The Cellar

The Cellar (http://cellar.org/index.php)
-   Quality Images and Videos (http://cellar.org/forumdisplay.php?f=22)
-   -   Ships (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=31974)

Carruthers 05-19-2016 11:04 AM

Ships
 
1 Attachment(s)
When it comes to being impressed by engineering, I have to confess that ships have always been pretty well down the list.

However Dad, being ex-Royal Navy, has always made a point of watching the Mighty Ships series on Quest TV (Discovery Lite) and I now realise how much more there is to ships than meets the eye.

Consequently, the arrival of the cruise ship 'Harmony of the Seas' at Southampton this week, attracted my attention.

The Daily Mail has its shortcomings but, credit where credit is due, they excel at photo features.

Quote:

World’s biggest cruise ship Harmony of the Seas rules the waves as it docks in Southampton ahead of maiden voyage.

Harmony Of The Seas is a 1,188 foot and 227,000-ton cruise ship - the newest and biggest the world has ever seen

Worth £800m, it boasts the Ultimate Abyss - the tallest slide at sea - as well as seven separate ‘neighbourhoods’

Stood on its stern the ship would soar above the Shard, the Eiffel Tower and the Burj Al Arab hotel in Dubai

It is 330ft longer than the Titanic, and can carry a human cargo of 8,880 including 2,100 crew from 77 countries
Attachment 56603

Quote:

The largest cruise ship in the world – measuring more than four football pitches in length with a maximum capacity for 6,780 passengers – has docked in Southampton for final preparations before its maiden voyage.

A small crowd of well-wishers, including some dressed in their pyjamas, welcomed the £800million Harmony of the Seas as it arrived just after dawn today, but tens of thousands of people are expected to visit the coastal city this week to catch a glimpse of the gigantic vessel before it carries paying customers for the first time.

After sailing from a shipyard in Saint-Nazaire, France, and spending the day yesterday cruising the English Channel, Harmony of the Seas sailed up Southampton Water and arrived at Southampton shortly after 6:15am.

It will depart on a short cruise on Sunday – a four-day taster voyage to Rotterdam, in the Netherlands – and on 29 May will make its maiden voyage to Barcelona, where it will be based for 34 seven-night tours of the western Mediterranean this summer. It will sail between Florida and the Caribbean this winter.

Royal Caribbean International’s 18-deck ship has set new records for length (1,1188ft), gross tonnage (227,000), width (215.5ft), passenger capacity (5,479 at double occupancy or a maximum of 6,780) and staterooms (2,747).

With a crew of 2,100 from 77 countries, the floating city boasts seven 'neighbourhoods', a 10-storey slide that is the tallest at sea, 23 swimming pools, 20 dining venues, 52 trees, surf simulators, robot bartenders, a casino and climbing walls.
There are more impressive photos at the Daily Mail.

glatt 05-19-2016 01:55 PM

Yup, it's big.

I would not want to set foot on it though. Too many damn people. Almost 9k people? Gimme a cabin on a lake. That's much better. And much lest chance of Rotavirus.

Gravdigr 05-19-2016 03:38 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Our Mr. Carruthers has a better pic of Harmony of the Seas than Wikipedia:

Attachment 56606

I wouldn't get on that boat...:headshake

xoxoxoBruce 05-19-2016 05:15 PM

I'd love to spend a day exploring the ship, if everybody else got off. It's fascinating from a design/build standpoint, but cruising doesn't appeal to me. That doesn't reflect poorly on people who dig that sort of thing, I can see the attraction, just not my bag. The comments at the Daily Mail were mostly negative except for some guy named Allen, defending it like an investor or travel agent.

Carruthers 05-20-2016 04:54 AM

1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by xoxoxoBruce (Post 960563)
The comments at the Daily Mail were mostly negative except for some guy named Allen, defending it like an investor or travel agent.

I heard on the radio during the night that five thousand people from the travel and tourist business are being entertained on board for three days so I think you've hit the nail on the head there!

The place I live has a population of about nine thousand so it's equivalent to the max number of souls on board this ship.

A cruise isn't something I'd volunteer for. At least I have some chance of escape here!

As of five minutes ago it's still moored in Southampton.

Attachment 56615

Ship Finder

glatt 05-20-2016 09:08 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by xoxoxoBruce (Post 960563)
I'd love to spend a day exploring the ship, if everybody else got off. It's fascinating from a design/build standpoint, but cruising doesn't appeal to me. That doesn't reflect poorly on people who dig that sort of thing, I can see the attraction, just not my bag. The comments at the Daily Mail were mostly negative except for some guy named Allen, defending it like an investor or travel agent.

This.

It's a marvel, and I'd love to explore it. I loved exploring the USS New Jersey with about 100 Boy Scouts a few years ago. Would have been different to be on that ship with 3,000 sailors. I'd be spending all my time just trying to get out of the way.

Gravdigr 05-24-2016 01:36 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Hey, Harmony of the Seas...

...Gotcher nose!

Attachment 56679

Gravdigr 05-27-2016 12:04 PM

1 Attachment(s)
The HMS Illustrious - FOR SALE!

Attachment 56723

Sailboat for scale.

Gravdigr 06-03-2016 03:40 PM

1 Attachment(s)
They're never as pretty before the make-up:

Attachment 56856

BigV 06-03-2016 03:59 PM

Sailboat?

Airport for scale.

New owner could catch SOME REALLY BIG AIR from that gnarly ramp, duuuuude.

xoxoxoBruce 06-17-2016 12:31 AM

1 Attachment(s)
US Battleships Missouri and Iowa off Korea in 1952...

Gravdigr 07-19-2016 06:03 PM

We got some spare ships, see. We need to do something with them, see. Here's what we'll do, see. We'll beat the shit out of it after towing it out to sea, see.

Here, see:



After the halfway point of the vid, it's just a camera circling the ship, documenting damage. The Mk-48 torpedo made a mark.

Here's the story. Interesting how much damage the USS Thach took before finally giving up the ghost 12 hours later.

Gravdigr 08-25-2016 01:43 PM



I'm guessing somebody got a big, Russian boot in they ass after this.

Pamela 08-25-2016 07:56 PM

Cargo breaks loose from the transport ships all the time.

My first destroyer found floating cargo containers more than once. Sadly, we lacked a crane to recover them to see what was inside.

fargon 08-26-2016 10:08 AM

That cargo loss could have been prevented with the use of pipe stakes.


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 02:02 AM.

Powered by: vBulletin Version 3.8.1
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.