Costa Concordia
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Re: Costa Concordia
Thought it was an American Chris to use as a hotel or is this another one
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Re: Costa Concordia
Clive Palmer - Australian billionaire is building Titanic II.
Lou Rocke
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Re: Costa Concordia
----paying for it maybe, don't think he'll be doing much building. It's unimaginable having so much money you don't know what to do with it.
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Re: Costa Concordia
I heard they used 65,000 tonnes of pressure to right her. Previously the biggest amount for a job like this was 2,000.
What a fantastic piece of engineering

What a fantastic piece of engineering


Sir Hugo Reginald Von Bartesby - "Burble and Squeak"
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Re: Costa Concordia
I heard that they used 65,000 tonnes of pressure to right her. The highest previous to this was 2,000 tonnes to do a similar job. What a fantastic piece of salvage engineering



Sir Hugo Reginald Von Bartesby - "Burble and Squeak"
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Re: Costa Concordia
Whoops, didn't mean to do that 

Sir Hugo Reginald Von Bartesby - "Burble and Squeak"
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Re: Costa Concordia
Too much pressure 

Cheers Alex
all thoughts are given in good faith but..." You pays your money and takes your choice"

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all thoughts are given in good faith but..." You pays your money and takes your choice"
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Re: Costa Concordia
ice ice baby 

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Re: Costa Concordia
It can't be pressure, tension maybe?
Serial Morris Minor Owner and Old Vehicle Nutter
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Re: Costa Concordia
Heard the head of the operation on radio 5...that's the word he used, don't understand myself but it sounds impressive



Sir Hugo Reginald Von Bartesby - "Burble and Squeak"
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Re: Costa Concordia
Pressure needs an area to act on and should have an "area" in the units, e.g. Pounds per Square Inch
Its one of those mis-used terms
Its one of those mis-used terms
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Re: Costa Concordia
I think it'd be force, a bit like density pressure is the same regardless of the area you're measuring it from but the total force would change.Matt wrote:Pressure needs an area to act on and should have an "area" in the units, e.g. Pounds per Square Inch
Its one of those mis-used terms
so the total force could be 65,000 tons but the total pressure could be 65,000 tons per square inch or 0.065tons(65kg) of pressure over 1,000,000 inches
I think that's right ???
Will



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Re: Costa Concordia
No, lbs is unit of mass - which takes accelleration in to account (normally due to gravity)
To be strictly correct they should have used Neutons as a unit. (1kg is approx 10N)
To be strictly correct they should have used Neutons as a unit. (1kg is approx 10N)
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Re: Costa Concordia
German fleet were raised by being sealed and pumped full of air, I think?
Plus they were upright.
Not so. They turned several of them over underwater using lots of hand winches on floating barges before lifting them to the surface. There is a fascinating book about how it was done about http://www.amazon.co.uk/Coxs-Navy-Salva ... 1848845529 - IMHO well worth nine quid.
The safety record for the times was quite impressive too - IIRC they only lost two men out of thousands working on raising the ships, and one of them was when a land based derrick crane collapsed due to what was mostly a manufacturing fault.