I am trying understand Vixen's "argument" that the 35-minute sinking time implies that the bow visor coming off couldn't have sunk the MS Estonia.
This is the bow visor:
[qimg]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/imagehosting/thum_57382611921e4aa070.jpg[/qimg]
Apparently, it is important that some ships have been torpedoed multiple times and didn't sink so fast.
We also have the claim that if enough water came in fast enough to sink the ship in 35 minutes, people would have heard rushing water, but they didn't. And anyway, water coming in wouldn't sink it so fast because the ship would have turtled and floated on the surface for hours. So the fact that the MS Estonia sank so fast can't be explained by the bow visor or water coming in.
Instead, the reason the ship sank so fast is because of this hole:
[qimg]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/imagehosting/57382611922aee7969.jpg[/qimg]
This hole at or above the water line is due to either an explosion or an impact from a submarine. This explains why the ship sank so fast.
Here is where I get confused. This hole is certainly less damage than multiple torpedo strikes, so the comparison to torpedo sinking times should rule this out, as well. Further, even if it was an impact or explosion, it had to be water coming in that made the ship sink. If the lack of witnesses describing the rush of water rules out the bow visor, wouldn't that rule out the ship sinking from this hole in the side? Would you not hear "2,000 tons" of water coming through that hole? And if taking on water will lead to the ship floating upside down for hours, this should still be true if it took on water after an impact/explosion. Unless the claim is that this hole at or above the water line prevented it from floating upside down, but losing the bow visor would not. But why would that be true?
I don't get it. It would make more sense to me if we didn't have images of the ship on the bottom of the sea. Then we could speculate about giant holes in the bottom of the hull or something. But we know there aren't any. I don't see how the time it took to sink is evidence for impact/explosion, unless we adopt some weird pseudo-Aristotelian theory according to which the natural disposition of an impacted ship is to sink quickly, whether or not it takes on water.
I can understand being incredulous about how fast it sank, but that should apply equally to both the bow visor and to impact/explosion, in which case (if we stubbornly hold onto our incredulity at all costs) the conspiracy theory should be that it took much longer to sink than "they" are willing to admit, for some reason. At least that theory wouldn't be obviously internally inconsistent.