Findhorn
Well-Known Member
One my favourite ships,sailed on her before and after the "concorde incident".....The story I heard was that she was saved from a plunge to the bottom because the for,d hold was loaded with kapock which kept her afloat
One my favourite ships,sailed on her before and after the "concorde incident".....The story I heard was that she was saved from a plunge to the bottom because the for,d hold was loaded with kapock which kept her afloat
I'm guessing a deep tank in No.1 would have the opposite effect of loads of kapok; hopefully all these ships made it to port ?
I wasn’t involved in the Bencruachan case but I was involved in a small way after the event in the Neptune Sapphire case. I think the Benledi class may have had a deep tank in way of no.1 /no.2? The perfect ring fracture of the Neptune Sapphire gave rise to some comment and there were out of court settlements...
I sailed with a RO who had been on Bencruachan and regularly exchanged messages with those aboard. I believe she regularly had a female RO, quite unusual back then. The story I heard was that she was pressing on a bit to maintain the liner timetable and possibly pressed on a bit too much given the bad weather and the cape rollers. Not uncommon if true, then, now and even back in Titanic days.
Jimi,
yes his name was Leo and he became paranoid because every time his name was mentioned everyone ducked and ran to the other side of the boat...
Jumbleduck,
if rogue waves are now accepted by science, doesn't that mean they're not ' rogue ' any more, sporadic, episodal or something ?
In playful or affectionate use, "one who is mischievous," 1590s. Meaning "large wild beast living apart from the herd" is from 1859, originally of elephants. Meaning "something uncontrolled or undisciplined" is from 1964. Also common in 17c. as a verb. Rogue's gallery "police collection of mug shots" is attested from 1859.
What's the deepest reported rogue trough?
Science works on evidence. As soon as there was evidence for rogue waves, science accepted them, and as soon as there was evidence for anthropogenic global warming science accepted that. Eppe si muove, as we scientists say when confronted with wilful stupidity and ignorance.
And another one, the Neptune Sapphire, also 1973, on her maiden voyage, same area, steamed into a hole and ring fractured in way of the bulkhead between hold 1 and hold 2. Towed in.
There is a funny story about this one. The Master was thrown out of bed and immediately looked out of his cabin window... to see the bow of a ship going past. He ran to the wheelhouse and yelled at the OOW «*What the ****?»
To which the officer of the watch replied That was our bow, Sir!
I thought it was 'eppur si muove' but perhaps 'eppe' is equivalent?
You are quite right. I don't Latin as good as I English.
Isn't it Italian? Whatever, the implication that it is on the lips of English-speaking scientists when they encounter 'wilful stupidity and ignorance' struck me as a delightful, if rather hopeful, idealisation.![]()
Tuscan (which subsequently became standard Italian)
It's all debased Latin, innit, along with French, Spanish, Romanian (bit of a giveaway) and Ladin (even bigger giveaway).