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Miscellaneous weird wallet cards related to the U.S.S. Green Bay. As with everything else, I believe there were more than what is pictured here, but they have been lost or destroyed.
The wallet cards are kinda ratty because they spent a lot of time in wallets. Not a healthy environment.
I failed to get my aluminum plank when I was detached from the U.S.S. Green Bay. The U.S.S. Green Bay was decommissioned. I again failed to get my plank. If the former U.S.S. Green Bay is ever scraped (no! not that!), I want my plank.
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I recently started learning about copyright law and have become concerned about displaying this particular graphic or allowing it or other higher resolution versions to be downloaded. I am trying to get permission from the copyright holder, Tiffany Publishing Company of Norfolk, VA.
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For high speed cruising the ship was powered by a GE 7LM1500-PE102 gas turbine. This is the same engine as the J79 that powered several models of the Phantom jet, but with a power turbine in place of the thruster section. As an engineer, I got to play with the gas turbine a little (a very little).
We ALL had the joy of being lulled to sleep by the mellow SHRIEKING of the gas turbine from time to time, as the ship pounded through the water at speeds "in excess of 45 knots." Ya gotta be pretty darned tired to fall asleep with a jet engine feet from your head, and only a quarter inch of aluminum between you and the SHRIEKING engine. Dang! My wife wonders why I am hard of hearing.
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(I never was an EM ... typo) |
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