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Chapter 9 Engineering Casualty Control
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Inspection and Maintenance

CHAPTER 9 ENGINEERING CASUALTY CONTROL This  chapter  provides  general  information  on engineering  casualty  control,  a  phase  of  damage control.  If  a  review  of  damage  control  principles and related information is necessary, see Basic Military Requirements, NAVEDTRA 10054 (cur- rent edition), Military Requirements for Petty Of- ficer 3 & 2, NAVEDTRA 10056 (current edition), Fireman, NAVEDTRA 10520 (current edition), and Naval Ships’ Technical Manual, chapter 079. The mission of engineering casualty control is to maintain all engineering services in a state of max- imum  readiness  and  reliability.  To  carry  out  this mission, it is necessary for all personnel concerned to know what actions are necessary to prevent, minimize, and correct any effects of operational and battle casualties on the machinery and the electrical and piping installations of their ship. The primary objective of casualty control is to maintain a ship in such a condition that it will function effectively as a fighting unit. This re- quires  effective  maintenance  of  propulsion machinery, electrical systems, interior and exterior communications, fire control, electronic services, ship  control,  fire  main  supply,  and  of  such miscellaneous  services  as  heating,  air  condition- ing, and compressed air. Failure of any of these services will affect a ship’s ability to fulfill its primary objective, either directly, by reducing its power,  or  indirectly,  by  creating  conditions  which would lower personnel morale and efficiency. A secondary objective of casualty control is to minimize personnel casualties and secondary damage to vital machinery. You can find detailed information on casu- alty control in the  Engineering  Casualty  Control Manual,  the Damage Control Book, the Ship’s Organization  Book,  and  the  Ship’s  Repair  Party Manual. Although these publications vary from ship to ship, they explain the organization and the procedures that must be followed when engineer- ing  casualties,  damage  to  the  ship,  or  other emergency  conditions  occur. FACTORS INFLUENCING CASUALTY CONTROL The  basic  factors  influencing  the  effectiveness of engineering casualty control are much broader than the immediate actions taken at the time of the casualty. Engineering casualty control effi- ciency  is  obtained  through  a  combination  of sound  design,  careful  inspection,  thorough  plant maintenance  (including  preventive  maintenance), and effective personnel organization and train- ing. CASUALTY PREVENTION IS THE MOST EFFECTIVE  FORM  OF  CASUALTY  CON- TROL. DESIGN Design influences the effectiveness of casu- alty control in two ways: (1) the elimination of weaknesses which may lead to material failure and (2) the installation of alternate or standby equip- ment for supplying vital services in the event of a casualty to the primary equipment. Both of these factors are considered in the design of naval ships. Each  individual  plant  aboard  ship  is  equipped with duplicate vital auxiliaries, loop systems, and cross  connections.  All  complete  propulsion  plants are designed to operate as isolated units (split- plant design). CASUALTY CONTROL COMMUNICATIONS Casualty  control  communications  is  extremely important to the operation and organization of 9-1

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