Tuesday, August 31, 2021

"The GUN-X"




Here's one I thoroughly enjoyed reading and thought I'd put out there for my shipmates. This was written by an FT Lasorsa from the ol' school Navy way back in the fifties... I hope you enjoy!!!


Some of my recollections, of the Navy service days, have dimmed with time.  But certainly some events remain imbedded in my memory bank and will stay forever.  This tale is one that I recall every time I see a Navy Corsair.

        
Early in 1952, the Daly was conducting gunnery exercises off Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. On this occasion, we were to conduct an aerial target shoot using the “New” Mk 25 Gun Fire Control Radar. The Daly had just had the obsolete “bed screen” antenna replaced and this was to be a crucial operational test of the new system, its operation and accuracy.
 
Part of the days exercise was to fire the 5”38 guns, using the new Fire Control Radar, at a sleeve that was being towed by a Navy Corsair. From my position, in the Main Fire Control Director, a level above the bridge, I was peering through our gun sight optics tracking the target sleeve in the sky high above us. The Pointer, my partner in the Director, and I reported to the Control Command Center (Plot) that we were having problems staying on the target sleeve because the Radar was “hunting” back and forth instead of locking on the target. It seemed that the Radar was trying to run up the sleeve towards the plane. This was causing the computer to receive information that the target speed was faster or slower than it actually was. Each time it did this, it gave the computer a false indication of the true target speed.  This in turn affected the calculated trajectory, which would cause the guns to shoot at a “target it believed to be farther ahead of where it should be.
 
My initial reports to the Command Center (Plot) recommending that we delay the exercise were being over ruled by an eager, excited Gunnery Officer, sitting nearby me in the Director, to fire the guns. Shouts of “Commence Fire” came over the phones.  On reflex with the command to “Fire, I closed the firing key, and observed that the Radar was creeping up the cable, toward the plane.  My immediate response was to release the “firing key” and I screamed into the phones, “Cease Fire” and pulled the alarm. 
 
To my surprise and totally ignoring my command, someone continued to shout “Commence Fire, Commence Fire”, I felt the rumble as the guns fired.  Anxiety spread through my body as I pressed my eye tighter to the gun sight and saw a 5-inch shell burst right beside the tail of the Corsair.  The design of the Proximity Fuses used in this exercise was designed to explode the shell within 50 -75 ft of the target. The shell burst pattern, with shrapnel, was close enough to have destroyed the tail section of the plane.
 
The shouts of “Commence Fire” coming from the Gunnery Officer in the Fire Control Director continued even after the shell burst. Seeing the seriousness of this matter I held to a “Cease Fire,” holding the firing key open. There was silence, no guns fired! All action had ceased.
 
The Gunnery Officer turned to me and bellowed “You, are on Report”! I tore off my headphones and pulled myself out of the overhead hatch and headed below.  Someone came up to me and said I was to report below to the Chiefs Quarters, to meet with the Fire Control Chief. On my way below, I took noticed that all the gun barrels were slowly dropping down to the deck. All power has been shut down to the guns. 
                 
Our Fire Control Chief was the perfect model of a Navy Chief.  Extremely efficient and strongly defensive of his men.  I was only in the Chief’s Quarters a few moments when a line of officers appeared at the hatch.  It seemed that each one had a report chit in his hand.
 
 They were stopped cold by the chief with his firm words of reality, “This is just practice, and that was an American Pilot in that plane”.  His comments continued that I represented his “Eyes” in the Fire Control Director, and had orders from him to shut down the exercise if anything should appear wrong.  He told them that “he” ran the ship when “we” fire the guns. With these final comments, it was agreed that the exercise would continue, with caution. At this point all Officers left the Quarters.
 
Meanwhile, after that shell had exploded perilously close to the plane, the pilot pulled his Corsair hard up into the clouds and disappeared. A short while later he radioed down with these words that I will never forget.
 
“I’m pulling this thing not pushing it.  When you find out which one you’re shooting at, I’ll come back”
 
 Nick Lasorsa, FT2

             P.S.  I was not put on report!
 

2 comments:

  1. Nick - Being a FTM3 I really enjoyed your story. I had something similar happen to me while on my first DE. We were having trouble with all of our 40mm guns. we had a firing exercise scheduled and the XO was told about our problems, which when the 40mm's reached a certain angle they would immediately point straight up. The XO, was hell bent on conducting the exercise and so it went on. I was in one of the Twin forty director tubs and the exercise started. The plane was towing the sleeve and when the command was given, we started firing. When we reached that certain angle the guns went to straight up. Of course, the projectiles came very close to the tow plane and the pilot cut the cable and left. Of course we didn't care because now we had a sleeve with no holes for crossing the equator.

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  2. A. Carman 5" Battery OfficerSeptember 2, 2021 at 5:20 AM

    On a lighter note - while serving as Sky-1 director officer on BB-62, we had the chance to shoot at a towed target in the med. The plan was to open fire with the 5" first and then let the 20mm CIWS shoot as it closed to 2,000 yards. The CIWS gunners were always bragging how we (5" team) couldn't hit the target and they would take it down for us. I told the weapons officer that was only because we only fired practice ammo that had no explosives and in addition the fuzes placed on the practice ammo were usually defective (the ammo plant put the fuzes that didn't pass all the quality assurance tests on the practice ammo). Bottom line, we got to use live 5" ammo, one salvo at 10,000 yards and the target was gone, leaving the 20mm nothing to shoot. And the 5" team got to paint the director instead

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