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Boat trouble!
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Boat trouble!
It happens from time to time. Several boats have been destroyed like
that. My father inlaw's 43 foot Hans Christian was almost dropped like that. Fortunately, the sling slipped only a small amount. I noticed the camera man was quite startled. He must have been the owner watching his boat getting trashed. Smart boatyards strap the top of the sling to prevent this type of thing from happening. Simmo wrote: Can anyone suggest where this guy went wrong! http://www.officeclips.com/clips/barge1.mpg |
Boat trouble!
From: "Simmo" Organization: ntl Cablemodem News Service Reply-To: "Simmo" Newsgroups: rec.boats.paddle.touring Date: Tue, 20 Jan 2004 21:36:40 -0000 Subject: Boat trouble! Can anyone suggest where this guy went wrong! http://www.officeclips.com/clips/barge1.mpg There should have been some kind of spanner at the top of the rig to keep the two slings separated. That would have helped but would not have guaranteed success. The slings should have been farther apart too. It looks like the balance of the weight of the boat was outside of the slings which could cause it to slip out even if the slings were rigged with a spanner. My hunch is that this barge was a bit larger than the crane operator was used to and this is how he normally rigs boats that are smaller where the balance of the boats weight is between the slings. The barge's complete lack of rocker also contributed to the problem. Had the boat had some rocker to the hull it would have been less likely that the stap would have slipped as it would have had to overcome the weight of the boat. The video is cut off too early to tell what the final outcome was but it looks like it could have gone down as a "close call" rather than a disaster. I hope that's that case as I'm sure it was the owner's first time putting it in. Why else would one video tape such an event? Let's hope the crane operator learned something too. DV |
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