erwinl
Illuminator
- Joined
- Sep 5, 2008
- Messages
- 3,965
Imagine Estonia was just like the Herald of Free Enterprise. The latter was virtually exactly the same type of accident as the MS Jan Heweliusz., except the MS Jan Heweliusz another roro, was in particularly poor maintenance condition. The former capsized on its side onto a bank as it was still in shallow water. Had it been out at sea like the MS Jan Heweliusz, it would have turtled face down, as the MS Jan Heweliusz did. The MS Jan Heweliusz floated face down for about five hours before it finally sank.
It is common sense to understand that ships are designed to withstand waves of seawater lashing at its decks. The height of the Estonia was six or seven decks/stories above the water level, so ships can withstand enormous weights without sinking. The free surface area of the car deck, above water level was just 2,000 tonnes worth of seawater. Once full, it cannot have taken on any more. The car deck was sealed off from other decks with a water barrier of 9 cm (OK, so not very high) there were side vents for excess water to escape, as on other decks. As of the point the ship was listing at 30° it becomes near inevitable that it will capsize completley unless urgent action is taken. At 40° it is gone. However, it wouldn't sink - although of course this is highly dangerous for the incumbents - it would simply turtle, just as the MS Jan Heweliusz did, not immediately sink.
Thus, it becomes obvious that the hole in the starboard is important to investigate, yet it never was even mentioned. The JAIC report says the only damage to the ship was the bow visor and car ramp.
Why did the MS Jan Heweliusz sink then?
It apparently took 5 hours in that case, but it did sink.
Since the hull was intact at that moment, it couldn't have sunk, could it?