Posted on 01/20/2012 5:40:20 PM PST by BfloGuy
They will be sealing it up and will start pumping ping pong balls into it in mid February then it will be towed to dry dock and refitted
Don’t worry, I hear the seas are rising.
Eleven dead and twenty still missing, almost certainly dead, and all the enviro-weenies care about is a little bit of fuel oil. Nasty little evil morons.
The farther North you go the higher the tide differential.
How about that black rubber spray on they sell on TV. It says it floats boats.
You’re right... you must watch the late television ads like I do. Stops any sort of leak, too. You may be on to something, CGG!
He just saying that to get more money for the job.
Ding ding ding, We have a winner!!
According to the ad, all they have to do is get some screen wire and lots of cans of the spray on rubber and the problem is solved.
LOL!
I’m on the technical side.
I’m sure our sales guys would have told me to shut the hell up!
If the bottom of her hull (not the side) is up against a rock outcropping, they’ll have to create enough buoyancy to float her upright onto the outcropping and then over it.
Remember, this ship is bigger and weighs more that an aircraft carrier.
If they can do it, the longer it takes, the more it’s going to cost to refit her. Saltwater eats everything.
I think this ship will have her super-structure cut off as much as possible, then floated to the bone-yard.
I’m guessing no ballast, but plenty of vomit.
Pump foam into the compartments that were ripped open on the rocks, forcing out the water, and then get her off the rocks at high tide. Clean her up for a couple Million Lira(?), and you’re back in business.
The hull was pierced on the rock outcropping, and a huge chunk of rock broke off in the hull. It’s still there, and it’s the size of a cement truck.
They should, however, be able to isolate the compromised area, close all the watertight doors and hatches, and start pumping water out, one space at a time. It might not be too difficult to right it up again and float it off of there.
They’ll either seal up the lower sections and pump them full of air to refloat it or they’ll strap a zillion empty air bags around the bottom of it and fill those with air to refloat it.
Otherwise they’ll scrap it...
That is the reason I went in to submarines when I joined the Navy. In crap like that, go deeper.
A half a million gallons of fuel could wreak havoc on the marine ecosystem
If that were true, these same ecosystems would have been dead since WWII. Greenie hand wringing at its worst
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