P.J. Denyer
Penultimate Amazing
I’m curious about the bullet holes.
MiIitary applications. I've checked and the company has been dissolved. I'm not surprised tbh, it was the worst job I ever had and I quit in less than six months.
I’m curious about the bullet holes.
And also the difference between erosion on the sea bed and on the shoreline. It’s littorally a different situation.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.
...or read Jeffrey Eptsein's emails.you would put the immersion suit on when you were preparing to abandon
Its something that 'normal' people 'don't get' in many subjects- and in many cases 'hard steel' is exactly what you DON'T want!!!!!Ductility is preferred over hardness. Most lay people have a completely unrealistic idea of how steel behaves at scale.


A ship's shell plating has one job: keep out water. That purpose is best served by something that responds to stress by bending first instead of fracturing.Its something that 'normal' people 'don't get' in many subjects- and in many cases 'hard steel' is exactly what you DON'T want!!!!!
When I used to fly on Boeing 747s to and from Europe, passengers would note (with some alarm) the degree of wingtip flexure. It was always my pleasure to tell them, "It has to bend or else it would break."Like plane wings...
As I said, the Myers-Brigg thing was a questionnaire sent around British Mensa by a psychologist around the late-80's or early-90's. Did you not hear this the first time? No, we didn't have Myers-Briggs re psychometrics.You claim to have a degree in psychology. Was Myers-Briggs covered in the course? If so, was it regarded as valid for any purpose? If so, what purpose?
I think if you are the captain and part of his bridge team faced with a sudden emergency, you will be frantically trying to rectify it.Do YOU think the crew didn't have time to put on emergency gear?
I bet you're incapable of answering this simple question.
When it said it floated on a 90° list. OK fair enough, but where do they show their calculations as to GOM, etc. To account for it sinking stern first, it brings in the concept of 'it must have been the aft windows on decks four and five wot got smashed by waves' to account for it, when the first common sense thought would be, OMG there's a breach in the hull let's look into that as a first priority!Obviously not, because if it had you would have realised that I was asking for the source for your claim that the JAIC said that a ship would float on its superstructure.
Here's the question again: what was the source for your claim that the JAIC said that a ship would float on its superstructure?
Incorrect. The drawing is a reproduction by Edinburgh University IIRC.Bjorkman's website. It appears there multiple times, this is clearly Vixens source.
Irrelevant.
Evertsson lied. He admitted he lied. Deal with it.
Straw man.
Ships don't sink by "falling into" water. Objects moving through fluids is something I've practiced professionally for decades. Show me your calculations. Impact of objects with other objects is also part of my decades of engineering experience. Show me your calculations there too.
I'll wait.
There is no such thing as "GOM." There is no point in trying to calculate intact-hull stability parameters for a ship that has flooded significantly. You're starting with the premise that Anders Björkman knows what he's talking about and is right. Instead try starting wit the premise that Anders Björkman is an obvious crackpot whose hand-wavy claims are nonsense.When it said it floated on a 90° list. OK fair enough, but where do they show their calculations as to GOM, etc.
No, that doesn't necessarily follow.To account for it sinking stern first, it brings in the concept of 'it must have been the aft windows on decks four and five wot got smashed by waves' to account for it...
No, your layperson's common sense does not trump actual science and engineering....when the first common sense thought would be, OMG there's a breach in the hull let's look into that as a first priority!
I posted it twice previously. You ignored it both those times, so go fish.Citation please of where 'Evertsson admitted he lied'.
Except they weren't static in one place, unlike our ancient granite rock. Here's a typical example:For centuries, cannonballs were round and as smooth as a baby's bottom. That must be why they were never used to damage ships.
IMG-20250812-WA0001 by Username Vixen, on FlickrCensored because I was right.Careful. Vixen doesn't know how cannonballs work either.
No, you weren't. You stated muzzle velocity from the cannon was equal to projectile velocity, and when you tried to spin out that discussion to keep the attention on yourself, both you and others who responded got the posts removed for being off topic.Censored because I was right.
That one sticking up on the right would do quite a number on a ship's hull if it were on the seabed and a ship landed on it.Except they weren't static in one place, unlike our ancient granite rock. Here's a typical example:
IMG-20250812-WA0001 by Username Vixen, on Flickr
What was your source for it?Incorrect. The drawing is a reproduction by Edinburgh University IIRC.