sjn911 Posted February 13, 2016 #326 Share Posted February 13, 2016 (edited) Thanks, but the only way I know its a weekend is that the messages from the office stop. One day is pretty much like the next out here. I bet....all work no real rest/break on your kind of job....24/7. This time of year used to be calving on my dad's/our family ranch...one crabby 24/7 cowboy..so glad that is over. Edited February 13, 2016 by sjn911 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare A&L_Ont Posted February 13, 2016 #327 Share Posted February 13, 2016 I bet....all work no real rest/break on your kind of job....24/7. This time of year used to be calving on my dad's/our family ranch...one crabby 24/7 cowboy..so glad that is over. Yah, but I bet you do miss seeing the baby calves running I the spring as the snow melts. I don't miss the midnight checks either, but I do miss the calves.:) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cpufrost Posted February 13, 2016 #328 Share Posted February 13, 2016 Passengers are the "cargo" of a cruise ship, so they and their baggage are included in the deadweight. Using a round number like 6000 pax and crew, with an average weight of 220 lbs (100 kg), that only accounts for 300 metric tons or 2.7% of the allowable deadweight. Fuel, drinking water, and ballast water probably make up 9-10,000 tons. What about food and most importantly the secondary fuel...beer! :D Speaking of which I find it a riot that this gets brought up: How much more a ship weighs after a few days in on a voyage due to pax weight gains. :eek: I thought people were joking, that's what is scary. The show "Are You Smarter Than a Fifth Grader?" really brought up the issue at hand. And all over the news reports of 45 degrees list. I suggest people even thinking this is the case get a protractor (that little piece of plastic in the shape of a D, the grade they got in middle school math) and put it next to their dinner table. With the help of a friend lift one end until the middle gets to 45. Don't try this with dinner on board or your pets will be enjoying it and your spouse may not appreciate it. How the heck would you be able to cope with this if this angle was the floor? I've seen my share of bad storms and the WORST was perhaps 9 degrees (pax ship). And this took a while to get there. That's the other thing. Lose power and swing into a beam sea (been there on a trawler) and it's like a see-saw (sea-saw?) that will literally toss you like a trebuchet. Heavy objects become deadly projectiles. The period would be longer on a larger vessel but the back and forth sliding across the floor would still be your enemy. Ships can take a lot more beating than people for sure. Combine diesel fumes and a rolling sea and you're incapacitated for 24 hours or more. Most of you have smart phones. There are plenty of free apps that show inclination and these are pretty good. I like "Theodolite" on iOS because you can use the camera to snap a pic with a full overlay of coordinates and other sensor data. You may look like a dork but if you're a ship nerd like a lot of us you're busted already! ;) You may be disappointed that all the pitching and rolling you feel in the dining room is only a few degrees plus and minus. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sjn911 Posted February 13, 2016 #329 Share Posted February 13, 2016 (edited) Yah, but I bet you do miss seeing the baby calves running I the spring as the snow melts. I don't miss the midnight checks either, but I do miss the calves.:) Smiles....all the babies....but I can see them driving around often here..even though more east and closer to a small and larger "town". My dad still can ski a few runs at 81 due to this...not moi..lol. Edit to say back to ship at hand and hopefully all good now.... Edited February 13, 2016 by sjn911 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chengkp75 Posted February 13, 2016 #330 Share Posted February 13, 2016 What about food and most importantly the secondary fuel...beer! :D Speaking of which I find it a riot that this gets brought up: How much more a ship weighs after a few days in on a voyage due to pax weight gains. :eek: I thought people were joking, that's what is scary. The show "Are You Smarter Than a Fifth Grader?" really brought up the issue at hand. Well, you also have to subtract the weight of the food that was eaten to produce the weight gain in the passengers. At worst, a wash, when you consider the food wastage and the amount that goes through the waste treatment plant (you know what I mean), the ship will come back to port lighter than it left, even if you discount the drinking water and fuel. A ship the size of Anthem will get around 10-15 40' trailers of food for the week. 40' containers have a max weight of 40mt, so food and beverage is somewhere between 400-600 tons. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jd10367 Posted February 14, 2016 #331 Share Posted February 14, 2016 (edited) And all over the news reports of 45 degrees list. I suggest people even thinking this is the case get a protractor (that little piece of plastic in the shape of a D, the grade they got in middle school math) and put it next to their dinner table. With the help of a friend lift one end until the middle gets to 45. Don't try this with dinner on board or your pets will be enjoying it and your spouse may not appreciate it. How the heck would you be able to cope with this if this angle was the floor? I've seen my share of bad storms and the WORST was perhaps 9 degrees (pax ship). I would think at worst we tilted 10-15 degrees. Edited February 14, 2016 by jd10367 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Capt_BJ Posted February 14, 2016 #332 Share Posted February 14, 2016 (edited) What about food and most importantly the secondary fuel...beer! :D Speaking of which I find it a riot that this gets brought up: How much more a ship weighs after a few days in on a voyage due to pax weight gains. :eek: I thought people were joking, that's what is scary. The show "Are You Smarter Than a Fifth Grader?" really brought up the issue at hand. And all over the news reports of 45 degrees list. I suggest people even thinking this is the case get a protractor (that little piece of plastic in the shape of a D, the grade they got in middle school math) and put it next to their dinner table. With the help of a friend lift one end until the middle gets to 45. Don't try this with dinner on board or your pets will be enjoying it and your spouse may not appreciate it. How the heck would you be able to cope with this if this angle was the floor? I've seen my share of bad storms and the WORST was perhaps 9 degrees (pax ship). And this took a while to get there. That's the other thing. Lose power and swing into a beam sea (been there on a trawler) and it's like a see-saw (sea-saw?) that will literally toss you like a trebuchet. Heavy objects become deadly projectiles. The period would be longer on a larger vessel but the back and forth sliding across the floor would still be your enemy. Ships can take a lot more beating than people for sure. Combine diesel fumes and a rolling sea and you're incapacitated for 24 hours or more. Most of you have smart phones. There are plenty of free apps that show inclination and these are pretty good. I like "Theodolite" on iOS because you can use the camera to snap a pic with a full overlay of coordinates and other sensor data. You may look like a dork but if you're a ship nerd like a lot of us you're busted already! ;) You may be disappointed that all the pitching and rolling you feel in the dining room is only a few degrees plus and minus. there is a line on the horizon for a basis and one at the color break of the hull to determine the offset, One of the salvage crew died despite use of mountain climbing gear another, less severe Edited February 14, 2016 by Capt_BJ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KarinaGW Posted February 14, 2016 #333 Share Posted February 14, 2016 (edited) there is a line on the horizon for a basis and one at the color break of the hull to determine the offset, One of the salvage crew died despite use of mountain climbing gear another, less severe Based on my need, at the time, of having to get from the bathroom back to the bed at the height of the storm, i judged the angle to be 10-15*. Your graphic feels like it supports that. Edited February 14, 2016 by KarinaGW Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Capt_BJ Posted February 14, 2016 #334 Share Posted February 14, 2016 (edited) my ships 'routinely' experienced rolls over 15 degrees .... and they were usually memorable events with lots of overturned chairs and spilled glasses but we were 'secured for sea' and expected this. you should have see the preps when we did a Bering Sea trip! One of the things that typically scares me on a cruise ship IS the total lack of regard for "securing for sea". I've watched the full contents of a large bar area all crash to a "wall" (I call it a bulkhead) same too for every bottle in the perfurm shop> Other favorites: music equipment like risers, amp and even piano ON WHEELS. Stacks of folding chairs and tables and often on a rolling stand Rolling grills and steam tables . . . . we called these things "missile hazards" If not welded or strongly bolted to a strong structure or tied down with something able to carry 150% of the weight, the question is not "will it move" only WHEN will it move and where is it gonna go . . . Carib cruisers can sail for 20 years and never see these conditions .... or it might be your lucky day. BTW my recent QM2 experience did NOT convince me that thye were fully ready either, but our crossing was smooth so I never got to see their plan in action p.s. my classroom for learning about wind waves and ships Edited February 14, 2016 by Capt_BJ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kearney Posted February 14, 2016 #335 Share Posted February 14, 2016 Cheng is the acronym for Chief Engineer, KP stands for Kings Point, the US Merchant Marine Academy, and 75 is my year of graduation. Did you know a Pete Creagan at Merch Marine Academy. He grew up with my husband. He thinks he was there around the same time. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cpufrost Posted February 14, 2016 #336 Share Posted February 14, 2016 my ships 'routinely' experienced rolls over 15 degrees .... and they were usually memorable events with lots of overturned chairs and spilled glasses but we were 'secured for sea' and expected this. you should have see the preps when we did a Bering Sea trip! One of the things that typically scares me on a cruise ship IS the total lack of regard for "securing for sea". I've watched the full contents of a large bar area all crash to a "wall" (I call it a bulkhead) same too for every bottle in the perfurm shop> Other favorites: music equipment like risers, amp and even piano ON WHEELS. Stacks of folding chairs and tables and often on a rolling stand Rolling grills and steam tables . . . . we called these things "missile hazards" If not welded or strongly bolted to a strong structure are tied down with something able to carry 150% of the weight, there question is not "will it move" only WHEN will it move and where is it gonna go . . . Carib cruisers can sail for 20 years and never see these conditions .... or it might be your lucky day. BTW my recent QM2 experience did NOT convince me that thye were fully ready either, but our crossing was smooth so I never got to see their plan in action Missiles, exactly. Getting clocked by a baby grand on wheels would be like getting run over by a car. Probably worse TBH. And those odyssey cabs full of amps, processors, etc. Weigh hundreds of pounds with steel corner protectors. And most don't even engage the wheel brakes. At least they're tethered with a snake with Neutrik/Speakons which are pretty secure. But where it can move (and it will) it will come at you like a Case front end loader and thinking you put your hands up and stop it would be futile. 10-15 deg on a large, modern cruise ship is major. Folks up high in suites would feel this as much worse seeing the horizon going up and down. It always feels worse than it is. Look at the first dip on a roller coaster. ;) And like there's a ruler for "fisherman's inches" there should be a scale for cruisers. ;) x2. I have to say I like it. No lines in the buffet and when you tell others "Meh, it's not the bad" the look they give you like you have lobsters crawling from your ears, is priceless. But it gets old quick. An hour or two of getting slammed is one thing. But enduring it for a day or more is entirely another. The issue with Carib cruises is leaving from the NE. There's a lot of weather that needs respect. They don't call it the Graveyard of The Atlantic for nothing. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chengkp75 Posted February 14, 2016 #337 Share Posted February 14, 2016 (edited) Did you know a Pete Creagan at Merch Marine Academy. He grew up with my husband. He thinks he was there around the same time. Name doesn't ring a bell. I gather that it's your husband who thinks Pete was there then, and not Pete himself? :p Though I gotta say there was a lot of alcohol haze back then. Edited February 14, 2016 by chengkp75 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ocean Boy Posted February 14, 2016 #338 Share Posted February 14, 2016 p.s. my classroom for learning about wind waves and ships Is that picture taken on the Eagle? She lives just up the road from me. I got to spend the good part of a day aboard once thanks to a friend of mine. I'd love to sail aboard her as the ship physician. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GolfMom321 Posted February 14, 2016 #339 Share Posted February 14, 2016 there is a line on the horizon for a basis and one at the color break of the hull to determine the offset, Wow, that really puts it in perspective! I know on the TA it felt like we were tipping pretty far at times. When we asked, on the bridge tour, what the max was, I honestly didn't believe the 12 degree figure. But this totally bears it out. I can certainly understand someone going through it thinking it was 45 degrees, but looking at your photo paints a much more realistic picture. Thanks! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chengkp75 Posted February 14, 2016 #340 Share Posted February 14, 2016 Is that picture taken on the Eagle? She lives just up the road from me. I got to spend the good part of a day aboard once thanks to a friend of mine. I'd love to sail aboard her as the ship physician. Actually, that's the Horst Wessel. :p Sorry, CaptB_J, anytime I see the Eagle, I think of where she came from. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare John&LaLa Posted February 14, 2016 #341 Share Posted February 14, 2016 What I find more amazing is that it was just over 65 years from the Wrights first flight to the first flight of a 747. 18 years from now (2034) will be 65 years from the 747's first flight, and 747s (okay, not 747-100s) will still be flying in commercial service. I had several Aunts who were born before the Wright Bothers flew and lived to watch a man land on the man 65 years later. I still have a difficult time wrapping my brain around that fact. Thom B52 will be 65 years old next year. That's a lot more impressive than the 747. They are scheduled to be operational for 25 more years Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Clarea Posted February 14, 2016 #342 Share Posted February 14, 2016 B52 will be 65 years old next year. That's a lot more impressive than the 747. They are scheduled to be operational for 25 more years Another great aircraft from Boeing. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare John&LaLa Posted February 14, 2016 #343 Share Posted February 14, 2016 Another great aircraft from Boeing. Have you ever seen the one at MCO? Hidden in the trees, you can just make it out on 528. I may take my grandson if I can figure out how to get to it Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Clarea Posted February 14, 2016 #344 Share Posted February 14, 2016 Have you ever seen the one at MCO? Hidden in the trees, you can just make it out on 528. I may take my grandson if I can figure out how to get to it No, didn't know it was there until now. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare John&LaLa Posted February 14, 2016 #345 Share Posted February 14, 2016 No, didn't know it was there until now. You might be able to see it on Google earth. North side, green cammo Sent from my HTC One_M8 using Tapatalk Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Clarea Posted February 14, 2016 #346 Share Posted February 14, 2016 You might be able to see it on Google earth. North side, green cammo I see it.:) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jcl410 Posted February 14, 2016 #347 Share Posted February 14, 2016 (edited) BTW my recent QM2 experience did NOT convince me that thye were fully ready either, but our crossing was smooth so I never got to see their plan in action Captain - I was on QM2 on a westbound transatlantic while we were going through 30 foot seas and 40-50 knot winds on the bow. Sitting up on deck 9 in the Commodore Club, you could feel the motion, but it wasn't bad (only 1 time in 2 hours did the bar tender even need to steady the glasses behind the bar. (But seeing the large amounts of wind blown spray hitting the windows was impressive!) On the sailing ship Royal Clipper the did secure all the bars when we hit some rough weather - AND the put installed the lee boards on the beds! Now THAT was a fun trip! Aloha, John Edited February 14, 2016 by jcl410 typos Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BillB48 Posted February 14, 2016 #348 Share Posted February 14, 2016 Have you ever seen the one at MCO? Hidden in the trees, you can just make it out on 528. I may take my grandson if I can figure out how to get to it Of course now everyone knows;)! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B-52_Memorial_Park Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rare Keith1010 Posted February 14, 2016 #349 Share Posted February 14, 2016 Thanks for sharing. Keith Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TravelerThom Posted February 14, 2016 #350 Share Posted February 14, 2016 B52 will be 65 years old next year. That's a lot more impressive than the 747. They are scheduled to be operational for 25 more yearsAgreed. The B52 projected operational life is almost twice as long as the time span from first flight of the Wright brothers to first flight of the B52. And that projected lifetime is longer than mine:eek: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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