For the most part fission is fission, and the steam cycle is what it is. If I were to reveal which boats were getting warp drives and photon torpedo upgrades, I'd have to kill you.
Best bet is to graduate at the top of your starfleet academy class and never be the junior guy on the away team.
No matter what, do NOT wear a red shirt to an uncharted planet.!
Star Trek goofyness aside, I usually ask the forum members to take it easy on newbies. They have, within the past week, chased away one new member with their harshness. BUT, nobody here has been harsh in the least. In fact, the very helpful suggestions that they posted here were done in rather gentle fashion.
Your response, in contrast, has been ... er...well... to put it bluntly...STUPID and PIG-HEADED! Social failures? Get a clue newbie. These guys come here to connect with colleagues and to HELP YOU. You don't have to worry much about serving with those potential a$$#0les because you have very low probability of making the cut. The fact is that if you can't take these guys, you don't stand a motherf%&*ing chance in a billion in the actual Navy. If you want to be a submariner, even more so. Yeah, the "new" nuclear navy has a low drop rate, but to get in to it you first have to get through recruit training. Then, when you graduate, you have to serve in the fleet. Nobody in either of those communities likes nukes to begin with. An arrogant, disrespectful nuke with an attitude like yours will last a few minutes at best.
Lookie here, you have been given an opportunity to put your best foot forward. You blew it. Now, try again. Get used to it, because where you are going it will be required at all times - not just when you feel like it. If you have a problem showing courtesy and respect to those who have been where you wish to go, you are the one with the problem, a HUGE problem. Better get a grip on that now when the consequences are not so severe. You give that attitude in the Navy ... well, you had better like scrubbing nasty stuff on weekends, because that is where it will surely get you.
Now, take a breath or two. Chill out, and come back with a better attitude. Show some respect. Realize that it is YOU who is asking for something here, and that when asking for something - like help, advice, or information - the very least you can do is to be considerate of those from whom you are asking it. Capitalization, punctuation, sentence structure, and all that other stuff you were taught in school at taxpayer expense, are not just signs of a good education. They make your writing easier to read and understand. They make it so that the reader doesn't have to work hard to find out what you are trying to ask.
All that politeness, respect and consideration are definitely more important than you seem to think they are. But, the fact is that you are going to ask permission to operate a NUCLEAR REACTOR that we happen to own. If you expect to get that permission, you will need to demonstrate that you ALWAYS and WITHOUT FAIL do a job correctly and don't take shortcuts. Start now.