"Brian Braidwood, a diving and blasting expert..."
Rabe says she has received confirmation from several research laboratories that the explosives remain in the samples." - HS
Don't twist my words.
We were discussing the Atlantic lock, when a poster came along and sneered, 'How does that prove sabotage?' apropos of nothing. Don't put someone else's words in my mouth.
Are you claiming to be Hoffmeister's superior and deign to advise him his report is defective?
Not necessarily. If the explosives, which Braidwood explains can be a small amount (1kg) are placed behind the plate on the for'ard bulkhead that takes the brunt of the bang whilst the screws and bolts are loosened. I dare say, were you to examine these hardware materials there may well be evidence of key explosion deformation.
And you say this from your vast experience in the use of explosives in engineered systems and materials? Now you're just imagining evidence, not providing it.
Apparently, 5 years of physics.I accept Braidwood as an expert in diving and explosives. I do not accept you as an an expert in either.
I do not accept Rabe as an expert in explosives. But if you can provide the original laboratory reports, I will be happy to review them for the thread. How is it that Westermann found no such evidence?
You posited a scenario involving the placement of explosives such that no residue or physical effects would be found on any of the examined pieces, yet it would have caused the ship to sink. I want to know why we should trust you to have done this with anything more than a fertile imagination unfettered by knowledge.
When I rocked into uni, it was apparent that I knew nothing.
All the facts posted by Vixen are referenced and verified. Vixen herself has assured us of this.
Well, my question is unanswered so far. Why do most ships sink by the bow? That merely takes pragmatism at best. Call that physics if you wish. I suppose it is in the end.Physics is taught entirely differently at the college level, and then entirely differently altogether again for physics majors. That said, the physics underlying the topics we're discussing here can be understood well enough using pre-college physics. Here it's not the case that 5 years of physics was insufficient. It's the case that no appreciable portion of that 5 years of pre-college physics seems to have persisted into the latter days.
Well, my question is unanswered so far. Why do most ships sink by the bow?
Thanks. What about these pictures Braidwood spotted on the Rockwater videos?
They don't resemble explosive devices. That's rope, not det-cord.
Considering the violence of the bow visor coming off, ripping the ramp open amidst stormy seas, and high winds it is doubtful they were there when the ship was on the surface. Even had they been charges, they should have been torn away and washed into the sea, or deeper into the car deck. And yet, there they are.
And this assumes the divers are complete idiots.
In short, Braidwood is wrong.
Never insult an expert specialist by asking him or her to have a look at your tonsils whilst they are at it.
What is this obsessive straw man crap about superstructure? The JAIC do not say the ship would have continued to float on its side if the upper deck windows had not failed. They say it only speeded the rate of flooding. So what point do you imagine you are making?So you concur a ship does not float on its superstructure and it is only an illusion it does before its final rapid death throes under the water?
This is like trying to extract crap from a rocking horse.
Can you expand on this in any way? What is your specific disagreement with what the JAIC concluded, and please quote rather than paraphrase them.Nope.
Never insult an expert specialist by assuming that when he reports a structure exhibits stress fractures and corrosion that the only defects he is capable of recognising are stress fractures and corrosion.
Then quote them claiming "a ship will float on its superstructure ".This is what the JAIC claim.
Then you haven't looked at many.
Most sinkings are caused by flooding when a sea pipe breaks and the machinery space floods.
That's one of the weak points in all ships designs, you have to have lots of holes below the waterline to allow water to be pumped in to the ship to cool the engines, generators and air conditioning, supply the fresh water makers and plumbing and also the fire main.
If a through-hull fitting or pipe fails then a lot of water can come in very quickly in to the largest space below deck.
Machinery spaces are big, flooding them removes a lot of buoyancy from a ship. It also stops the machinery which means the pumps no longer work and the flooding can't be countered.
The JAIC claimed the flooding happened from smashed windows on Deck 4, yet it never provided any proof, evidence, calculations or analysis of the type of glass these windows had, bearing in mind they have to withstand strong winds, waves, gales, hailstones, drunk passengers falling into them.
In 2002 the Swedish bods came up with a new theory, that of water ingressing the ventilation pipes. However, you saw how long it took for that type of flooding to topple Oceanos: 18 hours. Truth is, the JAIC never investigated the pipes!!!
Think about that.