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Destroyer crash
I am hearing that the destroyer was passing in front of the freighter.
The Fitz was the give way vessel and the freighter was the stand on vessel. The ACX was supposed to maintain course and speed. The story is it turned right full rudder, and that is what put them on a collision course. They hit 10 minutes later. If the ACX maintains course and speed, it passes astern of the destroyer. ACX was trying to help but following the rules of the road is what they were supposed to be doing |
Destroyer crash
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Destroyer crash
On Wed, 28 Jun 2017 00:17:55 -0400, wrote:
On Tue, 27 Jun 2017 22:39:39 -0500, Wayne.B wrote: On Tue, 27 Jun 2017 13:27:51 -0400, wrote: I am hearing that the destroyer was passing in front of the freighter. The Fitz was the give way vessel and the freighter was the stand on vessel. The ACX was supposed to maintain course and speed. The story is it turned right full rudder, and that is what put them on a collision course. They hit 10 minutes later. If the ACX maintains course and speed, it passes astern of the destroyer. ACX was trying to help but following the rules of the road is what they were supposed to be doing === For the "give way" vessel to attempt passing in front strikes me as being very questionable. It fails to comprehend the various Murphy's Law possibilities and of course that's exactly what happened. At the very least the destroyer should have communicated and negotiated their intentions well in advance of the actual crossing situation to prevent any possible confusion. We hear commercial ships negotiate meeting and crossing situations all the time on VHF radio. We've even participated in a few ourselves where there was ambiguity. I'm always impressed by the high degree of professionalism that we've encountered even though much smaller than the big guys. I will not be surprised if the destroyer crew assumed the freighter was going to stay on course and they thought they would just cut through,being gone when the freighter got there. Looking at the track, if they took 10 minutes to hit after changing course 90 degrees (looking at the track) they would have missed by a couple miles. I agree they should have negotiated the pass but military guys can get arrogant some times. I am sure we will be hearing more about it. === The international rules of the road (COLREGS) make no exceptions for either military vessels or arrogance. The destroyer clearly shares the largest portion of the blame in my opinion regardless of any action or inaction on the part of the freighter. This stuff just isn't supposed to happen and navy heads will roll starting with the CO. |
Destroyer crash
On 6/27/2017 11:39 PM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Tue, 27 Jun 2017 13:27:51 -0400, wrote: I am hearing that the destroyer was passing in front of the freighter. The Fitz was the give way vessel and the freighter was the stand on vessel. The ACX was supposed to maintain course and speed. The story is it turned right full rudder, and that is what put them on a collision course. They hit 10 minutes later. If the ACX maintains course and speed, it passes astern of the destroyer. ACX was trying to help but following the rules of the road is what they were supposed to be doing === For the "give way" vessel to attempt passing in front strikes me as being very questionable. It fails to comprehend the various Murphy's Law possibilities and of course that's exactly what happened. At the very least the destroyer should have communicated and negotiated their intentions well in advance of the actual crossing situation to prevent any possible confusion. We hear commercial ships negotiate meeting and crossing situations all the time on VHF radio. We've even participated in a few ourselves where there was ambiguity. I'm always impressed by the high degree of professionalism that we've encountered even though much smaller than the big guys. I don't follow Greg's assertion that the freighter, as the stand on vessel, would pass astern of the destroyer. The destroyer in this situation should have passed astern of the freighter. As the "give way" vessel, it was up to the destroyer to either slow down, stop, turn to starboard (to pass astern of the freighter) or take whatever evasive action required to avoid a collision. IMO, the destroyer was at fault here. --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. http://www.avg.com |
Destroyer crash
On 6/28/2017 1:49 AM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Wed, 28 Jun 2017 00:17:55 -0400, wrote: On Tue, 27 Jun 2017 22:39:39 -0500, Wayne.B wrote: On Tue, 27 Jun 2017 13:27:51 -0400, wrote: I am hearing that the destroyer was passing in front of the freighter. The Fitz was the give way vessel and the freighter was the stand on vessel. The ACX was supposed to maintain course and speed. The story is it turned right full rudder, and that is what put them on a collision course. They hit 10 minutes later. If the ACX maintains course and speed, it passes astern of the destroyer. ACX was trying to help but following the rules of the road is what they were supposed to be doing === For the "give way" vessel to attempt passing in front strikes me as being very questionable. It fails to comprehend the various Murphy's Law possibilities and of course that's exactly what happened. At the very least the destroyer should have communicated and negotiated their intentions well in advance of the actual crossing situation to prevent any possible confusion. We hear commercial ships negotiate meeting and crossing situations all the time on VHF radio. We've even participated in a few ourselves where there was ambiguity. I'm always impressed by the high degree of professionalism that we've encountered even though much smaller than the big guys. I will not be surprised if the destroyer crew assumed the freighter was going to stay on course and they thought they would just cut through,being gone when the freighter got there. Looking at the track, if they took 10 minutes to hit after changing course 90 degrees (looking at the track) they would have missed by a couple miles. I agree they should have negotiated the pass but military guys can get arrogant some times. I am sure we will be hearing more about it. === The international rules of the road (COLREGS) make no exceptions for either military vessels or arrogance. The destroyer clearly shares the largest portion of the blame in my opinion regardless of any action or inaction on the part of the freighter. This stuff just isn't supposed to happen and navy heads will roll starting with the CO. I agree. --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. http://www.avg.com |
Destroyer crash
On Wed, 28 Jun 2017 00:49:39 -0500, Wayne.B
wrote: On Wed, 28 Jun 2017 00:17:55 -0400, wrote: I will not be surprised if the destroyer crew assumed the freighter was going to stay on course and they thought they would just cut through,being gone when the freighter got there. Looking at the track, if they took 10 minutes to hit after changing course 90 degrees (looking at the track) they would have missed by a couple miles. I agree they should have negotiated the pass but military guys can get arrogant some times. I am sure we will be hearing more about it. === The international rules of the road (COLREGS) make no exceptions for either military vessels or arrogance. The destroyer clearly shares the largest portion of the blame in my opinion regardless of any action or inaction on the part of the freighter. This stuff just isn't supposed to happen and navy heads will roll starting with the CO. I am sure the CO is going to be seeking other opportunities outside the Navy but if it is true that the freighter was the stand on vessel and he did not "maintain course and speed" the CO will stay out of jail. I do see the same thing on the water around here all the time but it is usually because the stand on "captain" thinks he has the right of way with no responsibility to do anything predictable. Fortunately they usually manage to pass without swapping paint but not always. |
Destroyer crash
On Wed, 28 Jun 2017 06:57:55 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: On 6/27/2017 11:39 PM, Wayne.B wrote: On Tue, 27 Jun 2017 13:27:51 -0400, wrote: I am hearing that the destroyer was passing in front of the freighter. The Fitz was the give way vessel and the freighter was the stand on vessel. The ACX was supposed to maintain course and speed. The story is it turned right full rudder, and that is what put them on a collision course. They hit 10 minutes later. If the ACX maintains course and speed, it passes astern of the destroyer. ACX was trying to help but following the rules of the road is what they were supposed to be doing === For the "give way" vessel to attempt passing in front strikes me as being very questionable. It fails to comprehend the various Murphy's Law possibilities and of course that's exactly what happened. At the very least the destroyer should have communicated and negotiated their intentions well in advance of the actual crossing situation to prevent any possible confusion. We hear commercial ships negotiate meeting and crossing situations all the time on VHF radio. We've even participated in a few ourselves where there was ambiguity. I'm always impressed by the high degree of professionalism that we've encountered even though much smaller than the big guys. I don't follow Greg's assertion that the freighter, as the stand on vessel, would pass astern of the destroyer. The destroyer in this situation should have passed astern of the freighter. As the "give way" vessel, it was up to the destroyer to either slow down, stop, turn to starboard (to pass astern of the freighter) or take whatever evasive action required to avoid a collision. IMO, the destroyer was at fault here. It appears that the ACX was pretty far away from the destroyer and passing in front was not an unreasonable maneuver. Are you saying that if you see a vessel approaching from your starboard side you will stop and wait, no matter how far away it is? I think that the OD made the determination that if the freighter maintained course and speed, he had plenty of time to be gone when the freighter got there. As it was the freighter turned 90 degrees and it took 10 minutes to hit the destroyer on the starboard side. That makes it sound like he would have been a couple miles behind the destroyer if he stayed on course. The open question is why the destroyer did not detect the course change and take evasive maneuvers. I still have not seen the movements of the destroyer or what it's base course was when this all started. My only thought about "arrogance" is these destroyer guys think they are race car drivers and think freighter captains are truck drivers. |
Destroyer crash
On Wednesday, 28 June 2017 12:01:06 UTC-3, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Jun 2017 06:57:55 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 6/27/2017 11:39 PM, Wayne.B wrote: On Tue, 27 Jun 2017 13:27:51 -0400, wrote: I am hearing that the destroyer was passing in front of the freighter. The Fitz was the give way vessel and the freighter was the stand on vessel. The ACX was supposed to maintain course and speed. The story is it turned right full rudder, and that is what put them on a collision course. They hit 10 minutes later. If the ACX maintains course and speed, it passes astern of the destroyer. ACX was trying to help but following the rules of the road is what they were supposed to be doing === For the "give way" vessel to attempt passing in front strikes me as being very questionable. It fails to comprehend the various Murphy's Law possibilities and of course that's exactly what happened. At the very least the destroyer should have communicated and negotiated their intentions well in advance of the actual crossing situation to prevent any possible confusion. We hear commercial ships negotiate meeting and crossing situations all the time on VHF radio. We've even participated in a few ourselves where there was ambiguity. I'm always impressed by the high degree of professionalism that we've encountered even though much smaller than the big guys. I don't follow Greg's assertion that the freighter, as the stand on vessel, would pass astern of the destroyer. The destroyer in this situation should have passed astern of the freighter. As the "give way" vessel, it was up to the destroyer to either slow down, stop, turn to starboard (to pass astern of the freighter) or take whatever evasive action required to avoid a collision. IMO, the destroyer was at fault here. It appears that the ACX was pretty far away from the destroyer and passing in front was not an unreasonable maneuver. Are you saying that if you see a vessel approaching from your starboard side you will stop and wait, no matter how far away it is? I think that the OD made the determination that if the freighter maintained course and speed, he had plenty of time to be gone when the freighter got there. As it was the freighter turned 90 degrees and it took 10 minutes to hit the destroyer on the starboard side. That makes it sound like he would have been a couple miles behind the destroyer if he stayed on course. The open question is why the destroyer did not detect the course change and take evasive maneuvers. I still have not seen the movements of the destroyer or what it's base course was when this all started. My only thought about "arrogance" is these destroyer guys think they are race car drivers and think freighter captains are truck drivers. In one of our boating classes we talkes about a reliable way to judge whether a boat approaching would be directly in your path or if it wouls pass ahead or astern of you. You line up something on your boat with the other vessel. If he stays in this line of sight, you will collide, if he moves ahead of the point...he'll pass across your bow and if he falls behind the reference point...he'll pass behind you. This all assumes you keep the same speed and course. |
Destroyer crash
On Wed, 28 Jun 2017 09:03:46 -0700 (PDT), True North wrote:
On Wednesday, 28 June 2017 12:01:06 UTC-3, wrote: On Wed, 28 Jun 2017 06:57:55 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 6/27/2017 11:39 PM, Wayne.B wrote: On Tue, 27 Jun 2017 13:27:51 -0400, wrote: I am hearing that the destroyer was passing in front of the freighter. The Fitz was the give way vessel and the freighter was the stand on vessel. The ACX was supposed to maintain course and speed. The story is it turned right full rudder, and that is what put them on a collision course. They hit 10 minutes later. If the ACX maintains course and speed, it passes astern of the destroyer. ACX was trying to help but following the rules of the road is what they were supposed to be doing === For the "give way" vessel to attempt passing in front strikes me as being very questionable. It fails to comprehend the various Murphy's Law possibilities and of course that's exactly what happened. At the very least the destroyer should have communicated and negotiated their intentions well in advance of the actual crossing situation to prevent any possible confusion. We hear commercial ships negotiate meeting and crossing situations all the time on VHF radio. We've even participated in a few ourselves where there was ambiguity. I'm always impressed by the high degree of professionalism that we've encountered even though much smaller than the big guys. I don't follow Greg's assertion that the freighter, as the stand on vessel, would pass astern of the destroyer. The destroyer in this situation should have passed astern of the freighter. As the "give way" vessel, it was up to the destroyer to either slow down, stop, turn to starboard (to pass astern of the freighter) or take whatever evasive action required to avoid a collision. IMO, the destroyer was at fault here. It appears that the ACX was pretty far away from the destroyer and passing in front was not an unreasonable maneuver. Are you saying that if you see a vessel approaching from your starboard side you will stop and wait, no matter how far away it is? I think that the OD made the determination that if the freighter maintained course and speed, he had plenty of time to be gone when the freighter got there. As it was the freighter turned 90 degrees and it took 10 minutes to hit the destroyer on the starboard side. That makes it sound like he would have been a couple miles behind the destroyer if he stayed on course. The open question is why the destroyer did not detect the course change and take evasive maneuvers. I still have not seen the movements of the destroyer or what it's base course was when this all started. My only thought about "arrogance" is these destroyer guys think they are race car drivers and think freighter captains are truck drivers. In one of our boating classes we talkes about a reliable way to judge whether a boat approaching would be directly in your path or if it wouls pass ahead or astern of you. You line up something on your boat with the other vessel. If he stays in this line of sight, you will collide, if he moves ahead of the point...he'll pass across your bow and if he falls behind the reference point...he'll pass behind you. This all assumes you keep the same speed and course. 'talkes', 'wouls' ??? Down here we refer to that phenomenon as 'constant bearing, decreasing range (CBDR)'. You must have missed this: On Sun, 25 Jun 2017 09:21:03 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote: Those are figurative comments, Timmy, not literal comments. Besides, shouldn't you be at church, helping the other elders poison the minds of the younger generations with religious bull****? All that religious bull**** you guys peddle and aim at kids ought to be labeled for what it is...child abuse. I can't wait to see Donnie's, "I whole heartedly agree with this post!" Lack of principle, Donnie, or just too cowardly to stick up for your beliefs? |
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