Vixen
Penultimate Amazing
Mojo writes:
Er, the bow visor is a huge 55 - 64 tonne chunk of solid steel, the Atlantic lock, is tiny in the grand scheme of things. We were OBVIOUSLY talking about the WEIGHT of the thing given the CONTEXT of a survivor passenger witness (Paul Barney) saying he felt a shudder that made him fall off the bench he was sleeping on. An Atlantic lock knocking against the hull is barely going to awake a seagull. The Atlantic lock is way down near the bulbous bow so is hardly going to make anyone feel like something has collided if it falls off. So, having had the weight of the Atlantic lock at the recent forefront of my mind at the time, I carelessly wrote its weight erroneously as the weight of the entire shebang that was causing collision/explosion type reports amongst some of the passenger survivors. In addition, this was acknowledged. So much for the ridiculous claim I was too 'embarrassed to admit to a mistake'.
As I said to another poster I got the 15kg mixed up with the Atlantic bolt.
For the record, I have never mistaken the bow visor for the Atlantic Lock...
Er, the bow visor is a huge 55 - 64 tonne chunk of solid steel, the Atlantic lock, is tiny in the grand scheme of things. We were OBVIOUSLY talking about the WEIGHT of the thing given the CONTEXT of a survivor passenger witness (Paul Barney) saying he felt a shudder that made him fall off the bench he was sleeping on. An Atlantic lock knocking against the hull is barely going to awake a seagull. The Atlantic lock is way down near the bulbous bow so is hardly going to make anyone feel like something has collided if it falls off. So, having had the weight of the Atlantic lock at the recent forefront of my mind at the time, I carelessly wrote its weight erroneously as the weight of the entire shebang that was causing collision/explosion type reports amongst some of the passenger survivors. In addition, this was acknowledged. So much for the ridiculous claim I was too 'embarrassed to admit to a mistake'.
