Post Amazingly Cool Pictures Of Ships or Boats!

Post Amazingly Cool Pictures Of Ships or Boats!

Author
Discussion

DJFish

5,921 posts

263 months

Wednesday 23rd November 2022
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Here’s a photo of where the previous photo was taken.

nebpor

3,753 posts

235 months

Wednesday 30th November 2022
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HMS Glasgow just launched into the Clyde via barge (they construct these as modules, so not designed to be slip launched) — passed on her way to Loch Long, where they will submerge the barge, then float her back up river for fitting out. If you head to Loch long tomorrow you’ll be able to see her … think they’ll do it at Finnart

Picture stolen from Facebook


5 In a Row

1,483 posts

227 months

Thursday 1st December 2022
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Wouldn't it have been easier to fit the propellers before floating the ship?

nebpor

3,753 posts

235 months

Thursday 1st December 2022
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a) is that even where the propellers are in a modern warship? Genuinely curious
b) maybe they consider their design classified - although in that case they could have just covered them up
c) maybe someone is having a face-palm moment and shouting "One job you had, propeller fitters .... one job!!!!!" at a bunch of sheepish looking engineers

Sadly it is an utterly dreich day and not much good for spotting it being towed back up to the yard

Shar2

2,220 posts

213 months

Thursday 1st December 2022
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nebpor said:
a) is that even where the propellers are in a modern warship? Genuinely curious
b) maybe they consider their design classified - although in that case they could have just covered them up
c) maybe someone is having a face-palm moment and shouting "One job you had, propeller fitters .... one job!!!!!" at a bunch of sheepish looking engineers

Sadly it is an utterly dreich day and not much good for spotting it being towed back up to the yard
Something I've not actually understood. Surely it's easier to install the shafts and propellers when the ship is high and dry, how do they stop the water from entering the stern glands when they're fitting the shafts? I could just be really dim though.

hidetheelephants

24,375 posts

193 months

Thursday 1st December 2022
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Maybe after POW's events they're delaying installation until there's a full post mortem.

nebpor

3,753 posts

235 months

Thursday 1st December 2022
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Shar2 said:
Something I've not actually understood. Surely it's easier to install the shafts and propellers when the ship is high and dry, how do they stop the water from entering the stern glands when they're fitting the shafts? I could just be really dim though.
Confirmed by a worker, they (and rest of rudder and bow sonar) will be fitted in dry dock back up at the yard - it’s literally a shell just now and fitting out won’t finish till 2026!

RizzoTheRat

25,166 posts

192 months

Friday 2nd December 2022
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So have they stuck the sections together to get a watertight hull they can then float in to a dry dock to continue working on it? Presumably easier maneuver the bits and glue them together when not constrained by the drydock, but easiest to transfer to a dry dock now before it gets to heavy?

hidetheelephants

24,375 posts

193 months

Friday 2nd December 2022
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nebpor said:
Shar2 said:
Something I've not actually understood. Surely it's easier to install the shafts and propellers when the ship is high and dry, how do they stop the water from entering the stern glands when they're fitting the shafts? I could just be really dim though.
Confirmed by a worker, they (and rest of rudder and bow sonar) will be fitted in dry dock back up at the yard - it’s literally a shell just now and fitting out won’t finish till 2026!
Isn't the whole point of modular construction that the modules are 80+% done before the welding fairies glue them together?

nebpor

3,753 posts

235 months

Friday 2nd December 2022
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Ah maybe my "just a shell" assumption is wrong, I made that assumption based on the fact it's got 4 years of fit-out required

hidetheelephants

24,375 posts

193 months

Friday 2nd December 2022
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nebpor said:
Ah maybe my "just a shell" assumption is wrong, I made that assumption based on the fact it's got 4 years of fit-out required
IOC is pencilled in as 2028, which is very leisurely; I imagine an element of it is being a first of class they are anticipating getting all the twiddly bits to work and speak nicely to each other being quite time consuming but 6 years for that plus finishing the fit-out seems to be taking the piss.

nebpor

3,753 posts

235 months

Friday 2nd December 2022
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I’m just glad we are keeping our locals employed somehow biggrin

Voldemort

6,147 posts

278 months

Monday 5th December 2022
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In the water (another pic stolen from fb)


Collectingbrass

2,212 posts

195 months

Monday 5th December 2022
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Looks like all Airfix will need to do is print the cut out or score lines on the inside of the box!

Baron Greenback

6,986 posts

150 months

Friday 16th December 2022
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Designing a subs must be a pain.

MBBlat

1,628 posts

149 months

Friday 16th December 2022
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Baron Greenback said:
Designing a subs must be a pain.
Nope, its easy, all you have to do is squeeze everything into as small a watertight tube as possible while still alowing the crew to move around, then make the whole thing neautrally boyant and make sure it can float upright. Simples smile

skedaddle

149 posts

21 months

Sunday 1st January 2023
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Some photos from a few days ago in New Zealand.



Ovation of the Seas & Queen Elizabeth

FourWheelDrift

88,535 posts

284 months

Sunday 1st January 2023
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Baron Greenback said:


Designing a subs must be a pain.
Designed by plumbers, it's why they are so expensive.

PushedDover

5,657 posts

53 months

Thursday 5th January 2023
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MartG

20,680 posts

204 months

Thursday 5th January 2023
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PushedDover said:
Did the front fall off ? jester