Tugboat capsize

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Discussion

fflyingdog

Original Poster:

621 posts

240 months

Tuesday 31st March 2015
quotequote all
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-hampshire-32

I would be buying a lottery ticket.

The Vambo

6,643 posts

142 months

Tuesday 31st March 2015
quotequote all
fflyingdog said:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-hampshire-32

I would be buying a lottery ticket.
With the number 404?

hornetrider

63,161 posts

206 months

fflyingdog

Original Poster:

621 posts

240 months

Tuesday 31st March 2015
quotequote all
Thanks for putting that right.

McWigglebum4th

32,414 posts

205 months

Tuesday 31st March 2015
quotequote all
Tugs don't just fall over when it is a bit windy


Rosscow

8,773 posts

164 months

Tuesday 31st March 2015
quotequote all
McWigglebum4th said:
Tugs don't just fall over when it is a bit windy
That's what I thought!

Otispunkmeyer

12,599 posts

156 months

Tuesday 31st March 2015
quotequote all
McWigglebum4th said:
Tugs don't just fall over when it is a bit windy
This is the BBC. Of course the wind did it. And It were global warming what caused the wind that did it.

rohrl

8,738 posts

146 months

Tuesday 31st March 2015
quotequote all
Otispunkmeyer said:
McWigglebum4th said:
Tugs don't just fall over when it is a bit windy
This is the BBC. Of course the wind did it. And It were global warming what caused the wind that did it.
The only sentence in the report which mentions the wind is this -

"The men were working on the tug Asterix at the Fawley marine terminal when it turned over in strong winds just after 20:00 BST on Monday."

That doesn't attribute the capsize to the wind. The high winds would have made the rescue operation more difficult though, possibly grounding the search and rescue helicopter.

carinaman

21,300 posts

173 months

Tuesday 31st March 2015
quotequote all
Otispunkmeyer said:
McWigglebum4th said:
Tugs don't just fall over when it is a bit windy.
This is the BBC. Of course the wind did it. And It were global warming what caused the wind that did it.
Perhaps it was one of those weather bombs?

princealbert23

2,575 posts

162 months

Tuesday 31st March 2015
quotequote all
Some genuine heroics here by all accounts

Huntsman

8,063 posts

251 months

Tuesday 31st March 2015
quotequote all
princealbert23 said:
Some genuine heroics here by all accounts
So it seems.

It was windy last night, usually the case when a tug sinks is that its pulled over by a rope, known as girting, its about a mile acorss the water from here. Well known case of girting on the Clyde a few years back.

Asterix is a little handling tug, no a big F off one.

princealbert23

2,575 posts

162 months

Wednesday 1st April 2015
quotequote all
Huntsman said:
So it seems.

It was windy last night, usually the case when a tug sinks is that its pulled over by a rope, known as girting, its about a mile acorss the water from here. Well known case of girting on the Clyde a few years back.

Asterix is a little handling tug, no a big F off one.
http://www.dailyecho.co.uk/news/12681162._Hero_of_the_night__pulled_man_from_cold_waters_after_tug_capsized/

matchmaker

8,495 posts

201 months

Wednesday 1st April 2015
quotequote all
Huntsman said:
princealbert23 said:
Some genuine heroics here by all accounts
So it seems.

It was windy last night, usually the case when a tug sinks is that its pulled over by a rope, known as girting, its about a mile acorss the water from here. Well known case of girting on the Clyde a few years back.

Asterix is a little handling tug, no a big F off one.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-glasgow-west...

BBC said:
Port operator Clydeport has been fined £650,000 over health and safety failures after three men drowned when their tugboat sank in the River Clyde.

Stephen Humphreys, 33, Eric Blackley, 57, and Robert Cameron, 65, were crew on the Flying Phantom, which capsized in thick fog on 19 December 2007.

Clydeport originally denied breaching health and safety laws but changed its plea to guilty last week.

Tugboat owner Svitzer Marine was fined £1.7m after it admitted failures.

Magog

2,652 posts

190 months

Wednesday 1st April 2015
quotequote all
Looks like the boat was this dinky little one;



rather than this one;



This is an even smaller one from the same fleet; Sometimes these things just looks wrong!


Foppo

2,344 posts

125 months

Wednesday 1st April 2015
quotequote all
Nothing wrong with this tug it all depends what type of towing it has to do.

I've had a few near misses working on Piet Smit harbour tugs back in the sixties.

Wire snapped towing a big vessel into its berth very lucky to survive standing on deck.Towing the big floating cranes was always hazardous with cross wire connections.Our tugs where single propeller and nowhere near the manoeuvrability of modern tugs.

Often depends on the skill of the tug skipper some are better than others.