JayUtah
Penultimate Amazing
I posted the same just yesterday and several times in previous chapters.
Indeed it was to that I was alluding. The notion that the best way to cripple or sink a ship with minimal required ordnance and minimal risk of detection should occur to several people simultaneously indicates that Braidwood's imagination may not be all it's cracked up to be. The scenario he insinuates is bonkers.
I would choose the engine and generator through hull pipes. When they are blown machinery is actively pumping thousands of litres a minute in to the ship.
For the benefit of people who don't build and operate ships, ship engines and equipment are cooled by seawater pumped into the engine spaces, circulated around the hot equipment, and then pumped back out. This is true for diesel engines (the "M" in MS Estonia) and even more so for steam engines that recover spent steam, condense it, and pump it back into the boilers (the "S" in RMS Titanic). A break in of of these circuits is more than just an instant hole in the hull. It's a feedwater pump blasting water into the wide open (i.e., relatively uncompartmentalized) engineering spaces of the ship.
Far less explosive needed than trying to blow bows off or try to blow holes in the hull plating.
Correct. You don't need luggage-sized satchel charges to sink a ship if you have access to the interior. The line of reasoning for explosives is blatantly reasoned backwards. They've started with the presumption that explosives were used, and are trying to find an explosives-driven scenario that matches a cherry-picked subset of evidence. The result is not a credible scenario, but when your job is to stir up controversy you don't care.
