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"HEMI - Powered" schreef in bericht ... Bouler added these comments in the current discussion du jour ... [snip] Here you can read what I wrote. http://www.abajournal.com/news/titan..._rivets_book_s ay s/ A little logic here, you have to know not every link is complete and sometimes broken. Because the link was to large the last symbol is on the next rule. Try again with on the end "says/". You could have known Jerry grin I'll try again but I thought my URL was OK. But, as to your writing it vs. reading it, let me respectfully refer you to your exact words, in English, of course, right under your [snip] - "here you can read what I WROTE". Did I misunderstand/misconstrue your intent here? My mistake, I must have had a black out and thought wrote was the past tense of read (sorry sir;-) OK, I tried it again, I THINK the way you suggested, to wit: http://www.abajournal.com/news/titan...vets_book_says / I have Xnews line width set right now so that the only character that wrapped is the slash. If I still have it wrong, please hold my hand, you know what an Internet newbie I am! I clicked on the link and it brought me were I had to be. See screenshot. Bouler, I looked here but cannot find a reference to you specifically. Could you please provide a closer link into the American Bar Association web site where you wrote an article on the rivets of the Titanic? I did not write it, I read it, I'm a teacher, not a technichen.;-) Please see my comment on this above and help me understand where I went wrong. I did, and and you were right and I meant read in stead of wrote, humble apollogies.;-) I commented on the rivets briefly, I shall expand from my somewhat meager knowledge of this particular aspect of the disaster. To my knowledge, the rivet issue is one of faulty metalurgy based on common practice of ship builders of the day. The problem is believed to be two-fold: steel with an inconsistent amount of carbon content making ductility variable from quite soft to extremely brittle based on original pouring of the rivets and the already present ductility variability further aggravated by some amount of annealing due to the temperature the rivets were heated to, presumeably red-hot, from some annealing down to very little. If an already brittle steel were incompletely annealed by the heating process, it is much more likely to fracture and fail under much less than it's design stresses and strains, thus in the case of the Titanic, it is believed that many rivets simply popped as the hull scraped along a submerged part of the iceberg, allowing water to seep in at an unanticipated rate through partially buckled steel hull plates. Expanding on some other engineering aspects believed relevant in the Titanic sinking, the steel of the hull plates themselves were also suspected with modern technology and investigation techniques to be substandard from both a normal yield strength and from a tendency to be too brittle, again leading to buckled and sheared off hull plates which would cause vast amounts of water to overwhelm the watertight bulkhead doors and sink the ships. Unfortunatly, this cannot be confirmed or dismissed as the hull is lying (laying?) on its starboard side. Its your first language, my thirdgrin but we both know what you mean. You have much more knowledge of iron and steel then I have, at least the used rivets in cars to if I'm not mistaken. I said used because I think its no longer allowed, correct me if I'm wrong. Yes, Bouler, I'm aware that you're gifted with two more languages than I am, save a dozen words I might be able to cobble together in Polish or German. You forget German and French, but not so good as the other three;-) And, yes, rivets were used in cars, as recently as in the 2002 Chrysler Prowler I owned a few years ago. The BIG difference was that car rivets are relatively small and generally are simple attachment devices with similar strength to a sheet metal screw. They're typically inserted with a ribbon of rivets along a tape in something like an ammo belt for a machine gun, with the rivet gun itself being either a manual tool one squeezes to get the force or an air tool, as used in early car applications. I don't know if there is an English word for, I could not find it but send you a small picture, we call then "popnagels" and use them wit a popnageltang (see other pic), do you know them in America? We are not allowed to use them anymore to fix damage on a car. But, NOT red-hot rather large rivets as were used until even the post- WWII years in sky-scaper steel girder construction and are still used in bridges, much as ships used them. It is the brittle metalurgy of the hot rivets as used on ships like Titanic which are alleged to have failed causing the sinking. I say "alleged" because it CAN be shown with some difficulty that SOME rivets are defective. It is difficult because they are severely corroded/rusted after some 80+ years in salt water. I also use the term "alleged" because I don't personally know of any nautical structural engineers or marine archeologists working with engineers that can positiviely point to the rivets, again unfortunately because that part of the hull is laying on its starboard side covering up the "problem." There are so many sorts of rivets, from small to large, maybe you can find a picture on Google. Ships is my hobby, but I never worked with ships like you did wit cars. One last comment on rivets in cars. I think you're correct that no one uses them for structural purposes anymore, probably not for a long time. But, I THINK they can still be found in non-structural applications such as attaching plastic trim on the interior or exterior of the car where there's little stress and loading except to keep the thing in place. I think thats allowed, but not to fix severe damage on the outside. Speaking of starboard, British merchant (and possibly naval) ships of the day used a peculiar form of port and starboard steering conventions so the officer on duty when the lookout reported the iceberg looming ahead is believed to have order "hard a starboard", meaning really "turn hard left". This may or may not have been correct in the first place, but worse, could have actually been counter-productive as the forward motion of the ship and the fact that the rudder is at the stern would cause the stern to move to starboard if the order were given correctly as it should which should have moved the bow and first few hundred feet of the hull away from the berg. However, inertia from a speed of around 23-24 mph (I believe it was going around 21 knots but I'm not certain of this) would cause the ship to lurch on for some distance before a turn in either direction could be affected. That, combined with unexpected effects of a full astern propulsion, again, supposedly ordered, might cause the bow 1/4 or so of the ship to actually move into the berg for quite some time. Again, AFAIK, nothing definitive can be said for these theories because of lack of physical evidence of where the rudder was positioned and what the engines were actually doing at the time of the collision but prior to the sinking. Indeed Jerry a lot of theories. Normally the rudder goes left if the ship must go to starboard. I do'nt know how this is on big ships, because with a steering wheel its technically simply to change the direction. Huh? If the rudder turn to port, i.e., left when looking down on it from above, would the water not force the stern to starboard and thus the bow to port, the intended direction? What I was talking about was the British convention which literally meant turn the RUDDER to the opposite direction from the turn command from the bridge. I said its technically possibel, I have a drill that can fo forward and backword, so why not a steering wheel. Of course this is pure hypotetic, but it must be possible. My somewhat limited understanding is that the idea was thought to be simpler to understand for officers and helmsmen to say where they wanted the stern to go. Moreover, there's some debate over whether the officer on the bridge thought that also using the engine telegraph to signal full astern might pull the bow to port faster. This is the stuff that I think is fraught with speculation and errors since I don't think any eyewitnesses can say with confidence what actually happened, are there? another link: http://www.encyclopedia-titanica.org...64/501.html?10 97630857 Maybe the link is in two parts again so take care. Now, using modern computer CAE and simulation computer technology, it is strongly believed that the hull could not possibly have withstood the bending stresses of a sinking by the bow at an angle in excess of, I believe, some 11 degrees, thus the hull can be shown to have broken i half BEFORE the ship slipped under the sea, and is confirmed by the relative positions of the bow and stern halves. So, it is my understanding that the tragedy COULD have been prevented entirely if Capt. Smith had heeded warnings of icebergs along the main shipping lanes and ignored his own instincts as well as members of White Star Lines officials on board. However, once the sequence of events sealed the Titanic's fate hours before the actual collision with the iceberg, it may STILL have been possible for Titanic to have sustained enough LESS damage to have at least stayed afloat long enough for the Carpathia [sp?] to arrive some 4 hours later, perhaps by delaying or simply not issuing the hard a starboard order combined with what my limited research suggests WAS an order for full astern power which likely exacerbated the entire scenario. Whew! Having said all of that, I must include my usual disclaimer: I am an AMATEUR historian, and a rather poor one at that, and my nautical knowledge is quite limited beyond simple strenght of materials engineering as I have outlined above. I have not personally done a deep dive (no pun intended!) research job on this, but simply evaluated available facts from old Encylopedia Brittannica and similar publications, a minor bit of Googling, but mainly public TV, Discovery Channel, and The History Channel episodes that more or less have fully explored the subject. The trouble with my kind of ersatz "research" is that I must try to separate truth from drama on made-for-television shows where the true intent is to sell air time, however, what I see on TV especially comparing traditional views with those of the several successful dives on the wreak seem to indicate the causes of the sinking to be multiple. In the end, though, does it really matter? I mean, the ship DID sink, albeit NOT the way it is ludicrously portrayed in the movie "Raise the Titanic!" which relies on the incorrect notion (of the time) that the hull was intact, but simply filled with water. Again, Bouler, I bow to your superior "knowledge of the sea" on all of this and would still love to read your full account, so please get me closer if you can. Thank you, and I know return control of your TV set to you! Lol I never heard that sayïng;-) Wow, my English is not that bad, but when it comes to technical terms I have to use my dictionnary. That was a long reply Jerry and I understand just like you there were a lot of reasons to question if there were made mistakes. Most experts think there was a lot wrong from the time the ship was build. Please excuse me if I (again) insulted you, your intelligence, or your English, Bouler, that was hardly my intent. My reply was rather lengthy because I wanted to possibly stimulate some discussion by commenting (from memory) pretty much the extent of what I know about the technical side of the construction of Titanic and its sinking, and NOT to obliquely lecture you or make fun of your English. You've never insulted me, but your work, engineering was very technical so you use them easily. My schoolenglish is good enough for a chat but when it comes to technical stuff I need my dictionary. Again, since I am obviously missing some things here in your comments, please guide me to correcting my reading or perception errors. Thank you. Its simple Jerry, I simply am not familiar with technical words in English. But I understood the whole interesting story and never had the need to correct you. -- Greetings Bouler (The Netherlands) |
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