rotrax
Well-Known Member
When a ship T bones a steel boat,' and it doent even hole, that PROVES CONCLUSIVELY that a steel ship hitting a steel boat of a given size and thickness, DOESN"T hole', period, especially when it has happened many times!
Calling reality ""Anecdote"is a way of denying reality, by those who dont want to face it.
We used to have a guy on here who posted nice video's on his blog about sailing his small yachts around the UK. I got him to give a talk at our club.
He showed some footage of large ships doing ten knots down the Orwell with a public-that means posh fee paying in the UK-school in the background. He was a pupil at said school, and that is where he learned to sail. The ship had a huge bow wave-it was riding light, having just unloaded-and the large bulb at the front was pushing tons of water aside. He said, when he was a boy, the school had sailing regatta's against other schools and organisations. The school rarely lost as the local boys would put off tacking until right in the bow wave of these ships and use the outward push of water from the bow wave to turn far quicker than would be the case without that assistance. If a ship was leaving on the tide in daylight and the boys were on the water, plenty of time to practice. No boys were drowned, or boats damaged over many years of this happening.
So, what does that prove? We should all use the bow wave of a ship to assist tacking?
Of course not-but some of your steel boat owners appear to be getting too close to ships, if steel yachts have been T-Boned many times!
Here in the UK, with FAR more sailboats in use through a far longer season, it is a very rare and newsworthy occurence. In fact, any collision by any two vessels is quite unusual, and makes the news.
Seems to happen a lot round your way......................................