yea, that was my first thought. well, apparently it was in shallow waters in the straight of hormuz.
i suspect what they did is to have an underwater team patch the damage, pumped out the seawater from the body of the ship, then the ocean itself would lifted the ship from the bottom. followed by a more extensive repair at shipyard of choice.
A bit confusing post. Is it about supertankers in general, or only about the one that started it's career as "The Seawise Giant"? If it's the latter, then #19 #20 and #21 is another ship (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Batillus). The others seem to be the right one. She changed name several times. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seawise_Giant
so how long is this ship in real measurements. their are only a handful of countries who still use "Ft." and if you wanna use "Ft." which one applies? english, scotisch, usa, indian, liberia, burmees....?
yea, that was my first thought. well, apparently it was in shallow waters in the straight of hormuz.
i suspect what they did is to have an underwater team patch the damage, pumped out the seawater from the body of the ship, then the ocean itself would lifted the ship from the bottom. followed by a more extensive repair at shipyard of choice.
A bit confusing post. Is it about supertankers in general, or only about the one that started it's career as "The Seawise Giant"? If it's the latter, then #19 #20 and #21 is another ship (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Batillus). The others seem to be the right one. She changed name several times. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seawise_Giant
so how long is this ship in real measurements. their are only a handful of countries who still use "Ft." and if you wanna use "Ft." which one applies? english, scotisch, usa, indian, liberia, burmees....?
.
i suspect what they did is to have an underwater team patch the damage, pumped out the seawater from the body of the ship, then the ocean itself would lifted the ship from the bottom. followed by a more extensive repair at shipyard of choice.
If it's the latter, then #19 #20 and #21 is another ship (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Batillus). The others seem to be the right one. She changed name several times.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seawise_Giant
their are only a handful of countries who still use "Ft."
and if you wanna use "Ft." which one applies?
english, scotisch, usa, indian, liberia, burmees....?
There was never such a thing as a "Brontosaurus."
Don't believe me? Look it up.