POWER & TELEPHONE 

 CABLE-CANVAS COVERED 

 SEARCHLIGHT GUARD 

 STROBE LIGHT 

 500 W SEARCH LIGHT 

 SEARCH LIGHT TURNING & 

 ELEVATING CONTROL HANDLES 

 CLOCK 

 TELEPHONE 

 BOURDON-TYPE DEPTH GAGES 

 HYDROPHONE RECEIVER 

 ADJUSTABLE MIRROR 

 SIX INCH 

 OBSERVATION WINDOW 

 FREE GYRO (ELECTRIC 

 OBSERVER 

 SEARCHLIGHT 

 POWER CONTROL 

 CAMERA PEDESTAL 

 FISH CATCHER 

 REVOLVING CHAIR 

 FLOOR 

 MOTOR-GENERATOR FOR GYRO 



PROPULSION MOTOR 



SONAR TRANSDUCER 



TURNING GEAR 



STROBE LIGHT & SPOT LIGHT 



FOUR INCH 



OBSERVATION WINDOWS 



SWIVEL 



ADJUSTABLE SLINGS 

 HATCH COVER COUNTER WEIGHT 

 SUBMARINE-TYPE HATCH 

 INFRARED LIGHT 



FOUR INCH OBSERVATION WINDOW 

 ASSISTANT 



MAIN SWITCHBOARD 

 TELEPHONE 

 OXYGEN BOTTLE 

 FOUR INCH OBSERVATION 

 WINDOW 

 STROBE-LIGHT CONTROLLER 

 SONAR (ECHOSOUNDER) 

 MUD SAMPLING CONTROL 

 FIN 



BALLAST 

 MUD SAMPLING DEVICE 



EMERGENCY RELEASING DEVICE 



DUCT AS FISH 

 RESERVOIR 

 ELEVATING 



RUDDER 

 BUOY ROPE 

 EMERGENCY 

 LIFTING WIRE) 

 SCREW PROPELLER 

 WITH NOZZLE 

 PROPULSION 

 MOTOR STARTER 



TRANSFORMER 

 BALLAST 

 VENTILATING FAN 

 AIR RECONDITIONING UNIT 

 ROLLER BEARING 

 WOODEN SKIDS 



BUOY 



BUOY ROPE 

 (EMERGENCY 

 LIFTING WIRE 



MAIN CABLE & 

 TELEPHONE WIRE 



KUROSHIO' 



Fig. 3.7 KUROSHIO I. (Courtesy of N. Inoue) 



plastic viewports and pressure-compensated 

 batteries went into the DIVING SAUCER, 



but the high degree of transportabiHty, com- 

 fort, better viewing, and maneuverabiHty 

 were new to the submersible scene. The first 



pressure hull, a disc-shaped, 6-foot 7- 

 inch-diameter, 5-foot-high, positively-buoy- 

 ant, steel structure was lost in 3,000 feet of 

 water off Cassis in 1967, during an un- 

 manned test dive, when the lowering cable 



41 



