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Cont: The sinking of MS Estonia: Case Reopened Part VI

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A knot is a measurement of speed, equivalent to one nautical mile per hour. It's nonsensical to propose to measure distance in knots. One properly measures distance in nautical miles, in cases where that's the appropriate measure. (Other cases might want kilometers, for example.)

"Knots per hour" is not a measurement of speed. It can technically (but not practically) be used as a measurement of acceleration, but that's not relevant.

Maybe you shouldn't pretend you know what you're talking about when it comes to shipping.

Of course you can calculate apx distance travelled if you have the parameters of unit of speed x time taken.

For example, a car travelling at 60mph for 20 mins can be estimated to have traveled 20 miles (60 x 0.33333).
 
I would argue it's not just technical subjects. She's also proven to be utterly clueless about politics, strategic studies, how university works, cockney slang...

You don't even know when someone knows better than you. So arrogant and yet so ignorant. Not a laudible combination.

"Shut gob, pin back lug'oles and put t'brain in gear' ~ Yorkshire homily.
 
Literally, because among other things her calculations assume that Estonia maintained a constant speed right up to the moment it sank.

Did you miss the bit where I said 'average speed, as estimated by the JAIC (iirc)'...?


Ergo an average speed of 18 knots.

Over 6.55 hours that equates to (18 x 6.55) = 117.9 nautical miles = 134 miles or 216 km. Another 193 km as the crow flies from Uto* to Stockholm.

I'd say that was midway.

*(40km away from MV Estonia; actually 38km to be precise)
 
...nautical miles...

Oh, look, a subtle change conforming to a rebuttal, but without acknowledging your prior error. Just like when you smoothly started using ′ correctly to mean minutes very quickly after people pointed out that ″ doesn't mean that. Don't think we can't see you trying to pretend to be smarter than everyone (and generally failing).
 
And the captain is wrong.

He was there. You were not.

The Ancient Romans had a very simple method for ascertaining truth. Their aphorism was: 'Seeing is believing'. This still applies to criminal law today.

Capn Makela and Capn Thoresson saw what they saw and they are quite capable of making up their own minds.
 
I can confirm Kemo sabe was cockney slang for "understand". Actually, it should read Kimo Sabe.

Nope. Cockney rhyming slang doesn't work like that.

In the unlikely event that a Cockney wanted rhyming slang for 'understand?' then it might go like this -

understand? ... band (the rhyme) ... marching band (the phrase containing the rhyme) ... marching? (the abbreviated form a Cockney would use)
 
You don't even know when someone knows better than you. So arrogant and yet so ignorant. Not a laudible combination.

"Shut gob, pin back lug'oles and put t'brain in gear' ~ Yorkshire homily.

<fx: sound of exploding irony meters>
 
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