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U.S.S. VOLADOR
(SS-490)Click to view crew list
USS VOLADOR (SS-490) - a Tench-class submarine
In Commission 1948 to 1972SS-490 Deployments - Major Events
Add a SS-490 Shellback Initiation | Add a SS-490 Deployment - Major Event | ||||
Month | Year | to | Month | Year | Deployment / Event |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
JUN | 1945 | - | Keel Date: 15 JUN 1945 at Portsmouth Naval Shipyard Kittery ME | ||
MAY | 1948 | - | Launch Date: 21 MAY 1948 | ||
OCT | 1948 | - | Commissioned: 1 OCT 1948 | ||
AUG | 1953 | - | OCT | 1953 | Alaska |
DEC | 1959 | - | JUN | 1960 | West Pac |
JUN | 1967 | - | Shellback Initiation - 15 JUN 1967 - Pacific Ocean | ||
AUG | 1967 | - | Shellback Initiation - 15 AUG 1967 - Pacific Ocean | ||
AUG | 1967 | - | AUG | 1967 | AUCKLAND, NEW ZEALAND |
JAN | 1968 | - | MAR | 1968 | Capture of PUBELO (AGER-2) by NORTH KOREA |
AUG | 1972 | - | Decommissioned: 18 AUG 1972 |
SS-490 General Specifications
Class: Tench-class submarine
Complement: 10 Officers and 75 Enlisted
Displacement: 1870 tons
Length: 307 feet
Beam: 27 feet 4 inches
Draft: 17 feet
Range: 15 000 Nautical Miles
Final Disposition: Transferred to Italy 18 August 1972; sold to Italy 5 Dece
USS VOLADOR (SS-490)
The second Volador (SS-490)
was laid down on 15 June 1945 by the
Portsmouth (N.H.) Naval Shipyard, but work on her construction was
discontinued in January 1946. Her unfinished
hulk remained on the ways until August 1947 when construction resumed.
The submarine was launched on 21 May 1948;
sponsored by Mrs. Dudley W. Morton;
and commissioned on 1 October 1948, Comdr. H. A. Thompson in command.
Volador completed her builder's trials on 20 January 1949, left Portsmouth three days later, and
stopped at Newport and New London
before sailing for the Gulf of
Mexico on 5 February. Volador arrived at New Orleans on 11 February and proceeded to the west coast, via Galveston and the Panama Canal, and arrived
at San Diego on 11 March. The submarine conducted
local operations along the California coast between San Diego and San Francisco until she departed San Diego on 13 October, bound for Hawaii. She arrived at Pearl Harbor on 7 November but returned to San Diego on the 18th and spent the remainder of 1949 as well as most of the following
year on the west coast, conducting
various training exercises. During that period, she also visited
Portland, Vancouver, and Pearl Harbor. In June 1950, Volador embarked reserves at Treasure Island, Calif., and
proceeded on a two-week reserve cruise
to Hawaii. En route, the Korean War
broke out; and the submarine spent
two months training in Hawaiian waters before returning to San Diego for
operations on the west coast that lasted into
the summer of 1951.
The submarine departed San
Diego on 21 July, bound, via Pearl
Harbor, for Japan and arrived at Yokosuka
on 15 August 1951. On 18 August, Volador got underway from Yokosuka for a period of special operations. Her orders directed the submarine to conduct an undetected reconnaissance patrol in
the area of Hokkaido, Japan, for a
four-week period, in order to keep Commander, Naval Forces Far East, informed of any Soviet or Chinese communist seaborne and airborne activity in that area. Throughout her patrol, the submarine identified and photographed numerous radar contacts and made rendezvous with Ronquil (SS-396) and Tint (SS-416) to exchange patrol reports and
other valuable information. On 15 September,
Volador held ceremonies commemorating her 1,000th dive. After a
24-hour engineering run in Tsugaru Strait,
she ended her patrol and arrived in Yokosuka
on 22 September. From 11 to 15 November, Volador conducted ASW
operations with Hanson (DD-832),
Mackenzie (DD-836), and Taussig (DD-746) in the Atami area. From 16 November to 9 December, Volador participated in
hunter/killer operations en route to Okinawa from Japan in company with Task Group (TG) 96.7. The submarine visited
Buckner Bay, Okinawa, before heading
home via Pearl Harbor.
Volador returned to San Diego in January 1952 and conducted local operations until early summer. She
then spent three months in the Juan de
Fuca Strait and the Puget Sound area
before entering the Mare Island Naval Shipyard in October. During the five-month overhaul which followed, a new battery and
an Askania automatic depth control
system were installed. Upon her
return to San Diego, Volador provided services to ASW surface
units, aircraft, and the Fleet Sonar School and participated in type training,
Exercise "Pacphibex," and hunter/killer exercises. She departed San Diego on 7 August 1953 and arrived at Pearl Harbor on the 15th, received briefings by members
of the Commander in Chief, Pacific
Fleet, and the Commander, Submarines, Pacific staffs on 17 and 18 August and tested experimental sonar equipment at sea on 20 August.
On 22 August 1953, Volador
began a period of special operations,
departing Pearl Harbor for an Alaskan training
cruise which kept her in northern waters until October 1953. Her patrol station was northeast of the St. Lawrence Bay; and, on 1 September, she
made rendezvous with Blackfin (SS-322)
off the southwest cape, St. Lawrence
Island; the following day, she snorkeled to an area off Brook Bank, then
proceeded to the Bering Strait area. Volador conducted a shipping
reconnaissance patrol until the night of 27
September 1953 when she made
rendezvous with and was relieved by
submarine Caiman (SS-323). Volador arrived at Pearl Harbor on 7 October 1953. During her second
patrol, she contacted a total of 63 ships and identified and photographed the majority of them.
Returning to San Diego, Volador
rendered services and conducted
type training there until May 1954, when she entered the Mare Island Naval Shipyard for overhaul. The yard work was completed in October 1954, and Volador returned to San Diego for
local operations. Departing San Diego
on 3 January 1955 for her second tour
of duty in the Western Pacific (WestPac), Volador proceeded to Yokosuka, Japan, via Pearl Harbor.
Upon arrival at Yokosuka on 26 January
1955, she conducted type training
and furnished ASW services to a destroyer division and elements of the
Japanese Maritime Self-Defense Force until 1
March 1955. Shen then completed two weeks of routine upkeep on 13 March,
prior to departure for another period of special operations on the 14th.
Volador transited Tsugaru Strait and, on 19 March, commenced a submerged patrol on the lane between Vladivostok and La Perouse Strait which lasted
until 8 April. She then commenced a
transit of Tsugaru Strait and set a
course back to Yokosuka where she moored
on 11 April 1955. After the completion of this patrol, Volador was
commended for excellent photography,
correct identification of contacts, and accurate reporting of identifying characteristics regarding the 33 ships contacted.
Visiting Subic Bay, Hong
Kong, and Pearl Harbor while en
route, Volador returned to San Diego on 1 July. The submarine operated along the west coast for
the next two years. In August 1957, Volador
commenced another Far East
deployment. She arrived at Pearl Harbor on 3 August and departed three days
later for a 30-day patrol off
Petropavlovsk, Kamchatka. Her mission
was to gather intelligence information. Due to motor casualties nine days after arrival on station, she departed the Petropavlovsk area on 25 August and arrived at Yokosuka five days later. During this
patrol, Volador contacted 13 merchant ships and eight warships.
On 8 November 1957, the
submarine arrived at Subic Bay for a
scheduled upkeep and departed on 17 November for Yokosuka. Volador arrived
at Yokosuka on 26 November; and,
from 11 December through 4 January 1958, she conducted a special
reconnaissance patrol in the Sea of
Okhotsk. During this 17-day undetected special patrol, she completed her
photographic mission in spite of
severe ice and blizzard conditions. Returning to Japan, Volador departed Yokosuka on 9 January for Pearl Harbor. She arrived at Hawaii on 19 January
and departed two days later for San
Diego, arriving on 28 January 1958.
Volador remained at San Diego until 3 October, when she departed for Vancouver, Wash. Twenty guests of
the Vancouver Navy League were embarked at Long-view, Wash., for a
ship's visit and disembarked upon arrival at
Vancouver. Volador was welcomed by a gathering of about 500 citizens, plus the local high school band, and was presented a plaque in a
simple ceremony on board. She
departed Vancouver on 5 October and
visited Seattle and Port Angeles, Wash., through the month of October. Volador visited Victoria, British
Columbia, from 31 October through 3 November. HMCS Antigonish was the host ship, and wardroom officers
were entertained on board and in the homes of the
host's officers.
The submarine patrolled the areas of Esquimalt, Port Angeles, Tacoma, and Seattle until 22 November
when she began her return trip to San Diego, arriving on 26 November. Volador
operated in the San Diego-San Francisco
area until 5 May 1959 when she entered the San Francisco Naval Shipyard at
Hunters Point for overhaul.
Completing overhaul in
October 1959, the. submarine returned
to San Diego for local operations until leaving for WestPac in late
December. While thus deployed, Volador participated in many operations including amphibious Exercise "Blue Star" and SEATO
Exercise "Sea Lion." Upon returning to San Diego, she participated in various local operations during the next
20 months.
Volador spent the early months of 1962 in local operations in the San Diego area until she conducted
a reserve cruise from 4 to 11 April.
Upon her return, she was placed 'in
commission, in reserve" while undergoing
FRAM Mk I conversion to a Guppy III configuration
at the San Francisco Naval Shipyard. The submarine was saved from possible total destruction due to a spectacular pier fire at the shipyard on
9 and 10 November 1962 by the duty
section led by the duty officer and
the executive officer. In September 1962, Volador was returned to active
service. The conversion was completed
in February 1963. A 15-foot hull section was installed in addition to a large amount of new electronic, fire control, and sonar equipment,
making Volador one of the most modern diesel-electric submarines in the Fleet.
After trials in Puget Sound, Wash., she returned to San Diego in April 1963 to take part in local operations.
The
submarine departed San Diego in September 1963 for another WestPac deployment. Near the conclusion of her tour, Volador
conducted a special assignment which resulted in her receiving a commendation from the Commander,
Submarine Force, United States Pacific Fleet, for "a mission of great value to the
government of
the United States." After returning to San Diego, she was assigned to
local and Pacific coast operations.
In
late 1964, Volador again distinguished herself by sending the ex-Sea Devil
(SS-400) to the bottom after firing one homing torpedo in a weapons system evaluation test, making her the
only submarine in the Navy to claim two peace-time "kills." Commander,
Submarine Force,
United States Pacific Fleet, awarded the "E" for overall performance
"and for being adjudged the outstanding submarine in Submarine Squadron 5
in fleet intratype
competition for fiscal year 1965.
Volador resumed operations on 3 January 1966 after a short period of holiday routine in San Diego
alongside
the submarine tender, Nereus (AS-17). The greater part of January was spent conducting weapons system accuracy
trials at the Dabob Bay and Carr Inlet facilities in the Puget Sound area. Volador
returned
to San Diego on 3 February and conducted a week of refresher training commencing on 10
February. Following this, she began a three-week upkeep period during which she
successfully underwent an administrative inspection and a nuclear weapons acceptance inspection. On 7 March
1966, Volador left port for a week of type training in the local
operating areas during which time sound trials were conducted to investigate the problem of
noisy propellers. She got underway on 4 April for a four-day restricted availability at the San Francisco Bay Naval
Shipyard where new propellers were installed. The remainder of April and the period until 11 May were
spent in the San Diego area conducting various tests and preparing for deployment to WestPac.
The
submarine departed San Diego on 12 May and, after a four-day stopover in Pearl
Harbor, reported to Commander, 7th Fleet, for operational control on 3 June and arrived at
Yokosuka, Japan, on 6 June 1966.
Following
an eight-day upkeep period for voyage repairs, Volador departed Yokosuka
on 14 June to provide ASW services to ships and aircraft of the Japanese Maritime Self-Defense
Force. Throughout the summer, she continued to conduct exercises and provide services which were made more
meaningful by the mutual exchange of officers. The submarine operated in the areas
of Yokosuka and Iwakuni, Japan, and Buckner Bay, Okinawa.
Volador was in upkeep status at Yokosuka from 15 to 23 September. She got underway for Hong Kong on 26 September, after shich
she stopped at Kaohsiung and Midway Island and arrived at Pearl Harbor on 6 November. She departed
two days later for San Diego. Volador arrived at her home port on 19 November and spent the remainder of
1966 in holiday leave and upkeep status. She was nominated for the Captain Edward F. Ney Memorial Award for the
most outstanding general mess for 1966. On 1 July 1966, Volador was awarded
the Squadron
5 award for fire control and weapons excellence.
Operations
resumed on 15 January 1967 after a period of holiday routine alongside the Submarine Facility, Ballast Point, San
Diego. The first half of 1967 was spent participating in various exercises, undergoing upkeep and repairs,
and qualifying for a nuclear weapons technical proficiency inspection, a material inspection, and an
operational readiness inspection.
Volador then departed San Diego on 24 July en route to Auckland, New Zealand.
She made a two-day stop at Pago Pago, American Samoa, and arrived at Auckland on 15 August. The
submarine participated in LONGEX 67, then departed for Subic Bay and arrived
there on 10 September
for five days of upkeep and voyage repairs. She participated in Exercise
"Gillnet," visited Buckner Bay, Okinawa, and arrived at Yokosuka, Japan, on 26
September. The remainder of the year was spent conducting various
operations out of Yokosuka.
On
1 January 1968, Volador was en route to Hong Kong for a port visit. She
arrived back at Yokosuka, Japan, on the 24th to learn that her deployment was being indefinitely
extended because of mobilization response to the capture of Pueblo (AGER-2) by the
North Koreans.
Volador departed for sea on 31 January and returned 31 days later.
The submarine left Japan and made a two-day stopover at Pearl Harbor before arriving in San Diego on 29
March. The period until 26 June was spent in post-deployment upkeep and local operations.
On 27 June, Volador departed for a regular shipyard overhaul in the San
Francisco Naval Shipyard at Hunters Point at which time a Mk 48 fire control system was installed.
Post-overhaul trials were conducted in the San Francisco operating area on 20 and 22
December, and the submarine finished the year at the San Francisco Naval Shipyard,
Vallejo, Calif.
Throughout
January and February 1969, Volador held sound and weapons trials in the Puget Sound
area. The
next two months were spent in upkeep and training before heading to the Pacific
northwest for a quality assurance system test of the Mk 48 Astor torpedo. After the firings, while
en route to home waters, a stop was made at Monterey, Calif., on 20 and 21 May to provide familiarization
cruises for students of the Naval Postgraduate School, local members of the Navy League, and city leaders.
The trip was an outstanding success and received wide dissemination through the local press media.
The
submarine returned to San Diego and commenced an upkeep period and a final workup for
deployment. Volador
departed San Diego on 28 July 1969 for Yokosuka, Japan, via Pearl Harbor. During the Christmas holidays, Volador visited
Bangkok, Thailand, enjoying the exotic sights and the Thai people and providing a week of services
to the Royal Thai Navy. Leaving Bangkok on 26 December, the ship headed for Hong Kong and was en
route as the year ended.
Volador left Hong Kong for two weeks of operations and liberty in Yokosuka,
Japan, before returning to San Diego on 12 February 1970. The next month was a period of upkeep and
rest for the crew. The following three months were filled with numerous exercises and
drills to retrain the crew and to prepare for inter-fleet transfer to the east
coast. Volador departed San Diego on 7 August for transit to the east coast via the Panama Canal. She
arrived at her new home port of Charleston, S.C., and spent the remainder of 1970 there.
During
the first few months of 1971, Volador conducted exercises and drills and underwent upkeep in
preparation
for deployment to the Mediterranean. On April, she arrived at Rota, Spain, and
commenced participation in Exercise "Dawn Patrol 71" with sev eral NATO units on 23
April. Upon completion of this exercise on 12 May, Volador visited Piraeus,
Greece; Augusta
Bay, Sicily; Palma, Majorca; Villefranche, France; Gibraltar; Naples, Italy; and Malaga, Spain;
and returned
to Rota on 19 July for turnover. Volador departed for Charleston, S.C., on 21 July after
spending three
months in the Mediterranean Sea. On 1 August, she was diverted from her
homeward transit to render assistance to the tanker M/T Lacon, a
Liberian vessel which was on fire. Volador arrived at Charleston on 5 August and began a period
of leave and upkeep until 20 September when she entered the Charleston Naval Shipyard,
commencing a regular overhaul and battery renewal.
On
18 August 1972, Volador was transferred to Italy where she serves the
Italian Navy as Primo Longobordo (S-501) into 1980.
Volador earned three campaign stars for service during the Vietnam War.
[Note: The above USS VOLADOR (SS-490) history may, or may not, contain text provided by crew members of the USS VOLADOR (SS-490), or by other non-crew members, and text from the Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships]