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Message

re: Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore has collapsed - container ship wrecked into it

Posted on 3/26/24 at 3:15 pm to
Posted by ell_13
Member since Apr 2013
85167 posts
Posted on 3/26/24 at 3:15 pm to
quote:

Savannah River Channel is very narrow compared to that channel.
And prior to the crash, this ship had tugs helping it around. It wasn’t until it got turned around and to the wider part of the channel did they leave.
Posted by FleurDeLonestar
The Dirty HOU
Member since Mar 2011
6169 posts
Posted on 3/26/24 at 3:22 pm to
quote:

Not the time for it


It’s absolutely the time to discuss the economic impact this will have regarding the 8th busiest port tonnage wise in the US. Along with the local economy of time lost from commuters and downstream costs of this event. This is unprecedented to a degree in modern America.
Posted by ell_13
Member since Apr 2013
85167 posts
Posted on 3/26/24 at 3:23 pm to
quote:

This is unprecedented to a degree in modern America.
Posted by Mr Breeze
The Lunatic Fringe
Member since Dec 2010
5977 posts
Posted on 3/26/24 at 3:23 pm to
quote:

I don't know much about big ship wheels but wouldn't they cavitate if moved into full reverse and thus be more or less useless. I also don't know if cargo ships have controllable pitch props either.

Adding to what Jones has correctly said throughout this thread, cavitation and hydrodynamic inefficiency limits the props ability to fully reverse ship's direction in a rapid fashion. During sea trials it's an exercise called "crash astern" and for a ship that size, one to two nautical miles to come dead in the water from 10 knots would be excellent performance.

They don't have controllable pitch props which are fairly complex mechanical-hydraulic maintenance monsters. Container ships, while huge, are built for simplicity to go in one direction, forward.

Modern large cruise ships use 360 degree Azipod propulsion along with bow thrusters, far more maneuverable to avoid having to use tugs at ports of call for (when possible) docking and departure.
Posted by Seeing Grey
Member since Sep 2015
591 posts
Posted on 3/26/24 at 3:27 pm to
quote:

Unfortunately, immediately we need to put up bumpers or pylons to protect bridge supports on every span that see's ship traffic.


While we are at it, lets put some bumpers on trains to protect vehicles crossing the tracks.
Posted by CatfishJohn
Member since Jun 2020
13710 posts
Posted on 3/26/24 at 3:31 pm to
quote:

It’s absolutely the time to discuss the economic impact this will have regarding the 8th busiest port tonnage wise in the US. Along with the local economy of time lost from commuters and downstream costs of this event. This is unprecedented to a degree in modern America.



Our government voluntarily shut our economy down like 4 years ago. This port will be back open in a few months and the cargo will be redirected until then. Sucks for the traffic though, but back to my first point, remote working will fire back up!

ETA:

I'm being a bit tongue in cheek, I know there will be major local economic consequences, but I don't think the national impact will be all that bad.

This post was edited on 3/26/24 at 3:34 pm
Posted by baldona
Florida
Member since Feb 2016
20525 posts
Posted on 3/26/24 at 3:32 pm to
quote:

one to two nautical miles to come dead in the water from 10 knots would be excellent performance.


This ship wasn't going 10 knots though right? I'm assuming it was going extremely slowly as it had just pulled out and was still in the harbor?

Was the wind blowing it aggressively? The bridge span looked very wide compared to the ship 3-5 times the ships width, to the point that it should have never had an issue hitting the bridge unless it had been off course for quite some time? If it was off course for quite some time, there was likely a missed call by the pilot to abort leaving the harbor sooner?
Posted by CatfishJohn
Member since Jun 2020
13710 posts
Posted on 3/26/24 at 3:34 pm to
I thought someone in this thread said 9 knots?
Posted by LouisianaLady
Member since Mar 2009
81230 posts
Posted on 3/26/24 at 3:36 pm to
quote:

I'm being a bit tongue in cheek, I know there will be major local economic consequences, but I don't think the national impact will be all that bad.



The Covid lockdown insanity was my first thought when I read his unprecedented comment too, if that makes you feel better.
Posted by MemphisGuy
Member since Nov 2023
3482 posts
Posted on 3/26/24 at 3:38 pm to
quote:

This port will be back open in a few months


If not sooner. Whoever said 2 years or whatever was being... well... I gotta think that was just a knee-jerk reaction to something that had just happened.
Posted by JDPndahizzy
JDP
Member since Nov 2013
6448 posts
Posted on 3/26/24 at 3:42 pm to
quote:

And prior to the crash, this ship had tugs helping it around. It wasn’t until it got turned around and to the wider part of the channel did they leave.


I bet the new rule is tugs stay with the ship until it clears the bridge..
Posted by pennypacker3
Charleston
Member since Aug 2014
2742 posts
Posted on 3/26/24 at 3:43 pm to
quote:

This ship wasn't going 10 knots though right? I'm

My understanding is these ships need to be at a curtain speed to steer properly?
Posted by Mr Breeze
The Lunatic Fringe
Member since Dec 2010
5977 posts
Posted on 3/26/24 at 3:43 pm to
IIRC it's speed was near 8-9 knots approaching the bridge. The wind was negligible at less than 1 knot. Lots of good info in this thread, scattered throughout.

I can't keep up.

Posted by Obtuse1
Westside Bodymore Yo
Member since Sep 2016
25858 posts
Posted on 3/26/24 at 3:44 pm to
I just rewatched the GIF a little more closely and while I think it would have failed because of the loss of tension on the bottom chord I now think the failure occurred before that could happen. If you watch right before the upper and lower chords fail to the left of the right piling the upper chord actually goes into tension and the lower chord goes into compression (opposite of their designed states) and this shift lifts the portion of the span right of the piling up. Depending on the type of bearing used where the right portion of the truss span meets the concrete road bridge it either lifted off or stayed attached but either way excessive lateral torsional buckling in the lower chord and tensile failure in the upper chord would occur.



Posted by East Coast Band
Member since Nov 2010
62894 posts
Posted on 3/26/24 at 3:45 pm to
quote:

I bet the new rule is tugs stay with the ship until it clears the bridge..

Which bridge?
There's another one a few miles out ships must go under, then there's the Chesapeake Bay Bridge Tunnel they must navigate across before entering the Atlantic
Posted by Bama and Beer
Baldwin Co, AL
Member since Oct 2010
80962 posts
Posted on 3/26/24 at 3:45 pm to
Lots of instant cargo ship captains and pilots just appear here over night
This post was edited on 3/26/24 at 4:36 pm
Posted by au4you
Alabama
Member since Dec 2010
2539 posts
Posted on 3/26/24 at 3:47 pm to
quote:

It won’t be long before I just remove everyone from my FB. I usually just use it for my own personal photo album. The rest of the nonsense is of no concern to me….. I have seen so many post that “this sure doesn’t look like an accident to me”. It’s insanely crazy to me how many maritime experts I have on my timeline and the people I’ve read post on X. Listening to these people, this ships stop on a dime like vehicles do
Social media has rotten people’s brains, especially Twitter, with everything is a conspiracy posts.

Hell, two boomers in my office are convinced it was intentional.
Posted by MemphisGuy
Member since Nov 2023
3482 posts
Posted on 3/26/24 at 3:49 pm to
quote:

I just rewatched the GIF a little more closely and while I think it would have failed because of the loss of tension on the bottom chord I now think the failure occurred before that could happen. If you watch right before the upper and lower chords fail to the left of the right piling the upper chord actually goes into tension and the lower chord goes into compression (opposite of their designed states) and this shift lifts the portion of the span right of the piling up. Depending on the type of bearing used where the right portion of the truss span meets the concrete road bridge it either lifted off or stayed attached but either way excessive lateral torsional buckling in the lower chord and tensile failure in the upper chord would occur.



I just gotta say... I don't know what any of that means... but it sounds darn impressive.
Posted by tgrbaitn08
Member since Dec 2007
146214 posts
Posted on 3/26/24 at 3:52 pm to
quote:

This ship wasn't going 10 knots though right?


8.5-9 knots

Did you whatch the video?
Posted by BuckyCheese
Member since Jan 2015
49850 posts
Posted on 3/26/24 at 3:52 pm to
quote:

Unfortunately, immediately we need to put up bumpers or pylons to protect bridge supports on every span that see's ship traffic.


I really don't know why dolphins are not mandatory around bridge piers on waterways that see large ships.



The Mississippi River bridges owned by the railroad I worked for certainly had them for protection against wayward barges. Here's one of them with the dolphins clearly visible;
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