Moored Training Ship Parts

End item NSN parts
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Part Number
NSN
NIIN
009-7188 O-ring
006842070
1183L002 O-ring
011261555
1376-16-156 O-ring
005822136
16110167 O-ring
013240916
1793-9 O-ring
006842070
2-336 N304-75 O-ring
005797543
2-340 N304-75 O-ring
005822136
20195PCS21/22 O-ring
002311345
20202,PC21/22 O-ring
002311345
20202PC22 O-ring
002311345
20203PC21/22 O-ring
002311345
20211PC19,20 O-ring
002311345
20221FIND24 O-ring
002311345
20266FN22,23 O-ring
002311345
20274FN22 O-ring
002311345
20362FN23 O-ring
002311345
215294PC12 O-ring
006842070
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Moored Training Ship

Picture of Moored Training Ship

The Ship/Submarine Recycling Program (SRP) is the process the United States Navy uses to dispose of decommissioned nuclear vessels. SRP takes place only at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard (PSNS) in Bremerton, Washington, but the preparations can begin elsewhere.

Before SRP can begin, the ship or submarine's nuclear fuel must be removed. Defueling usually coincides with decommissioning. Until the fuel is removed, the vessel is referred to as "USS Name," but afterward the "USS" is dropped and it is referred to as "ex-Name." Defueling of submarines is carried out at only five ship repair facilities on the West Coast, and the hulls are then towed to PSNS. Reusable equipment is removed at the same time as the fuel.

Spent nuclear fuel is shipped by rail to the Naval Reactor Facility in the Idaho National Laboratory (INL), located 42 miles (67 km) northwest of Idaho Falls, Idaho, where it is stored in special canisters.

At PSNS the SRP proper begins. The salvage workers cut the submarine into three or four pieces: the aft section, the reactor compartment, the missile compartment if one exists, and the forward section. Missile compartments are dismantled according to the provisions of the Strategic Arms Reductions Treaty.

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