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#2
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![]() "Me" schreef in bericht ... What did the Bounty in the storm? She had time enough to find a safer place. I don't understand at all. -- Greetings Bouler (The Netherlands) |
#3
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Hi Bouler,
I have been wondering the same thing. These are my thoughts. We know that the storm was traveling south to north out at sea and was forecast to turn west and pass over Philadelphia. We know that the storm was very wide. We know that Bounty's stated route was to leave Connecticut and head east, then south, to avoid the storm. We know that Bounty sank only 90 miles off the coast of North Carolina. She apparently did not head east to avoid the storm. We know that Bounty was due in Florida for an event. My theory is that the captain decided he could race south, close to the coast, and get past the storm before it turned west, despite its enormous size. He almost succeeded but his plan had no margin of safety; if something went wrong, the ship was in trouble. Something did go wrong resulting in failure of the propulsion engine and the engine-generator powering the pumps. I suspect it was one problem that caused both to fail because two simultaneous failures are less likely than one. That's what I think. Bouler, you and the rest of the group are welcome critique this theory. I like to go down to the Cape Cod Canal, walk along the service road for a few miles photographing anything of interest, sea gulls, power boats, sail boats, tugs, barges, tall ships. The Bounty was the first tall ship I ever saw go through, back in 2002; she surprised the heck out of me when I turned and saw her approaching, sails raised, passing under the Sagamore Bridge. Bob "Bouler" wrote in message .. . "Me" schreef in bericht ... What did the Bounty in the storm? She had time enough to find a safer place. I don't understand at all. -- Greetings Bouler (The Netherlands) |
#4
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![]() "Bob_R" schreef in bericht ... Hi Bouler, I have been wondering the same thing. These are my thoughts. We know that the storm was traveling south to north out at sea and was forecast to turn west and pass over Philadelphia. We know that the storm was very wide. We know that Bounty's stated route was to leave Connecticut and head east, then south, to avoid the storm. We know that Bounty sank only 90 miles off the coast of North Carolina. She apparently did not head east to avoid the storm. We know that Bounty was due in Florida for an event. My theory is that the captain decided he could race south, close to the coast, and get past the storm before it turned west, despite its enormous size. He almost succeeded but his plan had no margin of safety; if something went wrong, the ship was in trouble. Something did go wrong resulting in failure of the propulsion engine and the engine-generator powering the pumps. I suspect it was one problem that caused both to fail because two simultaneous failures are less likely than one. That's what I think. Bouler, you and the rest of the group are welcome critique this theory. I like to go down to the Cape Cod Canal, walk along the service road for a few miles photographing anything of interest, sea gulls, power boats, sail boats, tugs, barges, tall ships. The Bounty was the first tall ship I ever saw go through, back in 2002; she surprised the heck out of me when I turned and saw her approaching, sails raised, passing under the Sagamore Bridge. Bob Thanks Bob for your explanation, it coud have been so. Still I think the captain took too much risk, maybe we'll here the real story from one of the survivers, I do'nt know if the captain is one of them. -- Greetings Bouler (The Netherlands) |
#5
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May she rest in peace.On Tue, 30 Oct 2012 20:41:17 -0400, Me
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