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276 Cards in this Set
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- Back
Deadly Force |
That force that a person uses causing, or that a person knows or should know would create a substantial risk of causing, death or serious bodily harm. |
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Justification for deadly force |
Deadly Force is justified only under conditions of extreme necessity and as a last resort, when all lesser means have failed, or cannot reasonably be employed |
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Terrorism |
Calculated use of unlawful violence or threat of unlawful violence to include fear |
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Counter terrorism |
Offensive measures taken to prevent terrorism |
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Inherent right self-defense |
When there is a reasonable belief that a person poses an imminent threat of death or serious bodily harm. |
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Defence of others |
In defense of non-DOD persons in the vicinity when directly related to the assigned activity or mission |
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Assets vital to national security |
When deadly Force reasonably appears necessary to prevent the actual theft or sabotage of assets vital to national security |
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Inherently dangerous property |
When deadly Force reasonably appears to be necessary to prevent the actual theft or sabotage of inherently dangerous property |
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National critical infrastructure |
When deadly Force is necessary to prevent the destruction of national critical infrastructure defined as President-designated public utilities or similar critical infrastructure vital to public health and safety |
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Arrest or apprehension |
When deadly Force is necessary to arrest or apprehend when there is probably cause to believe a person has committed a serious offence and there is an imminent threat of death or serious bodily harm |
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Escape |
When deadly Force is necessary to prevent escape of a prisoner provided there is probably cause to believe that such person has committed or attempted to commit a serious offence that is one that involves imminent threat of death or serious bodily harm |
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Attwo |
(Antiterrorism Tactical Watch Officer) One single action officer with batteries - release authority |
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SFWC |
(Security Force Watch Commander) Coordinate the actions of security Force personal during responses to emergencies and terrorist incidents. briefs personal on recent antiterrorism and law enforcement intelligence. |
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NVPZ |
(Naval Vessel Protective Zone) Three specific zones of an estimated distance around the ship that the watch standers can use to assist in determining the intent of contacts or potential threats. |
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What are the NVPZ zones |
*Assessment zone: 500 yrds or greater *Warning zone: 100-500 yrds *Threat zone: 100 yrds or closer |
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FPCON Normal |
General global threat of terrorism |
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FPCON Alpha |
Increased general threat of terrorism |
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FPCON Bravo |
Increased or more predictable threat of terrorism |
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FPCON Charlie |
Incident occurs or intelligence is received indicating some form of terrorism |
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FPCON Delta |
Immediate area where a terrorist attack has occurred |
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ATFP |
The Bible The ATFP plan defines the spectrum of measures, qualifications, responses and tactics necessary to counter and manage terriorst incidents. |
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RAMS |
(Random Antiterrorism Measures) Random, multiple security measures that when activated, serve to disguise the actual security procedures in effect. |
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What are the nine goals of terrorist operations |
1. Recognition 2. Elimination of Western influence 3. Harassment, weakening or embarrassement of governments 4. Attainment of money or equipment 5. Destruction of facilities and disruption of communications 6. Discouraging foreign investors 7. Influence in government decisions 8. Freedom of prisoners 9. Satisfying vengeance |
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Seven phases of terrorist operations |
Phase I: broad target selection Phase II: intelligence gathering and surveillance Phase III: specific target selection Phase IV: pre-attack surveillance and planning Phase V: rehearsals Phase VI: actions on the objective Phase VII: escape and exploitation |
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Terrorist threat types |
-threat or hoax -sabotage -kidnapping -hijacking/seizure -assassination -maritime threats -arson -bombing -hostage taking -raid or ambush -aircraft threat -suicide tactics |
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Security alert |
Security alert is an emergency inside the ship that requires an immediate response to protect Reagan's internal security. The only people that can move around are the CO, XO, CDO, department heads, SSDF, and IET. |
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How many life rafts do we have. |
128 life rafts |
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How many people can the life raft hold. |
50 people with food for 7 days |
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What model life raft do we have |
Mk-8 life raft |
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How much do our anchors weight |
60,000 lbs (30 tons) |
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What type of anchor do we have |
Mark II standard navy stockless anchor |
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What are the parts of the anchor |
-Shackle -Bill -Shank -Fluke -Shoulder -Crown |
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How much does a chain link weight |
365 lbs |
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Where did our anchors come from |
USS Ranger (CV-61) |
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How many shots of chain are there |
12 shots |
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How long is each chain |
1080 ft |
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How long is each shot of chain |
90 ft (15 fathoms) |
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How long is a fathom |
1 fathom = 6 feet |
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What are the three ways to count the shots of chain |
1. Color code: red-white-red 2. Number of white links FWD or AFT of the detachable link 3. Number of wire wraps on the most INBOARD and OUTBOARD white link |
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What is the name of the most forward chock |
The Bull Nose. |
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What is the Bull Nose used for |
Towing. An aircraft carrier can be towed but can not tow. |
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How many ways are there to brake the anchor chain |
Hydraulic and manual |
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Name the parts of the detachable link |
-C-shaped link -taper pin -lead plug -hair pin - coupling plates |
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Name the three stoppers |
-Hawsing stopper -riding stopper - storm stopper |
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Where is the Hawsing stopper |
Closest to the hawse pipe |
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Where is the riding stopper |
Closest to the wild cat |
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What is the storm stopper used for |
Used for heavy weather |
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What are the three types of chocks in the Navy |
- Open - Closed - Rolling The Reagan only has closed |
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What color is the second to last shot and what does it represent |
Yellow and it is the "Warning Shot" |
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What color is the last shot and what does it represent |
Red and It is the "Danger Shot" |
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What are the wild cats used for |
Used to raise and lower the anchor chain |
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What are the two modes of the wild cat |
Engaged and disengaged |
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What is a striker plate |
Used to keep the chain off the deck |
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What is the stroke |
Used to control the speed of the hoisting and lowing of the anchor chain |
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What is a cable jack |
13 feet long used for anchor chain size 2 3/4 and larger, and they're used to help pass stoppers |
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What is a swivel |
One on each anchor chain, used to twist and turn to stop the anchor chain from kinking up |
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How many unrep stations are there and what are thier names |
1,3,5,7,9,11,13,15 |
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Which unrep stations are double probe receiving stations |
1, 7, 9 |
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What stations are sliding padeyes for conrep |
3, 5, 11 |
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What station is a single probe sending station, capable of sending fuel to other ships |
Station 15 located starboard aft of the ship |
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What stations are located overhead of Hanger Bay 2 |
Stations 3 and 5 |
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What stations are located overhead of Hanger Bay 3 |
Stations 11 and 13 |
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What station has three spaces |
Station 15 - upper - middle - lower |
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What is the P & D line |
(Phone and distance line)
Is a bridge to bridge communication. Located on the flight deck forward of the island |
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Where is the P & D located for fueling evolutions |
Located on Ace 1 |
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Where is the P & D located for cargo evolutions |
Located on Ace 2 |
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The P & D flag is how long |
0-300 feet with a flag every 20 ft |
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What colors are the P & D flags |
Green, red, yellow, blue, white, green (Go run your bearings with grease) |
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What are the three types of replenishment |
- Conrep: taking on stores, mail, personal, ammo - Unrep: taking on fuel - vertrep: helicopter on the flight deck |
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During an unrep what color hard hat/life jacket does the safety wear |
White |
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During an unrep what color hard hat/life jacket does the rig captain wear |
Yellow |
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During an unrep what color hard hat/life jacket do the riggers/line handlers wear |
Blue |
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During an unrep what color hard hat/life jacket do the signalman/phone talkers wear |
Green |
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During an unrep what color hard hat/life jacket does the winch operator and checker wear |
Brown |
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During an unrep what color hard hat/life jacket do the fuelers wear |
Purple |
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During an unrep what color hard hat/life jacket do the gunners mates wear |
Red |
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What is the max speed for replenishment |
13 kts |
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What lateral separation is allowed for a replenishment at sea, what is the maximum |
140-160 ft 180 ft max |
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What does B&A crane stand for, and the what is it's purpose |
Boat and aircraft crane, used to on load / off load small boats and aircraft |
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What is the main hooks SWL |
50,000 lbs |
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What is the AUX hooks SWL |
6,750 lbs |
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What does RIB stand for |
Rigid hull inflatable boat |
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How many people can a RIB hold |
4 crew and 18 personal max |
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What is the name of the stbd rib |
The ranger |
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What is the name of the port RIB |
The Eureka |
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Where is the SAR swimmer deployed and recovered |
Deployed on the STBD side and recovered on the Port side |
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What type of engine does the RIB use |
Inboard engine is a Cummings Outboard engine is a prop |
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Who is in the Davit crew |
1. Safety 2. Davit Captain 3. Davit operator/winch checker 4. Line handlers 5. Phone talkers |
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Who are the boat crew personal |
1. Boat Officer 2. Coxswain 3. Boat engineer 4. SAR swimmer |
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What is used to raise and lower the RIB |
Man ropes (monkey lines) |
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In which order are the lines cast off when lowering the RIB in the water |
1. Raymond quick release hook 2. Aft steadying line 3. Fwd steadying line 4. Sea painter |
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What is the max speed for RIB recovery |
5-7 knots |
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What are the three types of man over board recovery |
1. Helo 2. Small boats 3. J-bar Davit (never used) |
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How is wire rope measured |
Diameter |
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How is line measured |
Circumference |
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What is small stuff |
Line measuring 1 3/4" or smaller |
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How is hawser measured |
5" or over |
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What is a tattle tail |
Used to give a safe working load of a mooring line |
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What is a capstan |
Used to heave or slack down lines. 8 total on the ship |
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What is a gypsy winch |
Used for smaller spaces to heave in or slack down lines. 4 total on the ship |
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What is a Marlinspike |
Used to splice line |
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What is a FID |
Used to splice line |
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What are the deck underway watches |
- aft steering both port and STBD - lifebouy - fwd lookout - aft port/stbd lookout - BMOW - MOOW - helms - leehelms |
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What does the aft steering watch stander do |
Takes control of steering from the bridge in case of a casualty |
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What does the lifebouy watch stander do |
Keep the lookout for a man overboard |
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What do the lookout watch standers do |
Report surface and air contacts as well as sea life |
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What does the BMOW do |
(boatswainmate of the watch) Is overall in charge of all enlisted on the bridge |
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What does the helm watch do |
Drives the ship |
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What does the leehelms do |
Makes RPM and speed changes |
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What are three ways to secure a line |
1. Bollards - on the pier 2. Cleats - 2 horned fitting on the bulkhead, decks, and overheads 3. Bitts - secure lines from ship to the pier |
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What was the first rate in the Navy |
Boatsmen mate |
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Who is this damage control officer |
CDR Jones |
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What is the DC watch station in DCC |
Damage control watch superviser |
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Describe a class A fire |
-Any burning material that leaves ash - white smoke - Primary extinguisher: firemain - overhaul: break apart embers |
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Describe a class B fire |
- Flammable liquids - black smoke - primary extinguisher: AFFF/PKP - overhaul: blanket with AFFF, remove fuel from space |
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Describe a class C fire |
- electrical fire - blue smoke - primary extinguisher: CO2, PKP as a last resort due to corrosive qualities - overhaul: preform initial voltage verification with CO's permission |
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Describe a class D fire |
- combustible metals / self-oxidizing - jettison |
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What are the three sides of the fire triangle |
1. Heat 2. Oxygen 3. Fuel |
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What additional component makes the fire tetrahedron |
Uninhibited chemical chain reaction |
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How many sides are there to primary boundaries |
6 |
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Which is the most important boundary pertaining to a fire |
Upper boundary must be set first |
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What are the two standard sizes for navy fire fighting |
1.5" and 2.5" |
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What are the four stages of a fire |
1. Growth 2. Flashover 3. Fully developed 4. Decay |
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What does PKP Stand for |
Potassium bicarbonate |
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What propels PKP from the extinguisher |
CO2 cartridge |
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What is the range for these extinguishers |
1. 18 lb PKP -- 19' / 10 seconds 2. 27 lb PKP -- 21' / 11 seconds 3. 15 lb CO2 -- 4-6' / 40-44 seconds 4. AFFF -- 15' / 4 sq foot / 60 seconds |
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What does NFTI |
Naval firefighting thermal imager |
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What is the NFTI used for |
To locate hot spots though smoke, for overhaul purposes, and to locate downed personal |
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What team member used the NFTI |
Fire team leader |
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What are the two types of NFTI battery packs |
1. Ni-Cad rechargeable 2. Alkaline battery pack (10 AA batteries) |
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A NFTI with fresh battiers has a life span of approximately how long |
60-90 mins |
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What model NFTI do we have on-board |
K90 talisman |
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What can the NFTI not see though |
Glass |
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What does SCBA stand for |
Self contained breathing apparatus |
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What are the two sizes of SCBA that we use |
45 min and 30 min |
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Who uses the 30 min SCBA bottle |
Investigators and gas free engineer |
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What kind of air do we fill our SCBA with |
Grade D (or better) |
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How much PSI are SCBA filled to |
4500 PSI |
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What is active desmoking |
Desmoking the smoke control zone during fire fighting efforts |
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What fans are used for desmoking |
1. Ram fan 2. Box fan |
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What is the CFM of the box and ram fans |
1. Ram fan / 2000 2. Box fan / 3200 |
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What powers the ram fan |
The firemain |
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What does AFFF stand for |
Aqueous film forming foam |
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What is the ratio of seawater to AFFF concentration |
94% seawater and 6% AFFF |
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How many AFFF stations do we have on the second deck |
20 |
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How many AFFF stations are injection only |
Four (1, 2, 11, and 12) |
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How many countermeasure washdown mixing stations are there and what deck are they on |
21 on the 03 level |
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What does group 21 serve and what station does it come off |
The bomb farm - AFFF #17 |
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How many gallons can the AFFF reserve tanks hold |
3900 gallons |
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How many AFFF transfer reserve tanks do we have and where are they |
Two (HB 1 port side and HB 3 stbd side) |
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How many ways can you operate an AFFF station and what are they |
1. Push button (remote) 2. SOPV (manual) 3. Motor controller (local) |
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How many gallons can AFFF stations hold |
600 gallons |
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How many transfer pumps do we have and what are they rated at |
2 pumps rated at 360 GPM |
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What are the two pumps on the AFFF stations |
- injection - proportioning |
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What are the injection and proportioning pumps rated at |
1. Injection: 60 GPM +/- 5 GPM 2. Proportioning: 65 GPM +/- 5 GPM |
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Where does the injection pump service |
The flight deck |
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Where does the proportioning pump service |
- emergency Diesel generators - JP-5 pump rooms - weapons elevator - hanger bay sprinkler - hanger bay hose reels - main space bilge sprinkler - re-entry hose reels |
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What is the AFFF sound powered phone circuit |
X50J |
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What does MOPP stand for |
Mission oriented protective posture |
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How many MOPP levels are there |
Five - MOPP level 0 - 4 |
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What MOPP level are personal required to carry gas mask on hip |
MOPP level 2 |
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At what MOPP level is circle William set |
MOPP level 4 |
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At what MOPP level is CMWD intermittently operated |
MOPP level 3 |
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What are the three different detection kits/papers |
- M-8 paper - M-9 paper - M-256A1 kit |
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What agents in a vapor form will the M-256A1 chemical agent detector kit identify |
1. Blister 2. Nerve 3. Lewisite 4. Blood |
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What chemical agents will M-8 paper detect when the paper turns the following colors |
Green : V nerve Yellow : G nerve Red : H-type blister |
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M-9 paper turns what color when a nerve agent is detected |
Spotted red |
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Where would one find the color comparison chart for the M-8 paper |
On the inside front cover of the M-8 paper booklet |
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Will the M-8 paper detect an agent in the gas or vapor form |
No, M-8 paper only detects agents in the liquid form |
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What is the response time for M-8 paper |
20 seconds |
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What is the response time for the M-9 paper |
10 seconds |
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Where should M-8 or M-9 paper be posted prior to an attack |
Near ventilation ducts Watertight access And as stated in ships CBR bill |
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What is contained in the M-256A1detector kit |
1. 12 sampler-detectors 2. 1 book of M-8 papers 3. Operation instruction cards |
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When using the M-256A1 kit, the operator must protect the sampler-detectors kit from what elements |
Excessive moisture, wind, and direct sunlight |
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What can touching the spots of the sampler-detector in a M-256A1 kit result in |
A false reading or incorrect test results |
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What is the skin decontamination kit called |
Reactive skin decontamination lotion (RSDL) |
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What are the two antidotes for nerve agents |
1. Atropine 2. 2-Pam chloride |
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How many physical states are chemicals found to exist in |
1. Solid 2. Liquid 3. Gas |
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How do chemical agents enter the body |
1. Respiratory tract 2. Contact with the skin 3. Wounds or cuts 4. Through the eyes |
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What is the CBR protective suit called |
1. Advanced chemical Protective garment (ACPG) 2. Joint Service lightweight intergrated suit technology (JSLIST) |
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What makes up an ACPG |
- trousers - coat - boots - gloves - glove inserts |
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What must you ensure is in your trousers and coat before donning |
The charcoal liner |
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What is the shelf life of an ACPG |
5 years |
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What is the operational life of the ACPG |
45 wear days (uncontaminated) 24 hours (contaminated) |
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How many times can you wash a ACPG |
6 times in 120 days |
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What is the canister that goes with th MCU-2P |
C2 canister |
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What is the CBR mask |
MCU-2P |
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What are some characteristics of the C-2 canister |
1. Charcoal filter 2. NATO threads |
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How can you tell the difference between a training C2 canister and actual C2 canister |
The training canister will have a white ring |
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What is the maximum life expectancy of a C2 when opened in a non-contaminated environment |
60 days |
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How many auto-injectors of atropine 2-chloride are issued to each person at the threat of chemical attack |
3 each |
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What is the chemical name for HFP |
Heptaflourapropane |
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Once HFP is activated how long for discharge after going though time delay |
10 seconds |
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How long is the time delay for HFP |
30 seconds |
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What is the purpose of the time delay for HFP |
Allow ventilation to shut down |
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For HFP how many CO2 actuation points are there and what are they |
2 local and remote |
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What is the required "soak" time before entering a space after HFP discharge |
Minimum 15 minutes soak time and 15 minutes ventilation time |
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How is HFP activated |
5 Lb CO2 actuator |
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How many spaces on board RR are protected by HFP |
11 |
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What spaces does HFP protect |
- emergency Diesel generators - jp-5 pump rooms - hazmat/paint lockers |
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At what temperature does HFP begin to decompose |
1300 degrees Fahrenheit |
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What toxic gas does HFP break down to |
Hydrogen flouride |
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What are the flow rates for the 1½ inch vari-nozzle and where are they used |
- 95 GPM (inside skin of ship) - 125 GPM (weather decks) |
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Why do we use 95 GPM hoses inside the skin of the ship |
To prevent flooding from firefighting water |
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What are the patterns of the vari-nozzle |
1. Solid steam 2. Narrow "V" 3. Wide "V" 4. Flush |
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What are the three types of shoring |
- H - I - K |
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What type of wood shoring is the strongest and why |
I type due to direct pressure |
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When using "K" type shoring you must keep the "V" angles to less than what degree |
90° |
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What are the best woods to use for shoring |
Douglas fir and yellow pine |
|
What are the two sizes of metal shoring |
3-5' 6-11' |
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What is the weight capacity for metal shoring |
3-5: fully extended-12,000 Fully collapsed- 20,000 6-11: fully extended- 6,000 Fully collapsed - 20,000 |
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Who can authorize steel shoring to be weilded into place |
The CO |
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What tools must a shoring watch have on hand |
Mallets |
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What is the maximum length of a shore |
30 times the minimum thickness |
|
What is the maximum length of a wedge |
6 times the minimum butt thickness |
|
What are the four pipe patches used in the Navy |
1. Soft 2. Jubilee 3. Banding 4. Ewarp |
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What is The first step to putting on a pipe patch |
Securing pressure to the pipe |
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What is the definition of flooding |
Water rising faster than it can be removed |
|
What is the max PSI for all four pipe patches |
Ewarp, soft patch, banding: 150 PSI Jubilee: 100 PSI |
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What does ewarp stand for |
Emergency water activated repair Patch |
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What is the soak time and cure time for ewarp |
- Soak time: 20 seconds - Cure time: 30 seconds |
|
What is the maximum operating temperature for ewarp |
300 degrees Fahrenheit |
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What types of systems cannot be patched using ewarp and why |
- steam: too hot - potable water: contamination of water - JP-5: contamination of fuel |
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What are the inlet and outlet sizes of the S-type |
1½" inlet and 2½" outlet |
|
What are the inlet and outlet sizes of the peri-jet |
2½" inlet and 4" outlet |
|
What is the advantage of using the peri-jet over the other 2 types of portable eductors |
Peri-jet can pass small objects up to approximately 2" in diameter |
|
What is the primary purpose of an educator |
Remove liquid |
|
What are the three types of portable eductors |
1. Peri-jet 2. S-TYPE 3. Derbyshire |
|
What does ESP stand for |
Electrical submersible pump |
|
What powers the ESP |
440 V |
|
How many DC repair lockers are there |
10 |
|
Where are the DC lockers on the main deck |
- 1A aft pulper - 1B above gee-dunk machine - 1F FWD in hanger bay 1 port side |
|
Where are the DC locker on the gallery deck |
- 7A inboard of the B/A crane 03 level - 7B ladder well up to the island, outboard 03 level - 7F next to the indoc classroom, 03 level |
|
Where are the DC lockers on the damage control deck |
- 2 fwd of male G-3 berthing - 3 aft of XO's pway - 4 aft of security dispatch - 5 next to midship pulper, aft mess deck |
|
Where is the second damage control Central |
Fire Marshalls office |
|
What is the PECU |
Portable exothermic cutting unit, used as an access tool |
|
What gas is used to operate the PECU |
Oxygen |
|
Firemain pressure is maintained at what PSI |
150 +/- 25 PSI |
|
Who maintains the master damage control book on the ship |
DCA |
|
What is the primary circuit for damage control |
2JZ |
|
What material condition is set during darken ship |
Dog zebra |
|
What 4 groups make up the repair party |
1. Locker team 2. Fire team 3. Support team 4. DC team |
|
Who makes up the locker team |
1. Locker leader 2. Scene leader 3. Phone talkers 4. Plotter 5. Messenger |
|
Who makes up the fire team |
1. Fire team leader 2. Nozzle man 3. Hose man 4. Access man 5. Plug man 6. Overhaul man |
|
What functions does the DC team preform |
- desmoking - dewatering - pipe patching - shoring - plugging |
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How do the following agents put out a fire |
- AFFF: smothers and cools - CO2: displaces oxygen - HFP: inhibits chemical reaction - PKP: inhibits chemical reaction |
|
What is the EEBD and how long do you have to escape with an EEBD |
(emergency escape breathing device) Approximately 10 minutes |
|
What 4 gases does the gas free engineer test for following a casualty |
1. Oxygen 2. Carbon monoxide 3. Hydrogen sulfide 4. Lower explosive limit |
|
What is the COSAL |
(Coordinated shipboard allowance list) Tells us what we are allowed to carry and how many of each item |
|
What is a DLR |
(Depot level repairable) Items which based on unit cost have been selected by inventory managers for special inventory control |
|
What is standard form 368 |
Quality definitely report |
|
What does TAO stand for |
Tatical actions officer |
|
What does ADWC stand for |
Air defence weapons coordinator |
|
What does AIC stand for |
Air intercept controller |
|
What does ASTAC stand for |
Anti-submarine tactical air controller |
|
What does SSES stand for |
Ships signal exploitation space |
|
What does NATO stand for |
North Atlantic treaty organization |
|
What does RADAR stand for |
Radio detection and ranging |
|
What does SONAR stand for |
Sound navigation and ranging |
|
What does EMCON stand for |
Emissions control |
|
What does GCCS-M stand for |
Global command control system marine time |
|
What does SSDS stand for |
Ship self defense system |
|
What does TDZ stand for |
Torpedo danger zone |
|
What does JEZ stand for |
Joint engagement zone |
|
What does FEZ stand for |
Fighter engagement zone |
|
What does MEZ stand for |
Missile engagement zone |
|
What does DLRP stand for |
Data link reference point |
|
What does TACAN stand for |
(tatical air navigation) Device mounted to ships mast used as a homing device to return to the ship |
|
Link 4A dolly |
Assist AIC |
|
Link 11 alligator |
HF and UHF roll call |
|
Link 16 timber |
High capacity anti-jam short range |
|
SAT 16 black timber |
Ultra long range super high frequency |
|
What are the different message traffic's |
1. Flash: less than 19 minutes 2. Immediate: 30 minutes 3. Priority: 3 hours 4. Routine: 6 hours |
|
What are the 4 classification of material |
1. Unclassified 2. Confidential 3. Secret 4. Top secret |
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Operations Officer |
(CDR Lee) Plans, coordinate, and schedule operations of the ship for warfare and logistic services |
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CDC officer |
(CDR Butler) Directly responsible to the operations Officer for the following: organizing and training the CDC team |