r/NavyNukes • u/Smooth-Bad-5425 ET2/CVN-72(Plankowner)/LCDR, CEC ( Ret) • 5d ago
Evolution of Nuclear Power Training
This post is mainly for the folks that spent at least a 20 yr active duty career in the nuclear power program over a few years ranges:
1980-2000;
1990-2010;
2000-2020; and
2010-present
What I'm curious about is whether over the time period from 1980 to the present, the nuclear power program changed such as difficulty & entrance requirements.
For data purposes, I was an ET from 1986-1992. Back in 1986, ETs went through Basic Electronics & Electricity for around two months or so where we learned all about the subject and went through circuit board troubleshooting. ET "A" school had antenna theory, transistors & tube, and the SPS-10 radar system (not very nuclear related at all). For the newer folks, ET "A" school for nukes back then was 2200-0600 daily. That was rough. Nuke school was probably similar to current academics and prototype was attended at either Idaho, Ballston Spa, or Windsor CT.
If anyone can chime in and give me program info over the years that would be much appreciated.
In summary, I have a feeling that making it through the training pipeline is more difficult now than what it was 40 yrs ago (that is such a depressing idea!).
Thanks!
1
u/cmetcalf7 1d ago
The USS Vulcan was a real piece of work. I was deployed on it for around 3 months in early 1975 waiting to start NPS. I think I was in the aft engine room, though I'm not positive. That might be the ship where I first heard the saying, "Get a bigger hammer". We were trying to remove a bearing from a motor, and it was not coming off. So the fellow I was working with said something along the lines of "We need to go get a bigger hammer". When I was an EM1 on the USS Virginia from '78-'80, I was trying to remove a bearing which, again, was not coming off. I told the bearing if it didn't move, I was going to get a bigger hammer. Amazingly enough, the bearing decided to come off. I still use that phrase to this day, rarely we any luck unfortunately.