Frantic Gish gallop.Look.
Careful. Vixen doesn't know how cannonballs work either.For centuries, cannonballs were round and as smooth as a baby's bottom. That must be why they were never used to damage ships.
Look. It could well be the Estonian crew were crap, the Captain was going too fast, the visor fell off due to weakened locks and lugs AND the hull was damaged/perforated when it hit bottom. All of these can be true but yet doesn't PROVE it was the 18 m/s wind, waves or speed that caused the disaster. After all, the supposed damaged Atlantic lock was thrown back into the sea unexamined and nor were the lugs recovered. So all we have is a hypothetical situation of what COULD have happened which is not the same as DID happen. Without identifying the captain and his movement before, during and after the catastrophe, how is it possible to come to any conclusion? Especially when divers reported seeing the captain with bullet wounds to the head.
You can't just assume the captain did nothing though. They had already banned the manually activated type by then. He would have been an automatically activated model. Although sadly for him, seemingly not a float free version.The captain's movements were unimportant because the captain was neither massive enough (if he was above the water surface) nor buoyant enough (if he was below the water surface) that his position within the ship would have measurably affected whether or not the ship would turn turtle once it capsized.
Anders Björkman didn't show any calculations either. He just guessed at a bunch of scalar quantities and declared the outcome to be what he wanted without solving a single equation. Now your attempt to repair Björkman's reputation seems to be claiming JAIC is wrong because they didn't duplicate Björkman's error by performing calculations in a model that has been rendered inapplicable by flooding. Björkman's error is not just a trivial oopsie or a typo. He's either woefully incompetent or deliberately lying. And before you try to slap another cheerful coat of paint on his nonsense, keep in mind that I have debated him directly over this and you have not. I know which of JAIC and Björkman has the better technical argument....show its GOM and GZ calculations...
Yeah, sometimes the correct answer is simple and obvious.Because it was a different ship and the bow had fallen off.
IIRR, and it's been a while, don't the SOLAS regs specify an immersion suit should be able to be donned in two minutes or less?Because they would have been dressed for a storm when they came to the bridge.
It's not difficult.
The stupid is off the charts here.Well, the latest investigation - which the Swedish prosecutors have said is 'closed' and they are not investigating further - claims the breach in the hull was due to the vessel hitting a 'rocky outcrop' as it sank. OK, so there is a rocky ridge nearby (but then the whole area consists of granite boulders, a remnant from the Ice Age) but here's the thing: these rocks are not sharp and jagged as the average person not familiar with the Finnish archipelago terrain imagines they are (and even further inland) they are as smooth and round as a baby's bottom. In summer you can walk barefoot over them without fear of jagged edges. So yeah, let's see if Evertsson is the scoundrel that you make him out to be. So let's see if the forthcoming report can convince sceptics the massive holes in the hull were due to abnormal pointy rocks jabbing through, bearing in mind the resistance from falling into a body of water.
YesIIRR, and it's been a while, don't the SOLAS regs specify an immersion suit should be able to be donned in two minutes or less?
I notice the MS Estonia laying on her side i rougher sea conditions represented in the animation. I notice that the sea water now has access to multiple ventilation shafts that are normally well above water, and that water is filling the ship via open stairways. Not depicted is the undulation of the ship causing water slosh around inside allowing for more water to enter further into the interior.Let's try again as the previous diagrams seem to have gone over your head. This is a picture of what the JAIC said the Estonia did. What do you notice?
View attachment 66091
Why did it not do what the M/V Jan Heweliusz did, which was a vessel in which repairs had been made with CONCRETE.
View attachment 66092
Penny dropped?
Thank you. It's been twenty years.Yes
General requirements for immersion suits
(a) The immersion suit shall be constructed with waterproof materials such that:
(i) it can be unpacked and donned without assistance within 2 min taking into account any associated clothing, and a lifejacket if the immersion suit is to be worn in conjunction with a lifejacket;
From
Indeed. Vixen continues to pretend she's an engineer. Statements such as :—The stupid is off the charts here.
...are not just "curiosity" or "interest." They're intended to challenge the conclusions of her betters. How steel structures behave when they hit rocks is an engineering question. You don't need to have an engineering license in order to know how to work the problem. But you do have to know how to work the problem. The tacit premise that only pointy rocks can make holes in ships is just yet another, "Because I say so," coupled with the omnipresent premise, "...and I know what I'm talking about."[H]ere's the thing: these rocks are not sharp and jagged as the average person not familiar with the Finnish archipelago terrain imagines they are...
Anyone else remember her hilarious attempt to AI her way through a solution to the question of hydrodynamic drag?...bearing in mind the resistance from falling into a body of water.
Let's see if our resident triple-niner can work out the difference between contours that are evident at the pedestrian scale and contours evident at ship scale.In summer you can walk barefoot over them without fear of jagged edges.
You can see how she's already arranging the mental furniture to reject the new findings.So let's see if the forthcoming report can convince sceptics...
Didn't it just forget that the ship was a thing half way through and continued on without reckoning the actual thing that was meant to be experiencing the hydrodynamic drag?Anyone else remember her hilarious attempt to AI her way through a solution to the question of hydrodynamic drag?
You can see how she's already arranging the mental furniture to reject the new findings.
Thank you. It's been twenty years.
What, that this thread's been running? Funny, it feels longer. Much, much longer....
Didn't it just forget that the ship was a thing half way through and continued on without reckoning the actual thing that was meant to be experiencing the hydrodynamic drag?
She confused the AI by apparently asking about the "pressure" of water on a ship sinking to a given depth, and it gave her the formula for the hydrostatic pressure of seawater at that depth—a correct answer to a completely unrelated question. She was sure she had slam-dunked the people questioning her on that particular claim. Here it's clear that the, "...and I know what I'm talking about," premise is not at all true.Didn't it just forget that the ship was a thing half way through and continued on without reckoning the actual thing that was meant to be experiencing the hydrodynamic drag?
Ironic, since RMS Titanic's shell plating (~38 mm) fractured simply from the stress of hitting mud. For comparison, shell plating above the waterline on the side of a ferry would be mild steel on the order of 15 mm. So that's a yield strength (the point where bending occurs) roughly in the 200s (N⋅mm-2) and an ultimate tensile strength (where it fractures) in the 400s—working the numbers in my head while eating a sandwich. Keep in mind that shell plating on ships gets bent by operational-level wave action alone. That tells you how little it takes to get to ~200 N⋅mm-2. Keep in mind it's okay if shell plating bends like that. That's not an indication of design error. Ductility is preferred over hardness. Most lay people have a completely unrealistic idea of how steel behaves at scale.Deckchairs and Titanic come to mind.
She confused the AI by apparently asking about the "pressure" of water on a ship sinking to a given depth, and it gave her the formula for the hydrostatic pressure of seawater at that depth—a correct answer to a completely unrelated question. She was sure she had slam-dunked the people questioning her on that particular claim. Here it's clear that the, "...and I know what I'm talking about," premise is not at all true.
Ironic, since RMS Titanic's shell plating (~38 mm) fractured simply from the stress of hitting mud. For comparison, shell plating above the waterline on the side of a ferry would be mild steel on the order of 15 mm. So that's a yield strength (the point where bending occurs) roughly in the 200s (N⋅mm-2) and an ultimate tensile strength (where it fractures) in the 400s—working the numbers in my head while eating a sandwich. Keep in mind that shell plating on ships gets bent by operational-level wave action alone. That tells you how little it takes to get to ~200 N⋅mm-2. Keep in mind it's okay if shell plating bends like that. That's not an indication of design error. Ductility is preferred over hardness. Most lay people have a completely unrealistic idea of how steel behaves at scale.