USS Bass V-2 / SS-64 (1/2)

Shipwreck USS Bass
This photo is signed by Admiral Chester W Nimitz.
Type:
shipwreck, submarine, U.S. Navy
Built:
1924, Portsmouth Navy Yard, NH USA
Specs:
( 341 x 28 ft ) 2000 displacement tons, no crew
Sunk:
Monday March 12, 1945
deliberate - weapons test
Depth:
155 ft - sand ; 140 ft - deck ; 120 ft - conning tower

The Bass was an unsuccessful design. Her three-ship class was envisioned as a long-range, long-endurance attack craft, designed to patrol in distant waters, and sported a number of very advanced features for their day. However, many of these features did not work as well as hoped, and the boats were plagued with mechanical difficulties, unreliable propulsion systems, and poor handling characteristics, both at the surface and submerged.

The Bass and her two sisters were huge - 340 ft, 2000 tons - over twice the size of most contemporary boats. For some idea of her size, the Bass dwarfs the nearby U-853 of almost twenty years later - 251 ft, 1051 tons. In fact, the U-853 would probably fit inside the Bass. The Gato class submarines that were the WWII workhorses of the US Navy in the Pacific were actually smaller than the Bass, at 311 ft, 1816 tons. Even the modern Los Angeles class nuclear attack submarines, largest of their type, are only some 20 ft longer, although considerably heavier.

Shipwreck USS Bass
Bass (right) and a sistership. Evidently, the forward diving planes retract into the hull, which explains their absence on the wreck.

Because of her shortcomings, the Bass was forced into early retirement less than 15 years old but called out again for wartime service in 1940. Her duties were mostly patrol and training, and she never saw combat. After a devastating internal fire, she was converted to cargo duties and was eventually used as a test target, a fate similar to several previous submarines.

Shipwreck USS Bass
Shipwreck USS Bass
The periscope sheers

Today the Bass lies in two pieces. The forward third of the hull broke off during sinking, and lies about 50 ft south of the main wreckage, skewed off at an angle and listing 45 degrees to port. There is usually a rope between the two pieces. The break occurred just forward of an internal bulkhead, so the bow section is wide open for penetration. The forward diving planes are not evident, but the torpedo doors are large and obvious. The anchor bit in the bow is of an odd shape that gave the boat a distinctive forward profile and is worth a look.

Shipwreck USS Bass
A diver swims above the port propeller.
Shipwreck USS Bass
The aft escape trunk.

The upright aft section, with the conning tower intact, is more interesting. Penetration of the hull at the break is possible through the hatches in the bulkhead. Penetration of the conning tower is also possible. Most of the decking has rusted away, revealing a maze of pipes below, and the cylindrical pressure hull beneath. Swimming back to the stern, you will find the most interesting area of the wreck. The dual propellers lie half-buried in the sand, with the aft diving planes just behind, set permanently at a hard down angle. Above these are the large frames that guarded against entanglement, and behind and mostly buried is the rudder.

Large schools of Ling swarm over the bottom around the wreck. Higher up, cunners are dominant. Owing to the depth, this is usually a dark dive, with little ambient light.

NOAA

Underwater photographs courtesy of James Lee / DeepScape.com.

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lanyard

Chances are your light or other piece of gear came with a wrist lanyard. This item is probably ok for diving in the tropics where you shouldn't be doing anything with your hands anyway, but around here it is lousy. Wrist lanyards are a pain to put on and a pain to get off, and in the case of a light, if you let go of it to do something with both hands, it will invariably get in the way and bob around until it shines in your eyes and blinds you. When you finally get fed up with it, you will take it off, and in a careless moment, your equipment will be lost. Here is a much better rig, commonly known as a "hi-lo" lanyard:

Take the wrist lanyard off, and throw it away. Get two brass snaps and a piece of rope. Braided 1/2 " nylon is what I used because it is supple, won't rot, won't unravel, and doesn't float. Attach a brass snap to each end. You can just tie them on, or get fancy like me and make streamlined loops. The end-to-end length of mine is about four feet, including the snaps, but you can experiment. Attach the base ring of one of the brass snaps directly to your gear where the lanyard was.

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