erwinl
Illuminator
- Joined
- Sep 5, 2008
- Messages
- 3,960
Well the German accident investigators not only took all those photos, it also took away a few square feet of panels from around the damaged side. It sent them to three independent laboratories, one in San Antonio, Texas, and two in Germany. All three independently found traces of explosives on the panels. As the shipbuilders, it is understandable Meyer might be indignant and eager to shore up damage limitation to its reputation. The bow visor was recovered about a mile west of the sunken vessel and the impact of coming loose mean that the top of the 'sealed' ramp was distorted to cause a gap of about one metre allowing sea water to enter.
Here's a riddle for you and and shipping boff Captain Swoop:
The car deck is above sea level, ipso facto, in order to allow transport to RORO. When filled with water, this equates to circa 2,000 cubic metres of water.
The decks below, including cabins, would have consisted of 18,000 cubic metres of air and is completely sealed off from any water leakage.
Question: how does such a vessel sink within 90 minutes?
https://miro.medium.com/max/1071/1*UEDpAanzq_Yol2FIPexmzg.jpeg
It seems you know a lot about this stuff.
What was the metacentric height of the Estonia in original loaded condition and what would the estimated metacentric height be with your 2000 tons of water in the cardeck. More importantly, what would the angle of stability be in that case?
And would a storm be able to push the ship beyond that angle?
The conventional explanation says, it will, but you seem to know it wouldn’t.