Stuck
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wrote on 26 Mar 2021, 22:56 last edited by jon-nyc
It’s one of the largest container ships in the world.
Its max capacity is 20,000 containers.
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wrote on 26 Mar 2021, 23:10 last edited by
Ive been looking for diagrams since I can’t figure out where the bridge is.
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wrote on 26 Mar 2021, 23:33 last edited by
It’s one of the largest container ships in the world.
Its max capacity is 20,000 containers.
20,000 8’ by 40’? That’s what I based my guess on.
In that picture, l’m counting 9-10 rows high, 24 long, and 10 deep (give or take). I was figuring those to be the typical 8’ x 40’ giving a max of 2400. Obviously I am missing something...
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It’s one of the largest container ships in the world.
Its max capacity is 20,000 containers.
20,000 8’ by 40’? That’s what I based my guess on.
In that picture, l’m counting 9-10 rows high, 24 long, and 10 deep (give or take). I was figuring those to be the typical 8’ x 40’ giving a max of 2400. Obviously I am missing something...
wrote on 27 Mar 2021, 00:05 last edited by@lufins-dad said in Stuck:
It’s one of the largest container ships in the world.
Its max capacity is 20,000 containers.
20,000 8’ by 40’? That’s what I based my guess on.
In that picture, l’m counting 9-10 rows high, 24 long, and 10 deep (give or take). I was figuring those to be the typical 8’ x 40’ giving a max of 2400. Obviously I am missing something...
Is this one at max capacity?
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@lufins-dad said in Stuck:
I wonder how much that Captain makes a year and whether he feels it is worth it right now?
Look on the bright side, he's got a great story for his grandchildren.
wrote on 27 Mar 2021, 00:06 last edited by@doctor-phibes said in Stuck:
Look on the bright side, he's got a great story for his grandchildren.
Once upon a time, the winds of fate blew me ship off and put it squarely on the “pause” button of global commerce ...
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wrote on 27 Mar 2021, 00:09 last edited by
Got me wonder how the Thunderbirds team would deal with something like this.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thunderbirds_(TV_series)
Maybe they won’t at all, since no human life is at stake. :man-shrugging:
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It’s one of the largest container ships in the world.
Its max capacity is 20,000 containers.
20,000 8’ by 40’? That’s what I based my guess on.
In that picture, l’m counting 9-10 rows high, 24 long, and 10 deep (give or take). I was figuring those to be the typical 8’ x 40’ giving a max of 2400. Obviously I am missing something...
wrote on 27 Mar 2021, 00:30 last edited byI looked it up and it’s 20k TEU which is twenty foot equivalent units.
So it would hold 10k of the 40 ft units
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wrote on 27 Mar 2021, 13:56 last edited by
The truck commercials practically write themselves.
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The truck commercials practically write themselves.
wrote on 27 Mar 2021, 14:30 last edited by -
wrote on 27 Mar 2021, 14:36 last edited by
Nahhh, just a commercial with some cowboy pulling up in a pickup truck, tying the ship to his tow hitch, and pulling the ship clear....
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wrote on 27 Mar 2021, 18:12 last edited by
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wrote on 27 Mar 2021, 19:10 last edited by
Big futhermucker.
I wonder if they still think it might be cleared tomorrow or Monday.
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wrote on 27 Mar 2021, 21:31 last edited by
Part of the problem is that the captains are always under the gun of a tight schedule.
My in-laws neighbor captains a container ship on the Houston-Antwerp-Houston run. A couple of years ago, he chose to throttle down and let a bad Atlantic storm go through, rather than risk his vessel and cargo.
I don't know how much it cost the company, but he had to undergo a company review board over his actions and his command was on the line.
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wrote on 28 Mar 2021, 00:21 last edited by
Moments before it ran aground, the Ever Given was apparently travelling faster than a speed limit set by the Suez Canal Authority, Bloomberg reported.
The Ever Given's last recorded speed was 13.5 knots, logged 12 minutes before it grounded, according to Bloomberg, which cited its own data. The maximum allowed speed through the canal was between 7.6 knots and 8.6 knots, the report said.
The Japan Times also reported the ship was travelling 13.5 knots, adding that two canal pilots were onboard when the ship hit land.
The Ever Given didn't have a tugboat escort through the canal, according to Bloomberg. The two ships immediately ahead of it reportedly had escorts, although such escorts were not required.
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wrote on 28 Mar 2021, 00:31 last edited by
Could they have been trying to beat the storm?
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Could they have been trying to beat the storm?
wrote on 28 Mar 2021, 00:38 last edited by -
wrote on 28 Mar 2021, 01:02 last edited by
@aqua-letifer said in Stuck:
@lufins-dad said in Stuck:
Could they have been trying to beat the storm?
Or their timetable.
I don’t really think so. There were Canal pilots on board not beholden to Evergreen. They weren’t speeding through the canal without those pilots approval. I’m an optimist. I think they were trying to keep something bad from happening and ran out of time. There’s not always a villain.
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wrote on 29 Mar 2021, 00:38 last edited by
What do you do with a drunken sailor?
What do you do with a drunken sailor?
What do you do with a drunken sailor ear-lie in the morning.Don't let him drive that cargo freighter.
Don't let him steer that cargo freighter.
Don't let him near that cargo freighter ear-lie in the morning.Put him charge of an Exxon Tanker,
Put him charge of an Exxon Tanker,
Put him charge of an Exxon Tanker ear-lie in the morning. -
wrote on 29 Mar 2021, 11:08 last edited by