MarkCorrigan
Героям слава!
Please don't ignore me Vixen.
Weasel words again. You wish to imply that JAIC certified the vessel seaworthy as well as the relevant inspectors. This is false as you well know.
Even the JAIC had to concede this would not be enough to capsize the ship.
You appear to have decided the only potential threat to a Baltic ferry is collision and heavy seas are no threat at all. It appears you have indeed still not read that page describing a dozen previous cases of ships suffering dangerous damage at sea.
The JAIC very clearly states the thing was seaworthy.
None of them sank. It's a red herring.
The JAIC very clearly states the thing was seaworthy.
What does 'float on it's superstructure' mean?
Why does it either capsize immediately or not at all?
It took over half an hour to sink, why isn't that plenty of time for water to get in to the hull and superstructure?
This is where you fall flat on your face as the JAIC state clearly that the vessel was in seaworthy condition, and as certified by Bureau Veritas, the compliance regulators.
International certificates cease to be valid when a ship changes flag. New certificates were therefore issued when the ship became Estonian in January 1993. Two new classification certificates (hull, machinery) were issued by Bureau Veritas in January 1993. The Estonian Maritime Administration had authorised Bureau Veritas in August 1992 to perform the surveys on its behalf and to issue certificates under the 1966 Load Line Convention, the 1974 SOLAS Convention, the 1973 MARPOL Convention and the 1969 Tonnage Convention. The status of the certificates at the time of the accident was as follows.
Passenger Ship Safety Certificate. As a new trim and stability manual was under development, the vessel carried an interim Passenger Ship Safety Certificate, issued on 26 June 1994.
Load Line Certificate. For the same reason the Load Line Certificate was interim, issued on 9 September 1994.
International Oil Pollution Prevention Certificate. A conditional IOPP certificate was issued by Bureau Veritas on 14 January 1993. The validity was conditional on the issuance of a Passenger Ship Safety Certificate.
International Tonnage Certificate. Bureau Veritas issued, on behalf of the Estonian Government, a tonnage certificate under the Tonnage Convention of 1969. The certificate valid at the time of the accident was dated 29 August 1994.
At the request of the owners Bureau Veritas had also issued a Cyprus tonnage certificate, dated 8 June 1993, according to the Cyprus Merchant Shipping Regulations requirements. Bureau Veritas also issued, under the same authority, a Certificate of Survey pursuant to the Republic of Cyprus Merchant Shipping Law of 1963.
The inspections of the vessel regarding compliance with international conventions and national regulations were, during the period under Finnish flag, carried out by the Finnish Maritime Administration except for compliance with the International Load Line Convention and the MARPOL Convention. The authority to perform surveys under these conventions was given to Bureau Veritas.
Bureau Veritas carried out the first load line survey at the time of delivery of the vessel. The compliance with the load line convention requirements was verified at the stipulated annual surveys and the five-year periodic surveys. The load line certificate was renewed when the ship changed flag in January 1993. The last annual inspection for verification of the load line certificate was carried out on 9 September 1994.
3.6.5 Classification society inspections
Bureau Veritas inspected the vessel for compliance with class requirements in accordance with their rules and standards. The main inspection period was five years and the items to be inspected were divided so that about one fifth of the total inspection work was carried out each year on a rolling schedule. The bow area was inspected under this programme in 1983, 1988 and 1993. No discrepancies were recorded during any of these inspections.
Bureau Veritas had no authorisation to survey the vessel for compliance with the SOLAS Convention. When Bureau Veritas surveyed the vessel for change of flag this was done in accordance with the requirements to the extent of a periodic survey, which did not include examination of construction drawings. The location of the extension of the collision bulkhead was thus not considered during this survey.
The position of the bow ramp of ESTONIA did not satisfy the SOLAS requirements for an upper extension of the collision bulkhead. No exemption was issued. Such an exemption could be given on condition that the vessel in the course of its voyages did not proceed more than 20 nautical miles from the nearest land.
Please don't ignore me Vixen.
I see, so US Navy SEAL's or Royal Navy divers are unable to set up communications with more than one platform.
Okaaay. We'll just ignore veteran elite expert Brian Braidwood.
More weasel words, intended to imply the JAIC were biased.
This does not address the point. (Imagine my surprise.) Is it your claim that after 4,500 tons of water entered the ship, flooding would simply stop?
I take your evasion to mean you accept the answer is "no".
The vessel was certified seaworthy.
Looks like it's weasels all the way down.
The JAIC very clearly reported the ship's state of inspection and certification. Any implication that they certified it is just some weird imagining in your own head.
If I show you my car's MOT certificate that does not mean I inspected and certified it. This is trivial stuff and I don't know why you don't drop it other than your seeming remarkable incapacity to admit error.
It would just carry on as before into port. The passengers wouldn't be happy at the drenched state of their vehicles but hey, the Diana II had a water ingress and carried on to port for the remaining two and a half hour journey.
Braidwood did not say divers get different instruction in each ear. Stop pretending he did.
And it would be super if you would drop all those passive aggressive "Okaaay" things to imply other people are being stupid. It really sits uneasily with the lack of foundation for the stuff you post.
Brian Braidwood knows better than a lawyer or a politician.
EFD
Some people have principles and use their skills for the common good.
Braidwood identified a petal-shaped indentation near one of the side-locks and his expert eye suspected it had been caused by a detonation.
But of course someone on their keyboard knows better.
If your car was in an accident, the police would certainly want to know if it was roadworthy. In the accident report it will state whether or not your vehicle was roadworthy (passed its MOT), thus Person B can't come along and claim it was not in a fit state for the road.
Remind me what your question is.
Think about it logically. Those Kirby Morgan earphones are set up to connect to one platform and operate rather like a conference call, wherein all callers can hear each other simultaneously.
Now think about it. You can set up your phone for a conference call on one ear. There is absolutely nothing to stop you from having a second phone to your other ear at the same time.