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The Best Do Battleships Leak So Much They Have To Have Video Leaks & Best Pics #fyp

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Could be ballast, ships like container ships need to be extremely buoyant.so buoyant in fact that when they are empty they need to weigh themselves down with water in large tanks to keep themselves from floating very high, on a very small part of their hull, and becoming unstable and prone to capsizing.

It also refers to the ability to intentionally flood certain areas of the hull for damage control purposes, or to increase stability, which is particularly important in combat vessels, which often face the possibility of serious. They killed over 2,400 people Eighteen ships were also damaged or sunk, including the u.s.s Arizona, which history says carried nearly 1.5 million gallons of fuel That fuel continues to leak into the waters of pearl harbor to this day, and no one wants to clean it up because the ship is a war grave. How did they feel about surviving when so many were lost

Most of the sailors and marines who survived the sinking were already on duty when the bomb hit at 8:06 a.m Ships leak, even new ones (probably especially brand new ones, as they haven’t chased down all the things that haven’t been done up enough or packed well enough) In this episode we're answering a frequently asked question, does the ship leak?to get your own piece of teak and to support that project Steam powered ships were much faster and more reliable as sail powered ships because they didn’t need the wind Ships could also be built bigger and heavier because steam was more powerful It was during the civil war that both the confederate and the union navies began to develop metal hulls.

In prehistoric times, ships had legs and walked like centipedes, but they sweated so much it started to fill up those ancient plains and valleys, creating the first oceans

You can see that in ancient ships that adapted their legs to paddle themselves forward Thankfully, oceans were cooler than land, so ships stopped sweating so much. Also, a minor leak isn't really an issue Big boats take on water in many ways, from water splashing in, to rain, to minor leaks on wooden boats, or a rivet being slightly loose on a bigger boat, or whatever A modern warship or cruise liner wouldn't have that issue so much, but even if they took a bit of damage and had a minor leak, they could deal with it with pumps An engineer told me that the ocean is an infinite heat sink

So ships just pump the water they sit in as a one pass cooling loop Reply reply [deleted] • reply reply more replies elaintahra • How were ships made waterproof during the age of sail I suppose they didn't have their fancy glass fibres or high quality water resistant paint so how did they seal their boats New comments cannot be posted and votes cannot be cast. Basically hundreds of sunken ships from ww2 lay at the bottom of various bodies of water with intact hulls full of fuel oil

Those hulls are now so decayed they're starting to leak oil and become serious environmental hazards

But it's to expensive to recover the fuel so the problem persists They do have a limit to what they can handle Many ships have been sunken in bad weather Something wasn't sealed shut and too much water made its way into the ship or the weather was so bad it broke open covers to then exposed cargo holds and flood the ship that way. The battleship arizona was fueled to its maximum level on december 6, 1941, with 1.5 million gallons of oil Even though the ship was broken in two by the explosion, many of its fuel tanks survived the dec 7th attack, estimated to be around 500,000 gallons

Over the past eighty years, approximately 50,000 to 65,000 gallons of oil have leaked into pearl harbor bay Thus, the oil leak at the uss. Discover the fascinating techniques that prevented wooden ships from leaking throughout history Explore the craftsmanship and materials that ensured these vessels remained seaworthy for long journeys Learn how innovation and design played crucial roles in maintaining the integrity of wooden ships on the open water. The problem is that they did, it's why we just don't have many older ships (more on this)

There's a few factors which effect this, one is just the water and moisture itself, which meant that ships would have to be taken into dry dock and the moisture removed, parts of the ship may have to be replaced, and the ship given time to dry properly and efficiently

This would ideally be done pretty. Why did later us battleships (such as the iowa class) still have wooden planking on the top decks Somewhat tangentially related, fluids do accumulate at the bottomed of large ships Referred to as bilge, they consist of not just (sea) water but also oil and various wastes that leak out of random places They do get pumped out/removed on a regular basis and unfortunately a significant source of pollution. Navy ships, however, have been attracting the exact opposite kind of attention

With rust streaks and weathered waterlines on display, citizens and retired naval personnel. Why do some ships have a small hole in the hull Not all ships have a small a hole constantly releasing water, but if there is it could be any one of a number of things from a small cooling system or similar constantly having seawater pumped through it to simply draining water from a compartment that has a water ingress sorce.

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