Warm
up your credit cards because Uncle Sam is having a garage sale. For the price
of $100,420, you could be the proud owner of the Sea Shadow prototype stealth
ship. And that’s not all — by ponying up all that cash, you’ll also be agreeing
to take possession of the Hughes Mining Barge (HMB-1), which was reportedly
built to hide the CIA’s recovery of the downed Soviet submarine K-129. Two
great pieces of outdated top secret history for the price of one.
The
sale of the two craft is being handled by the General Services Administration’s
auction site –think of it as eBay for government surplus. The auction only has
five days left, a reserve of $10,000, and a top bid placed just this past
Friday of $100,420.
Of
course, there are some catches. In addition to the sky-high asking price and
needing to take possession of both Seas Shadow and the HMB-1 simultaneously,
the terms of the deal require that the winner of the auction completely
dismantle the Sea Shadow for scrap. Sorry guys: No pleasure boating. Here’s
what the GSA say about the auction:
THE
EX-SEA SHADOW SHALL BE DISPOSED OF BY COMPLETELY DISMANTLING AND SCRAPPING
WITHIN THE U.S.A. DISMANTILING IS DEFINED AS REDUCING THE PROPERTY SUCH AS IT
HAS NO VALUE EXCEPT FOR ITS BASIC MATERIAL CONTENT.
Operation
Sea Shadow. A Stealthy Nautical Reveal!
|
The
Sea Shadow was built by Lockheed Martin and DARPA in 1985 to test stealth
concepts on naval craft and ship automation. The comparisons between it and the
angular design of the Lockheed F-117 stealth fighter are immediately apparent
to the eye, and the Sea Shadow was built only four years after the aircraft’s
first flight.
The
Sea Shadow has been paired with the HMB-1 since its inception, and the floating
drydock has continued to house the craft after it was removed from service in
2006. Since then, the pair have been quietly rusting in the Suisun Bay Reserve
Fleet, with the hopes that an interested museum would want to take on the
strange vessel. There were, obviously, no takers.
The
HMB-1 has had a bit of a storied history itself. A completely submersible
drydock barge, it was built to work in conjunction with the Glomar Explorer as
part of an elaborate CIA effort to raise the Soviet submarine K-129 called
project Azorian. Built by eccentric mogol Howard Hughes, the barge featured a retractable
roof and was meant to fit beneath the Glomar where a large mechanical arm would
descend to the ocean floor and pluck the submarine from the depths. Though
operation Azorian was only partially successful, HMB-1 found new life as the
perfect way to develop and test the Sea Shadow away from prying eyes.
And
if all that isn’t enough, the Sea Shadow inspired the ship used in Tomorrow
Never Dies. If that’s not enough to get you to plonk down a life’s savings than
I don’t know what will.
Source: Mashable.
By Max Eddy. 28 April 2012
http://mashable.com/2012/04/29/sea-shadow-ship/
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