and the
HMS Orlando at 335 ft long.
"At 5,643 tons displacement, she was certainly a large and impressive looking ship in her day. She was heavily armed..."
"The extreme length of the ship put enormous strains on her hull due to the unusual merging of heavy machinery, and a lengthy wooden hull"
The real problem with the Orlando wasn't its size, but having to carry enormously heavy steam engines, boilers, guns and armor plating. And this deadweight was positioned amidships, not evenly spread out over the whole vessel.
Wooden fighting ships of this size proved to be impracticable because they required powerful engines and heavy armament, as well as the ability to steam around the globe for years in any weather conditions. This is a completely different role than that of the Ark, which only needed to complete a single
unpowered voyage and did not have to plow through rough waters.
how do we know it's not possible to make a 450 ft ship out of wood and have it ocean-worthy? Because actual naval engineers tried, and ran into massive problems around three quarters of that size, even with steel bracing, silly. Just because you don't know history, doesn't mean everyone else doesn't have an argument either.
But nobody has even
attempted to make a seaworthy
Ark. The fact that at least one ancient ship was built which was almost as long as the Ark shows that it is at least
plausible, and nobody has yet produced any calculations to show that it is
impossible. Just because something
hasn't been done before doesn't prove that it
can't be done.
George said:
The aircraft was reported to heavy to be safe for regular flights. The unit was more of a flying boat than a plane.
The reason the H-4 Hercules flying boat only made one short flight wasn't a technical issue, but simply that it wasn't economically viable. With the War in the Pacific over it wasn't needed, and the reason for using wood no longer applicable.
Anyway that's beside the point, which is that if Howard Hughes hadn't pushed his project to completion we would now have people saying that a wooden aircraft of that size is
impossible - since all even the largest modern aircraft aver built has not been able to achieve that wingspan! The existence of the Spruce Goose shows how bankrupt that argument is.
So why hasn't anybody built a seaworthy replica of the Ark? Not because it's
impossible, but simply because it would be an enormous waste of money.