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VERY technical question, not for the squeamish ..........
On Apr 6, 9:00*am, "Don White" wrote:
wrote in message ... On Apr 6, 4:59 am, "Calif Bill" wrote: "Don White" wrote in message .. . "Calif Bill" wrote in message om... "Don White" wrote in message . .. "Richard Casady" wrote in message ... On Fri, 3 Apr 2009 19:37:33 -0600, "SteveB" wrote: What's the difference between a boat and a ship? Mostly size. Traditionally boats are carried on the deck of a ship, or at least are small enough to do so. 100 feet is a boat: 200+ is a ship. These semisubmersibles that can carry a full sized ship, the Cole comes to mind, blur the original distinction. Also traditionally, the crews of US subs call their ships " boats ".The fact that the Electric Boat Company built so many subs may have something to do with it, I don't really know. Casady Here'a one of the 'lemon' subs we bought from the British getting a free ride again. After it's fire off the coast of Britain, it was carried to Halifax a few years ago. Now it has hitched a $2 + million ride from Halifax to the west coast. http://thechronicleherald.ca/Metro/1114504.html Maybe if your schools were better and the people could read, you would be able to fix boats in the "Maritime Provinces". Shows how much you know Kalif Swill..... er Bill. We have a first rate shipyard here but for political reasons the contract to maintain our subs was given to a west coast shipyard. The local company has a lawsuit pending. http://www.cbc.ca/canada/novascotia/...ving-subs.html Maybe it was educational reasons. Or the Crown Corp. employees are a hindrance.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Damned public servants..... ************************************************** ****** Thay could teach you a thing or two about an 'honest days work'!- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Are you going to lie to everyone here and tell them that you have "facts" about my work? Might as well, you've proven to everyone here that you're a liar when it comes to those "facts". |
VERY technical question, not for the squeamish ..........
On Apr 6, 10:08*am, "Don White" wrote:
"Don White" wrote in message ... *Thay* could teach you a thing or two about an 'honest days work'! *better make that ... *they* Amazing!!! The first person to jump on someone for misspelling something has to correct his own blather! |
VERY technical question, not for the squeamish ..........
"Don White" wrote in message ... wrote in message ... On Apr 6, 4:59 am, "Calif Bill" wrote: "Don White" wrote in message ... "Calif Bill" wrote in message om... "Don White" wrote in message . .. "Richard Casady" wrote in message ... On Fri, 3 Apr 2009 19:37:33 -0600, "SteveB" wrote: What's the difference between a boat and a ship? Mostly size. Traditionally boats are carried on the deck of a ship, or at least are small enough to do so. 100 feet is a boat: 200+ is a ship. These semisubmersibles that can carry a full sized ship, the Cole comes to mind, blur the original distinction. Also traditionally, the crews of US subs call their ships " boats ".The fact that the Electric Boat Company built so many subs may have something to do with it, I don't really know. Casady Here'a one of the 'lemon' subs we bought from the British getting a free ride again. After it's fire off the coast of Britain, it was carried to Halifax a few years ago. Now it has hitched a $2 + million ride from Halifax to the west coast. http://thechronicleherald.ca/Metro/1114504.html Maybe if your schools were better and the people could read, you would be able to fix boats in the "Maritime Provinces". Shows how much you know Kalif Swill..... er Bill. We have a first rate shipyard here but for political reasons the contract to maintain our subs was given to a west coast shipyard. The local company has a lawsuit pending. http://www.cbc.ca/canada/novascotia/...ving-subs.html Maybe it was educational reasons. Or the Crown Corp. employees are a hindrance.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Damned public servants..... ************************************************** ****** Thay could teach you a thing or two about an 'honest days work'! Yes they could. All serve as an example. Some good, some bad. And from what I see from most government offices, it is the latter example. |
VERY technical question, not for the squeamish ..........
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