AndyPandy
Well-Known Member
Might be interesting
Considering the enormity of the construction programme involved in building a ship this size, how prohibitively would it be increased, by adding a second, inner skin, all the way up to the waterline? So that a catastrophic rupture of the outer hull, wouldn't flood the ship?
I think I heard that plenty of modern oil tankers do that already, rather than risk the hideous pollution we've seen previously.
I guess the inner skin would need to be well inboard of the outer, to avoid the same rupturing element - but presumably the thickness of the inner skin could be considerably lighter - in use, it might be damming thousands of tonnes of water, but it wouldn't have to resist waves and turbulence.
Seeing that such a design alteration would have saved Titanic and Costa Concordia and who knows how many other total losses, it might be worth calculating what percentage an 'inner skin' would add in costs, to be set against the potential cost of losing the ship.
IIRC Titanic had the inner skin but not all the way to the top. (prepared to be corrected).
A complete double hull however is just not worth the extra cost.
I can well believe that expense has been the reason for not doubling the whole submerged hull, hitherto...but I can't believe it stands up as a good enough reason, against the loss of a £half-billion ship. And that's aside from the unquantifiable loss of life.
The theory being that having water tight bulkheads should in most cases prevent the ship from foundering. Why this didn't work for Titanic is well documented, what happened to the Concordia I don't know, I've not been following the story that closely.
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It's certainly odd, that lots of really spectacularly awful incidents seem to have involved ships equipped with watertight doors which weren't utilised properly.