How many of you remember operating off the older oil-propulsion carriers (pre-ENTERPRISE except for AMERICA & KENNEDY), the periodic "Blowing The Tubes". That was a cleaning of the uptake & exhaust stack tubes by high pessure steam, of soot/sludge buildup from the ship's boilers.
The resulting huge, thick, black and horribly obnoxious lung and eye searing smoke, emanating from the exhaust stack aft on the Island, could really screw up a recovery at times. When underway, not flying... with calm winds, that dirty, smelly, acrid smoke would float down coating everybody/everything with grime & soot. When recovering aircraft, if the tubes were blown as an aircraft was rolling into or on final, the cloud would envelop the aircraft, block out sight of the landing area/meatball, and often cause a pilot intiated waveoff or bolter.
In pre-environmental & air pollution awareness days (pre-mid '70s), ships routinely blew tubes in port. God help anyone up on deck, especially in whites!
Additionally, in the A-4, it would be sucked into the pressurization system and stink up the cockpit. We often kidded the "Snipe Boss" (Chief Engineer), that he always waited for a "Skyhawk in the groove" before ordering BLOW THE TUBES!
Another seldom mentioned advantage of nuclear propulsion.
BzB
The resulting huge, thick, black and horribly obnoxious lung and eye searing smoke, emanating from the exhaust stack aft on the Island, could really screw up a recovery at times. When underway, not flying... with calm winds, that dirty, smelly, acrid smoke would float down coating everybody/everything with grime & soot. When recovering aircraft, if the tubes were blown as an aircraft was rolling into or on final, the cloud would envelop the aircraft, block out sight of the landing area/meatball, and often cause a pilot intiated waveoff or bolter.
In pre-environmental & air pollution awareness days (pre-mid '70s), ships routinely blew tubes in port. God help anyone up on deck, especially in whites!
Additionally, in the A-4, it would be sucked into the pressurization system and stink up the cockpit. We often kidded the "Snipe Boss" (Chief Engineer), that he always waited for a "Skyhawk in the groove" before ordering BLOW THE TUBES!

Another seldom mentioned advantage of nuclear propulsion.

BzB