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Tailoring Components and Facilities
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Naval Construction Force/Seabee 1&C - Construction manual for building structures
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Figure 4-3. Facility

capabilities of the component. The site plan pertaining to  each  component  is  depicted  by  a  NAVFAC  drawing number. However, drawings in volume 1, part 1, are indexed   by   component   designation,   not   drawing numbers. The word  NONE appears  for  components  that have no site plans. The facilities required to make the component  operative  are  listed  in  numerical  sequence by DoD category code. The alpha suffix for each facility designator  indicates  differences  between  sizes,  types,  or layouts  of  facilities  with  the  same  functional  purpose. Facility capacity is expressed in terms of the units of measure  used  in  the   Category   Codes   Facilities, NAVFAC  P-72.  The  component  capacity  is  figured  by multiplying  the  facility  capacity  and  the  quantity. Weight and cube are measured in normal units for export packing. Weight and construction efforts are computed using the Seabee Planner’s and Estimator’s Handbook, NAVFAC P-405. Average construction conditions are assumed  and  computations  are  based  on  normal  Seabee skill  levels. You  compute  the  total  of  the  weight,  cube,  and dollar  value  columns  by  adding  all  facilities  or assemblies  required  in  both  tropical  and  northern climates plus the unique requirements for either tropical or northern areas. Summary  data  located  below  the  component  facility listings  provides  information  on  the  following: 1. Construction standards (CONST STD) taken from Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS),  publication  3,  are grouped into two classifications: initial and temporary, Initial (INIT) is a duration requirement of less than 6 months. Temporary (TEMP) is a duration requirement of from 6 to 60 months. 2.   Days   of   construction   duration   (LAPSED DAYS)  are  based  on  job  requirements,  optimum construction crew size, and full-material availability. 3. Often the land requirements (LAND ACRES), based on the assumed plot plan, will not be followed exactly because of terrain or existing buildings. The idealized plot plan was developed to design supporting utility  systems.  The  information  contained  in  the  utility facilities has been increased to allow for variation in terrain. 4. The connected electrical load (POWER KVA) has been computed based on knowledge of ABIOL or TOA contents. A load diversity factor has been applied to compute the kVA demand. 5. Water and sewer (GPD) are based on ABIOL or TOA contents and the utility systems designed to this criteria. 6. Fuel usage (FUEL GAL) is computed on 30-day requirements  for  installed  engine-driven  or  fuel-fired equipment   only.   No   allowance   for   automotive, construction,  weight  handling,  and  other  jobsite  support equipment  fuel  is  included.  Fuel  is  not  provided  when facilities or assemblies are shipped. NAVSUP provides fuel  as  a  contribution  when  whole  components  are shipped. 7.  The  skill  requirements  (SKILLS  MAN- HOURS)  are  designated  by  Seabee  (OF-13)  ratings  and are  expressed  in  man-hours,  as  computed  for  each facility. Facility Figure 4-3 shows a typical facility entry in part 2 of volume 2—the electric power plant diesel 2-200 kW generators, without tank, facility 811 10R. Adjacent to the facility number, the heading shows the JCS planning factor applied. This planning factor is based on  Planning Factors   for   Military   Construction   in   Contingency Operations,  Joint  Staff  Memorandum  (MJCS)  235-86. The header also describes the basic capability of the facility.  After  the  facility  capability  description  is  the NAVFAC drawing number. The drawing number is shown  for  reference  purposes.  All  drawings  in  volume 1, part 2, are indexed by facility number. The  assemblies  required  to  make  the  facility functionally operational are listed in assembly-number sequence. These numbers were derived from the prime trade involved in the construction. The 30,000 series indicates   Construction   Electricians.   There   is   an exception  to  this  numbering  system.  The  exception  is for  Civil  Engineer  Support  Equipment  (CESE).  CESE is identified by an equipment cost code (ECC). In this example, ECC 512801 is a 200-kW generator. A brief description appears next, followed when appropriate  by  the  code  “N”  for  the  North  Temperate Zone  or  “T’  for  the  Tropical  Zone.  Only  assemblies required  for  Arctic  operation  are  designated  code  “N.” Other facilities or assemblies are designed for use in both  North  and  South  Temperate  Zones  and  Tropical Zones.  The  quantity  given  is  used  as  a  multiplier, indicating the number of assemblies to be ordered. Weight and cubic feet are measured in normal terms for export packing. Weight, cubic feet, and dollar value reflect totals for each line. 4-5

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