe - God is your Co-pilot

Mac

_____________________________

LAV-25 2147

(in reply to TheElf)
Post #: 23
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/20/2012 8:44:18 PM   
pmelheck1

 

Posts: 610
Joined: 4/3/2003
From: Alabama
Status: offline
Enjoy your time on the Abe. Closest This Air Force Person got was a couple of days on the Midway during the Philippines evacuation. Much tighter spaces than Clark AFB.

_____________________________


(in reply to Mac Linehan)
Post #: 24
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/20/2012 8:51:16 PM   
Dixie


Posts: 10303
Joined: 3/10/2006
From: UK
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: TheElf

I thought you all would be interested to hear that I am typing this from the USS Abraham Lincoln, somewhere in the Arabian Gulf. The last night recovery is in process. Hornets and Super Hornets are smacking the deck rigth over my head as I watch The latest Pirates of the Carribean movie on the ship's TV. I will be feet dry in a day or so but am enjoying being back in the fleet if only for a couple nights.

~Elf


Hope you're having fun mate, my Dad was on the phone from that neck of the woods a couple of days ago. He said he watched you (not you personally but the ship) leave port whilst he was off duty and they were tied up alongside.

_____________________________



Bigger boys stole my sig

(in reply to TheElf)
Post #: 25
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/20/2012 9:02:34 PM   
Mac Linehan

 

Posts: 1484
Joined: 12/19/2004
From: Denver Colorado
Status: offline
ny59giants -

You gotta be kidding. Two members of this forum who were shipmates - I served on USS Bowen 1980 - 1981 as a GMG2, serving the 5/54 cal Mk 42 Mod 9 mount forward (ok - it's the only mount and kind of big... <grin>). Eddy (SuluSea) served on the USS Capadanno FF-1093 the 1980's; I served on Capadanno in 1977 - 1978, right out of gunnery school in Great Lakes. I am going to have to check my notes and make sure I have the dates right.

I loved gunnery exercises, and loved being inside the mount - watching the two ammunition cradles cycle the semi fixed ammunition (on an alternating basis) to the transfer trays, which in turn rotated and opened to allow ramming powder and projectile into the breach. Massive pieces of machinery, working in awesome harmony until "cease fire" Then it was "bore clear, no casualties, five rounds expended".

My first ship was the USS Midway, CVA 41, Dec 1971. Midway was armed with the 5/54 MK 39, the manually loaded big brother to the 5/38. As a newb Seaman Apprentice, I was "hot caseman" - supposedly there to catch the ejected powder cartridge and drop it thru the bottom eject doors (or so I was told by my jokester shipmates). Equipped with two over sized asbestos gloves that came up to my elbows, with my bell bottom trousers tucked into my socks (all in approved Condition 1 fashion) and feeling excited and READY, I was totally unprepared for the sheer force and violence with which the powder cartridge hit the rear of the armored splinter shield, leaving a dent in the very hard rubber backing; and thusly suffered a consequent drop in testosterone level. Mom did not raise a fool, after that instance of enlightenment, my main purpose in life was to dance around to avoid having my 120 pound body smeared across the back of the mount by a demonized powder can, while the mount was erratically following the amplidyne signal.

Ok - I digress and am (of course) carried away.

Take care, Shipmates. Till Later...

Mac

USN Sept 1971 - Sept 1981, a four month break, then USMC Jan 1981 - Oct 1992. There is no better finishing school for life..

P.S. - no spell check on my wife's computer, or at least where I can see it, so please forgive any and all mistakes...



< Message edited by Mac Linehan -- 3/23/2012 9:17:25 PM >


_____________________________

LAV-25 2147

(in reply to ny59giants)
Post #: 26
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/20/2012 11:02:23 PM   
KMCCARTHY

 

Posts: 103
Joined: 11/28/2009
Status: offline
Take care!

(in reply to Mac Linehan)
Post #: 27
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/20/2012 11:03:41 PM   
Kwik E Mart


Posts: 2447
Joined: 7/22/2004
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: TheElf

I thought you all would be interested to hear that I am typing this from the USS Abraham Lincoln, somewhere in the Arabian Gulf. The last night recovery is in process. Hornets and Super Hornets are smacking the deck rigth over my head as I watch The latest Pirates of the Carribean movie on the ship's TV. I will be feet dry in a day or so but am enjoying being back in the fleet if only for a couple nights.

~Elf


...nothing like standing watch in the CIC (USS Carl Vinson) at the end of flight OP's and watching the closed circuit TV as one of these beasts boltered...if the tailhook had managed to snag a wire before the bolter, you had about a second to cover your ears before the d*mn wire smacked the steel deck...like putting an iron bucket on your head and hitting it with a hammer...it was better being in my stateroom up forward and hearing the catapult rumble down the deck overhead before slamming into the water break...the stateroom walls made such a soothing vibrating sound...

_____________________________

Kirk Lazarus: I know who I am. I'm the dude playin' the dude, disguised as another dude!
Ron Swanson: Clear alcohols are for rich women on diets.


(in reply to TheElf)
Post #: 28
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/21/2012 3:21:21 PM   
morganbj


Posts: 3634
Joined: 8/12/2007
From: Mosquito Bite, Texas
Status: offline
Ah, the memories, ... sitting in my tank in the rain and snow mix, shivering, without a shower for three weeks, eating cold C-rations three times a day, and for entertainment listening to the squadron S-3 drone on and on over the radio like a politician during election season. What a life. You swabies have no sense of what fun is.

_____________________________

Occasionally, and randomly, problems and solutions collide. The probability of these collisions is inversely related to the number of committees working on the solutions. -- Me.

(in reply to Kwik E Mart)
Post #: 29
RE: Hi From Abe - 3/21/2012 7:03:05 PM   
Bullwinkle58


Posts: 11302
Joined: 2/24/2009
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: bjmorgan

Ah, the memories, ... sitting in my tank in the rain and snow mix, shivering, without a shower for three weeks, eating cold C-rations three times a day, and for entertainment listening to the squadron S-3 drone on and on over the radio like a politician during election season. What a life. You swabies have no sense of what fun is.


From the great, old Usenet newsgroup sci.military.naval (now fallen on hard itmes), I recalled this classic re-write of a famous Monty Python sketch. Blackbeard was a regular contributor, an ex-bubblehead from Cold War SSN days, and Random was, I think, an ex-birdfarm officer, non-flying type. The war between submariners and skimmer pukes is neverending.

Anyway, it makes ME laugh.


Begin Quote-------

Blackbeard: Ahh . . . Very passable, this, very passable.

Random: Nothing like a good glass of Chateau de Chassilier wine, aye
Blackbeard?

Blackbeard: You're right there, Random.

Random: Who'd a thought thirty years ago we'd all be sittin' here
drinking Chateau de Chassilier wine?

Blackbeard: Aye. In them days, we'd a' been glad to have the price of a
cup o' coffee.

Random: A cup o' COLD coffee.

Blackbeard: Without milk or sugar.

Random: OR coffee!

Blackbeard: In a filthy, cracked mug.

Random: We never used to have a mug. We used to have to drink out of a
rolled up newspaper.

Blackbeard: The best WE could manage was to suck on a piece of damp
cloth.

Random: But you know, we were happy in those days, though we were poor.

Blackbeard: Aye. BECAUSE we were poor. My old COB used to say to me,
'Money doesn't buy you happiness.'

Random: 'E was right. I was happier then and I had NOTHIN'. We used to
sail in this tiiiny old minesweeper, with greaaaaat big holes in the hull.

Blackbeard: Minesweeper? You were lucky to have a Minesweeper! We used
to berth in one compartment, all hundred and twenty-six of us, no racks. Half the deck was
missing; we were all huddled together in one corner for fear of FALLING!

Random: You were lucky to have a compartment! *We* used to have to berth
in a passageway!

Blackbeard: Ohhhh we used to DREAM of berthin' in a passageway! Woulda'
been a palace to us. We used to rack out in an old sanitary tank. We got woken
up every morning by having a load from the head dumped all over us!
Passageway!? Hmph.

Random: Well when I say 'passageway' it was only a hole in the deck
covered by a piece of tarpaulin, but it was a passageway to US.

Blackbeard: We were evicted from *our* hole in the deck; we had to go
rack out topside on a submarine!

Random: You were lucky to be topside! There were a hundred and sixty of
us living in a small shoebox next to the keel.

Blackbeard: Cardboard box?

Random: Aye.

Blackbeard: You were lucky. We lived for three months in a used condom
in a septic tank. We used to have to get up at six o'clock in the morning,
field day the rubber, eat a crust of stale bread, go to work in the bilge for fourteen hours a
day week in-week out. When we got off watch, our COB would thrash us to sleep with
his belt!

Random: Luxury. We used to have to get out of the shoebox at three
o'clock in the morning, field day the bilge, eat a handful of hot gravel, go to work at
the boiler every day for $.02 a month, and CHENG would beat us around the head and neck
with a broken bottle, if we were LUCKY!

Blackbeard: Well we had it tough. We used to have to get up from topside
at twelve o'clock at night, and LICK the bilge clean with our tongues.
We had half a handful of freezing cold gravel, worked twenty-four hours a day at
the boiler for $.04 every six years, and when we got home, our COB would slice
us in two with a bosun's knife.

Random: Right. I had to get up in the morning at twenty-two-hundred-
hours, half an hour before I went to bed, (pause for laughter), drink a cup of
sulphuric acid, work twenty-nine hours a day below decks, and pay the Navy for
permission to come to work, and when we got done each day, our XO and CHENG would kill
us, and dance about on our corpses singing 'Hallelujah.'

Blackbeard: But you try and tell the young people today that... and they
won't believe ya'.

Random: Nope, nope..

-----------------------------------

_____________________________

The Moose

(in reply to morganbj)
Post #: 30
Page:   [1] 2   next >   >>
All Forums >> [New Releases from Matrix Games] >> War in the Pacific: Admiral's Edition >> Hi From Abe Page: [1] 2   next >   >>
Jump to:





New Messages No New Messages
Hot Topic w/ New Messages Hot Topic w/o New Messages
Locked w/ New Messages Locked w/o New Messages
 Post New Thread
 Reply to Message
 Post New Poll
 Submit Vote
 Delete My Own Post
 Delete My Own Thread
 Rate Posts


Forum Software © ASPPlayground.NET Advanced Edition 2.4.5 ANSI

1.188