Block Island Wind Farm

Type:
windmill towers
Built:
2016, USA
Specs:
( 600 ft tall )
Depth:
0-85 ft

Block Island Wind Farm is the first commercial offshore wind farm in the United States, located 3.8 miles from Block Island, Rhode Island in the Atlantic Ocean. The five-turbine, 30 MW project was developed by Deepwater Wind, now known as Ørsted US Offshore Wind. The structures were designed by Alstom Wind, stand 600 ft (180 m) high, and can withstand a Category 3 storm. Construction began in 2015, and in late summer 2016, five turbines were erected. Operations were launched in December 2016.

The Block Island Wind Farm has experienced multiple issues, causing it to fail to perform on some occasions. Problems include turbine stress fatigue on four of the five turbines and erosion exposing the underwater cables that took the power to the mainland. The combination of the issues resulted in extensive shutdowns in the summer of 2021 for repairs and safety inspections. Four of the five wind turbines at the farm were offline for at least two months. In other words, typical wind turbines.

The towers are clearly marked "No Trespassing", but I guess swimming around them is ok.

This is certainly a unique dive for the northeast - continuous structure from the surface down to 85 feet. Dive it while it is still there, windmills like these typically last only a small fraction of their 'design' life. Hurricane?

Enhancing the view from shore. Wind farm plans for New Jersey are on hold.

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A number of small warships are sunk in New Jersey and New York waters.

subchaser (model)

A subchaser was a small coastal patrol vessel of World War I or II. Subchasers were lightly armed and even more lightly constructed, mostly out of plywood, powered by two diesel (WWII) or three gasoline (WWI) engines. Roughly the same design was used in both wars - 110 ft long, about 100 tons. Almost a thousand were built over both World Wars, and several are lost in the waters around this area. Many private yachts and some larger fishing trawlers were converted to perform this function also, like the Tarantula and the Moonstone. Conversely, some subchasers were converted to other duties after the war, such as the Bronx Queen, pictured below in military trim. Real subchasers were designated SC-, while converted yachts were designated SP-, PY- ( patrol yacht ) or PYc ( patrol yacht - coastal. )