Vixen
Penultimate Amazing
You claimed coincidences were paranormal and cited to the Jung-Pauii hypothesis as proof.
That would be using the term coincidence correctly.
You claimed coincidences were paranormal and cited to the Jung-Pauii hypothesis as proof.
They were both recovered and we're manual beacons, they were found to be in working order.
Estonia wasn't required to replace the manual buoys until 1999 as allowed by the new regulation.
Some of this is wrong, and the rest has nothing whatsoever to do with he discussion at hand, or arguing against claims never made. No one here has suggested Finland had anti-Semitic aims during the Continuation War.
Yes. It's my profession to know. Hydrostatic release is not the same as immersion activation. This has been carefully explained to you dozens of times. We all understand it. You don't.
That's not what you said. You wrote "[The Times] even had reporters on the German front line, who must have been British secret agents to have infiltrated it in the first place."
Let's start again. Within one sentence you can have a list of discrete items which can be separated by a comma, if more than two and by a conjuction, 'and' or 'or' or similar for the last item in that list. So, for example, say you are talking about biscuits. You could say, "I went to the shop to buy some chocolate fingers, chocolate digestives and gingernuts." = Three different items but all things you intend to buy.
In my sentence I similarly described three different types of interesting articles in the TIMES: maps of battles such as Stalingrad, the battle of Stalingrad and an article on German soldiers and British soldiers. Just as you should not confuse gingernuts with chocolate biscuits, nor should you read the latter as being about Stalingrad.
As a pointer, Stalingrad was Germany versus the USSR and hence any correspondent who did get to the German frontline in Stalingrad would surely be interviewing about their view on the Soviets.
Nobody said it was the same.
They do work together.
The HRU's sole purpose is to release the free-float automatic EPIRB
when immersed in up to 4m of water, so that it can float freely to the surface and begin emitting a signal conveying its location to the satellite.
That is not what Helsingin Sanomat says, quoting Lt Capn Montonen, Coastguard and Asser Koivisto Marine Communications expert...
Er...you do know what 'hydrostatic' means...?
I don't recall exactly what I wrote yonks ago ...
MV Viking Sally was not even built until 1980. When it became MV Estonia in 1993 and refurbished of course it was fully compliant with IOM Chapter III re EPIRBS; it even had brackets for the beacon built either side of the bridge, as specified in IOM Chapter III!
Manually-activated-beacons-only are kept inside the vessel and ready to hand.
Otherwise, how else are you supposed to switch them on manually?
That would be using the term coincidence correctly.
So, what most people call a 'coincidence' like someone having the same name or even their dogs, is usually easily explicable. That is using the term 'coincidence' in the same way as 'chance' or 'luck'. When you look into it, it means nothing at all except some fortuitous coming together of two or more events...
No. Your ultimate source for this is not Koivisto, it's Margus Kurm and he's wrong.
Asked and answered multiple times. You are not reading the regulations carefully enough. MS Estonia's SOLAS certification posture is a matter of incontrovertible record.
No, you made this up.
Asked and answered multiple times. You remove them from the HRU, switch them on, and replace them in the HRU. Or alternatively you can thrown them overboard after switching them on.
Honestly, Vixen, no one is this accidentally dense. Stop playing games.
https://www.maritimenz.govt.nz/cont...l EPIRB (non-float,if they abandon the vessel.A manual EPIRB (non-float-free) sits inside a bracket installed on the vessel. The bracket must be kept in a readily accessible position on board the vessel. In an emergency, a person removes the EPIRB from its bracket, switches it on, and takes it with them if they abandon the vessel.
Ernwl said 'co-belligerents (ha ha).
I corrected a factual error.
Do you have a citation that it was Kurm speaking and not Koivisto?
Ernwl said 'co-belligerents (ha ha).
I corrected a factual error.
Er...you do know what 'hydrostatic' means...?
That is not how it works. The correspondent likely had contacts who relayed him the information.