Part 16 (2/2)

As the music struck up again, he squeezed Phyl's hand. ”I sure appreciate your concern, even if I didn't rate it.”

Phyl blushed as she returned the squeeze. ”You rate with me,” she confided shyly.

The festivities finally ended after a thoroughly enjoyable evening. Both Sandy and Phyl declared to their dates that it more than made up for the forgotten beach party.

”But let's not wait too long for the next date,” Sandy warned playfully.

”Okay, that's a deal,” Bud promised.

The next morning at the plant Tom called on Harlan Ames. He told of the sinister hoax by the caller who had pa.s.sed himself off as Lester Morris.

The security chief promised to investigate.

”I'll tip off the police about Len Unger,” Ames added. ”If they can find him, we may be able to crack this case wide open.”

Tom telephoned Bud, Hank Sterling, and Arv Hanson to meet him at the helijet hangar. The four took off in one of the Swifts' Whirling Ducks, which was standing by loaded and ready. Soon they landed on Fearing Island, where Tom would try out his antidetection invention.

”What'll we use for a test sub, skipper?” Hank asked as they drove toward the docks.

”A jetmarine,” Tom replied.

A truck with engineers and technicians was following the jeep. It carried the equipment which Tom and Bud had a.s.sembled the previous day.

When they arrived at the docks, Tom gathered the men in a loading shed.

He showed them his drawings and explained how his ”sonar-blinding” setup would operate.

”Don't let the diagrams fool you. The basic idea is very simple. We absorb all sonar impulses that hit the s.h.i.+p and transmit them out the opposite side of the hull, instead of letting a ping bounce back and show up on the sonarscope of any hostile sub on the lookout for us.”

Most of the job, he went on, would be tedious detail work. It would consist of attaching hundreds of mikes and speakers all over the hull to pick up and transmit the sonar pulses. The mikes would be receiving transducers and the speakers would be transmitting transducers.

”The leads from them,” Tom ended, ”will be centralized in a single electronic control unit inside the s.h.i.+p. I'll handle that part of it.”

”Great idea, Tom!” Arv Hanson said admiringly.

”But what a job it'll be rigging those transducers,” put in one of the technicians.

Tom nodded wryly. ”You're right, Danny. If this experiment works out, though, I think I can lick that problem on future installations.”

The young inventor explained that he hoped to find a way to mold the transducers into a continuous plastic sheet. This could be applied to the hull of a submarine in a single operation.

”But this time we'll have to do it the hard way,” Tom added with an apologetic grin.

A jetmarine was hoisted into drydock and the work crew swarmed over it, rigging the transducers. Would his experiment succeed? Tom wondered.

Hopefully, he set to work a.s.sembling the electronic control unit.

Bud helped the men on the hull for a while, then descended through the hatch to see how Tom was progressing.

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