When ships were in their home ports, the naval bases provided two vehicles to ships of the frigate through cruiser size. One was a pickup truck, the use of which was controlled by either the OOD or the CDO. The other vehicle was a four-door sedan, which was controlled by the CDO or the XO. They were the land-based analogues to the Motor Whaleboat and the Captain's Gig.[1] The vehicles were technically assigned to the local Supply Center's motor pool, which took care of maintenance. Gas was from the base gas station; the drivers would sign a sheet that gave the vehicle ID number.
Two vehicles did not begin to scratch the requirements for transportation of ships that had 250-350 people on board. Sailors and officers often had to use their personal vehicles for routine ship's business, though larger vehicles could be signed out of the motor pool for special uses.
So there was this one ship. A few sailors made it their practice to go over to Base Salvage from time to time.[2] One of the sailors found some vehicles and he tried to start them. One old step-side pickup truck started, so he took it back to his ship. The Supply Officer had a cow, so to speak, because the ship wasn't authorized three vehicles. He pointed out that they couldn't get gas at the base gas station, because the truck's serial number was stricken.
The XO told the SuppO to close his eyes and forget that he ever saw the truck. One of the chiefs drove to the far reaches of the base and found a similar truck. He wrote down the serial number of that truck. The unofficial ship's truck was then re-numbered to match the other truck.
When it was necessary to get gas, the only risk, although tiny, was that two identically-numbered trucks would be gassing up at the same time. But since there was more than one gas station on that huge base, the risk was negligible. The driver would drive up to the pumps and fill up the truck. The supply weasel at the station would note down the truck's number and the driver would drive away.
When the ship deployed to the Med, the truck was parked out behind the barn of one of the chiefs, who lived in a rural area. A large tarp was thrown over it and staked down. After the ship returned, the truck was retrieved and put back into service.
Finally the day came when the ship was assigned to another home port. Nobody was too keen on trying to drive that old truck a thousand miles or so over the highways, so it was parked in the pier's parking lot with the keys inside of it.
[1] A subject for a later post.
[2] Salvage was where ships and commands dropped off unneeded equipment. If another unit didn't want it, then it was disposed of after a period of time.
'Tis Done ...
6 hours ago
5 comments:
wondered how things like that worked. Most books mention very little about such things. I guess I always assumed there were a couple trucks (6X6s) assigned to each ship. Thank you!
Speaking of creative 'supply runs', I was an enineer on the fueling deck of an oiler. Our sister ship was going into refit and unloaded her hydraulic fueling deck gear on the jetty beside us. Seeing as we were perpetually plagued with mechanical breakdowns and was saddled with a glacial supply system I did a midnight shopping trip on those babies. This is when Karme rears its vindictive head. One year later I was posted to the same ship I just robbed. The upside of it my Chief thought I was an engineering god when I could find the problems so quicly:)
Why couldn't the XO have put the truck on the ship and taken it with?
PP, the problem was that while nobody was too bothered by driving an illegal truck on base, the ship was going into overhaul at a non-Navy shipyard. The truck would have been driven on civilian roads and there was a bit of a legal risk if the cops found out that the truck was illegally registered.
Or so I was told. It wouldn't surprise me a bit if the CO was told something along the lines of "we know about the truck, don't take it off base anymore."
I remember we once had a truck out of PSNS, and it got pulled over on I-5. They asked for registration... didn't have it. It was a military vehicle.
All kinds of calls are made, and afterwards the cop comes back and says "get out of here. This truck is too much trouble. Basically, you can get away with just about anything because there is no longer an officer in the area that will touch this vehicle with a ten foot pole."
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