Vixen
Penultimate Amazing
Time for this video again?
HMS Sirius pitching in a head sea.
And as you can see, the water simply washes away over the deck.
Time for this video again?
HMS Sirius pitching in a head sea.
It doesn't follow. It just gallops off in an orthogonal direction. But it gets an exasperated reply which keeps the thread simmering along with further posts about irrelevant digressions so maybe someone counts that as a little victory.
And as you can see, the water simply washes away over the deck.
And as you can see, the water simply washes away over the deck.
And as you can see, the water simply washes away over the deck.
And as you can see, the water simply washes away over the deck.
Where is the 'sophistry' or 'gilding'?
It was on the bottom, it wasn't afloat. unless you are using some new, previously unknown definition of the word sink.
Well she's certainly ridiculing the idea, but I can't for the life of me see what it's got to do with any of this.Seriously Vixen, are you claiming you can't temper steel at home?
Well she's certainly ridiculing the idea, but I can't for the life of me see what it's got to do with any of this.
I think you've got it; Vixen is under the impression that if a ship isn't completely covered with water it did not sink.
Samples from the bow visor show they were exposed to temperature s in excess of 700 degrees.
Vixen claims that only a 'detonation' or a lab could produce a temperature of 700 degrees and that all the parts were welded together is not a factor in this.
Somehow any metalworking involving any kind of heating can't be done at home therefore welding on the ship can't be included in any explanation of the event.
Because it is a solid bow designed to take big waves when the ship is forcing it's way in to a head sea at high speed. See how it is raised and the distance to the turret and front of the superstructure?
It does not have a faulty, over stressed, separate bow held on by bolts that have to be hammered in to place.
If the how fell off a couple of meters above the waterline do you think the compartments behind would not be filled with water very quickly?
I...have you ever been sailing at all Vixen?
How do you explain the video I posted earlier in the thread from the US series Survivor, which involved people in simple boats having said oats sink straight down without capsizing due to the boats filling with water?
Why are you always, always wrong? It's genuinely disturbing how literally every post you make is wrong. It's like you're trying to be wrong.
I did. You're still wrong.
Again, if a boat takes on water to the point where it loses buoyancy it will sink straight down give or take. To capsize a boat takes specific conditions such as the water coming across the boat side on, or the crew taking precautions to deliberately capsize the boat to avoid sinking. I ask again, do you sail?
Please explain how in the video I mentioned, the boats being flooded sank them straight down and neither boat capsized.
.. 34 of the survivors reported a series of three bangs ...
Take a simple rowing boat, wood frame, operated by oars. There are no leaks.
Any imbalance or inflow of water, the boat simply capsizes toppling its contents into the water. It doesn't sink, it floats upside down ceteris paribus.