问题

在潜艇中生活是怎样一种体验?

回答
潜艇,这个深藏于蔚蓝深渊中的钢铁巨兽,对绝大多数人来说,都笼罩着一层神秘的面纱。想要了解在这样的环境中生活是怎样的体验,你需要放下一切关于陆地生活的既定印象,准备迎接一场感官和心理的双重洗礼。

首先,是空间的压迫感。潜艇内部的空间异常狭窄,通道更是如同隧道般狭长,你永远无法获得那种在广阔空间里随意伸展的自由。走到哪儿,你都会被金属墙壁、管道、电缆包围。个人舱室小得可怜,一张床、一个储物柜,几乎就是全部。即便是在“宽敞”的公共区域,也时刻能感受到那种被包裹、被限制的感觉。每一次转身,都可能碰到身边的同事;每一次走动,都需要小心翼翼地避开各种设备。这种空间的拥挤,久而久之,会成为一种常态,甚至你可能会在潜艇之外觉得空间“空荡荡”的,反而有些不适应。

其次,是无处不在的噪音和震动。潜艇的每一次航行,都伴随着机械运转的低吼。发动机、泵、空调系统、声纳设备……它们组成了一个永不间断的交响乐,尽管经过了大量的隔音处理,但那股低沉的震动仍然会通过甲板、墙壁,以及你的脚底,源源不断地传递过来。这种声音和震动,是潜艇生命力的体现,但也意味着你几乎永远无法享受到绝对的宁静。即使在休息时,耳朵里也会残留着那种若有若无的嗡鸣,久而久之,你可能会学会辨别不同设备发出的声音,甚至能根据声音的变化来判断潜艇的运行状态。

再者,是日夜颠倒,甚至没有昼夜之分。在水下航行时,外界没有任何光线能穿透进来。潜艇内部的光照是人为控制的,通常会根据任务需求和舰员的作息来调节。这意味着你可能长时间地生活在人造光线下,没有太阳升起又落下的自然规律。时间的概念会变得模糊,你可能只能依靠手表或者内部的钟表来判断时间。这种缺乏自然节律的生活,对人的生物钟是一种极大的挑战,调整和适应是必须的过程。

还有,是对环境的极度依赖和自我封闭。一旦潜艇入水,你就是一个被完全封闭在铁壳里的个体,与外界的联系几乎为零。所有的物资,从食物到水,从空气到电力,都必须依靠潜艇自身的系统来维持。空气会经过过滤和再生,确保舰员的呼吸;水会经过净化和循环,保证饮用和生活用水。这种高度的依赖性,意味着你必须非常珍惜每一滴水、每一口空气。同时,这种与世隔绝的状态,也意味着你需要高度的自我管理和团队协作。任何一个小小的疏忽,都可能对整个潜艇的生存构成威胁。

在心理层面,这是一种挑战自我极限的体验。长时间的密闭生活,空间的压迫,单调的环境,以及与世隔绝的孤寂感,都会对人的心理产生影响。你可能会经历思乡、焦虑、烦躁等情绪。学会与自己相处,找到排解压力的方式至关重要。很多人会通过阅读、听音乐、做一些小的手工、或者与战友进行深入的交流来度过这段时光。团队的凝聚力在这样的环境中显得尤为重要,大家相互支持、鼓励,共同面对挑战,这是一种特殊的战友情谊,在陆地上是难以体会到的。

当然,也有独属于潜艇生活的独特魅力。当你看到声纳屏幕上闪烁的光点,那是你用自己的方式在探索未知的深海;当你感受到潜艇在水下平稳地航行,那是一种掌控庞大机器的成就感;当你在狭小的空间里与战友们分享简单的食物,却能感受到无比的温暖和信任。那种在沉默的深渊中,依靠精密的技术和过人的意志,完成一项又一项特殊任务的自豪感,是许多陆地生活无法给予的。

总而言之,在潜艇中生活,是一场对身体和心灵的双重磨砺。它剥离了你对舒适和便利的习惯,让你重新认识“生存”的意义,也让你学会更加珍惜与人、与自然的关系。它不是一场轻松的旅行,而是一次深入骨髓的体验,一次对极限的挑战,更是一段用汗水和坚韧书写的传奇。

网友意见

user avatar

《深海利剑》哈哈,瞥了两眼剧情,太特么装逼啦!不过看着有人认真看的样子,嗯~压抑不住的暗爽呢 下面是原答案

---------------------------------------------------------------------我们国家潜艇按动力分两种,一种是常规柴电,还有一种大国重器你懂的,以国产常规最新型为例。

一、生活体验

按出海讲吧,大体有三种海,水下两类:一个长的,几十天,一个短的若干天。还有水上的,比如从长江开出来,不可能水下的。区别不是很大,当然了,艰苦程度随时间呈指数级增长。

首先没有窗户!所以没有海底世界,一切水底的浪漫靠你脑补喽。

空气很差, 潜艇是个大铁壳,很有限的两三个出风口,出海的话还必须都关着,里面柴油机若干,液压装置若干,电机若干,轴承若干,水路油路无数,基本想想你家汽车把发动机舱和驾驶室打通,那个温度湿度加空气质量,艇上待两个小时出去的话身上就有一股味的,是所有军舰几乎共有的一股味道,工资有一项是有害气体补助,我们有名目繁多的各种拿命换的补助。还有几十个人在一个封闭空间里吃喝拉撒,那个酸爽!

空间很小,人员很多。

中低级军官和士兵是三个人轮两张铺的。

吃饭是没有所谓餐厅的,大家分别在站位附近找个地将就。

厕所是几乎百分百排队的。

洗漱是不能用洗面奶的,因为费水。

衣服是必须不洗的,因为费水。

洗头洗澡基本只能靠想的,因为费水。

打呼噜必须不行的,因为你会影响到至少十几个人。

这些其实还好了,最最考验人的,晕船!!!不要拿晕车比,车能停,这里你跳海吗,车再晃也是二维,你试试前后左右上下立体的,所有东西都是绑好的,包括人,不然会飞!

曾经最夸张的一次,两个台风追着跑,只能水上,潜艇速度慢,五天四夜全艇没开伙,根本没人吃饭,吃东西吧,吐!再说了晕船了能躺着绝不坐着,根本不想动,除非值更是万不得已死不了就得上!不吃吧,饿!关键是越饿越晕,越晕越吃不下就越饿!晃得厉害不断失重也睡不好,越晃就越睡不好,越睡不好越晕,一边值更一边拿个塑料袋的很正常。舰桥的旗杆,钢管,楞是被海浪打弯了。

晕船最后说一下,中国海军从来不是不晕船,而是不管再怎么晕,照样灭你丫小日本!死都死在站位上!

然后是睡眠不足,出海是睡不了囫囵觉的,半夜肯定会起来或者半夜才睡,或者半夜睡一半接着半夜起来,长的海还好,可以补觉,短的海就很惨了,最惨的时候早上四点多起床,晚上十二点多睡,连续几天如此,关于生物钟,出海是没太阳的,船上的钟都是二十四小时的,越长越紊乱,所以时间长的后期有时会迟钝,睡眠差,空气差,没事再晕个船。

还有一个,无聊!很大很大的精神摧残!所有娱乐设备禁止的,然后至于原因嘛,还是不说了。

一直在说坏话啊,让我想想有什么爽的,海上日出,晚上如果浮起的话,有机会看日出,

水面航行有时会有飞鱼或者海豚。

凌晨一点有夜宵,一般是各种面条。

对了,有钱!出海是按小时发钱的,睡觉也有!

二、战斗体验

不好细讲,但是我们的训练水平和战斗素养还是很高的,专业水平足够好,气氛很浓烈。

请祖国人民放心,大洋上,国门外,永远有一帮很朴实的水兵,用他们的青春和生命,护卫着祖国的安宁!

user avatar

Quora 上的答案,美帝洛杉矶级攻击核潜艇上的声纳操作员答复的,懒得翻译,讲几个重点好了

1.6小时值班-12小时休息的轮作方式,很快就只能靠吃的是早餐还是晚饭来鉴别昼夜了

2.一样是人比床多,当然如果可以忍受鱼雷舱的噪音和灯光的话那里有加床

3.电力足,能净化足够多的水和空气……但是潜艇里的味道依然妙极了

4.对自己的战友要绝对信任

Steve Jacobs

, Submarine Sonar Technician - STS1(SS)

这哥们名字略叼……

Cramped, sometimes boring, hard work, fun, rewarding, scary, aggravating and totally worth it.

I was part of the original crew for two 688 class attack boats (USS Baton Rouge and USS San Francisco) and I was there when the boats first went to sea and made their initial dives. When I was first assigned to the Baton Rouge, my life consisted of learning everything I could about the boat and all of its systems so I could earn my "dolphins" and be a real member of the crew.

That was in addition to learning my job in Sonar, field days, getting sleep here and there, standing topside watches when in port and Sonar watches at sea.

Once you earn your dolphins, your life gets a bit easier. After you stand your regular watch at sea, you take care of any tasks, like doing regular maintenance on equipment, then you're free to read, watch movies, or sleep. We had regular drills that trained us how to react to pretty much any emergency and since it was during the Cold War, did 'interesting things' that we still keep secret to this day.

Watch rotations at sea usually followed a "6 hour on, 12 hour off" schedule, so you quickly lost track of whether it was day or night and the only way to tell was by the meal being served (if it's breakfast, it must be morning). If your watch station was shorthanded, you got to stand what was known as "port and starboard" which is 6 on and 6 off.

Since there were usually more bodies than racks (bunks), three junior members of the crew were assigned to two bunks, so when one guy's getting up to go on watch, someone else jumps into the still-warm bunk, hence the name "hot racking". We would sometimes install temporary bunks in the torpedo room to expand available bunks, but you'd have to learn to deal with the constant light and noise of the people around you and most people learn how to fall asleep anytime and anywhere.

Life on nuclear subs was significantly easier than the diesel boat sailors had it. Since we had virtually unlimited power, we could purify enough water every day so everyone could shower and wash their clothes, plus some of that water was split into hydrogen and O2 using electrolysis. We kept the O2, but discharged the H overboard. We also had the ability to scrub CO, CO2 and any hydrogen that may have come from the batteries (yes, we have batteries in case the reactor shuts down while we're submerged).

The ability to stay submerged for very long periods of time means that you may be underwater for weeks or even months on end. After a while, being cooped up inside a steel tube with a hundred or so stinky, crusty sailors makes you kind of antsy, so we work off our anxiety to get back home by acting up and pranking one another. "Half-way Night" is a hallowed tradition in the submarine force where we officially get to go a little more nuts than usual.

"Periscope Liberty" is sometimes your only chance to see the open skies and catch a glimpse of the outside world. As a Sonar Supervisor, I could wander out to control while we were at periscope depth and look out one of the scopes while we were copying our radio traffic.

One thing that you notice when you get back home is that the outside world smells funny. Being cooped up for long periods of time with sweat, foot stench, amine (used in the CO2 scrubbers), diesel fuel and stale farts skews your senses and it takes a little while for things to smell right again. A submarine has an odor that no crew member will ever forget.

One thing about being a qualified crew member is that you have utter trust in your shipmates and know that they've got your back and will rise to the challenge if 'bad stuff happens'. Although I only spent 6 years in the Navy, I'm proud to have served on attack subs, probably one of the most challenging environments ever.

Because we've shared in the challenges of submarine life, the camaraderie of a submarine crew is amazing. Many of us are still in touch with our shipmates and nearly all boats have regular reunions where we fall back into our friendships as if we'd never been separated.

One benefit that's stayed with me my entire life is that I can learn nearly anything I put my mind to and completely excel at it. Your entire existence on boats is learning how to learn and to never fail at anything you take on.


另一位是SSBN——发射战略导弹的大家伙上的舰员,不过他服役的不是俄亥俄,而是更早的伊森艾伦

Allen Inks

, 8 years US Navy, with 4 years aboard USS Ethan Allen (SSBN-608 (B)) EM-1(SS)

1.这帮家伙常年在北极巡逻——和毛子的战略弹道导弹潜艇一个路数

2.噪音大,烦躁,绝大部分时间很无聊(他们要不无聊我们就可以去玩真人版辐射了)

3.和退役后在核电站的工作差不多,一样是做记录……唯一的区别在于核电站下班后开10英里回家见老婆,潜艇上么非执勤时间晃荡个几十米去食堂吃吃吃顺便看电影

4.大家打发时间的方式很有趣……比如说有人在琢磨韩国武术orz,还有人……看最下面那段……

Different at different times. I served on Ethan Allen, a missile submarine, where mostly we went out from Guam and got "lost" somewhere in the north Pacific (I never tried to learn precisely, but it was cold enough to require several blankets to sleep). I worked in the engineering spaces (mostly) and standing watch in the lower level Aux 2 feedwater station, watching gauges that never moved much, with no one else around, and loud pumps going so you had to wear hearing protection, and couldn't hold a real conversation with any roving watches that happened by.... that was B.O.R.I.N.G. usually. On the other hand, being in Maneuvering (Engine Room Control Room) during drills and starting up and shutting down generators, or answering BACK EMERGENCY s on the throttle panel (which had valve operating wheels linked by articulating shafts to the forward and reverse throttle valves on the Maine Engine Turbines) was exciting as heck. But those exciting moments were the exception rather than the rule. After I got out of the Navy, I was a Nuclear Supervising Operator (Control Room Operator/ Senior Reactor Operator) at Detroit Edison's Enrico Fermi 2 Nuclear plant. I found the environment to be similar to normal patrol operations - mostly nothing happening but watching and taking logs, in an industrial environment but remaining conscious that you have some pretty awesome responsibilities. The difference was that instead of a 10 mile commute back to my wife, I had a 100 foot commute back to the mess decks for some food and a movie or some maintenance work when I was on submarines.

It was intersting to watch what some guys did to cope with boredom. One guy was into Korean martial arts, and had a bag of rice that he stabbed his hand into for hours to develop muscles and callouses. There were a lot of exercisers, and a lot of readers. One guy tried to poop in long strand looping around the bottom of the toilet bowl, and kept a log book of the length of each bowel movement - I think he cross-referenced to his diet... but mostly I try not to think about it at all.

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