Accidents

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Accidents

Postby Hogans_Alley » Sun Jun 01, 2003 8:41 pm

>:( >:( >:( >:( >:(

Contrary to what the Chinese government said,  I believe that the cause of the accident aboard a Chinese sub which killed seventy people was chlorine gas resulting from sea water getting into their batteries. They claimed it was due to an engine explosion. The sub was towed back to port intact.

I also believe that the cause of the boiler explosion aboard the cruise ship SS Norway in which six crewmembers were killed and many others injured was lack of or improper boiler feed water treatment which caused "embrittlement".

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Re: Accidents

Postby Oso » Sun Jun 01, 2003 10:15 pm

You a snipe?
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Re: Accidents

Postby Blade » Mon Jun 02, 2003 12:02 am

Sure seems like it to me. By the way he's describing the boiler rooms and the sub I'd say he's either military or ex-military.
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Re: Accidents

Postby Oso » Mon Jun 02, 2003 11:56 am

Merchant maybe - or civilian power plants.


Which is it? Hmmm

A mystery.  ;)
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Re: Accidents

Postby ATI_7500 » Mon Jun 02, 2003 12:28 pm

what does he want to point out?
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Re: Accidents

Postby Iroquois » Mon Jun 02, 2003 3:20 pm

I also believe that the cause of the boiler explosion aboard the cruise ship SS Norway in which six crewmembers were killed and many others injured was lack of or improper boiler feed water treatment which caused "embrittlement".


I saw the SS Norway back in March docked at the Port of Miami. It's diesel/electric powered like most modern cruise liners and therefore does not have boilers. It's a really nice ship though, too bad something like that had to happen.

Also, being a Nuclear Super Power, I would think that China would use nuclear subs, so you're probably right Hogans_Alley.
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Re: Accidents

Postby Oso » Mon Jun 02, 2003 10:45 pm

Most if not all of China's subs are WWII vintage diesel or Russian surplus diesel. I think they just recently built a couple of their own (diesel). If they have any nukes at all I would be surprised.

As some of you know - on a diesel sub - the diesel charges the batteries - the batteries ( big and plenty) drive the ship.

Even a diesel cruise ship will have an extensive auxilliary steam system for heating, galley, steam catapult for skeet on the fantail, etc.
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Re: Accidents

Postby Hogans_Alley » Mon Jun 02, 2003 11:02 pm

:) :) :) :) :) :)

I'm an ex- "bubble head" and been a "bull snipe" on the skimmers (USN). I always make my point (if I may) when people get killed because of stupid mistakes. I was aboard subs while snooping on the Chinese. Although they do have some nukes, most are aged diesel electrics. When you combine battery electrolyte (H2SO4) and sea water (NaCl), it results in a vigorus reaction generating chlorine gas. It does not take long for the gas to circulate throughout the ship via the ventilation system. Unless the vessel sinks, no onboard explosion (short of a nuke weapon) can kill the entire crew immediately because of submarine compartmentalization.  

The SS Norway was the ex-SS France. She has four boilers and four screws but they shut down two of  boilers and removed two screws to conserve fuel. I went on a Carribean cruise on the Norway once. Everything was glitter above decks - spit and polish, all the pomp and circumstance. But try visiting the machinery rooms, especially the engine house. They skimp on maintenance and training which often result in tragic accidents. With the exception of the deck officers and heads of departments, most crew members were hired from the third world countries. I've heard of instances whereby during an emergency, the crew were first on the life raft. Bon Voyage

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Re: Accidents

Postby Oso » Tue Jun 03, 2003 12:34 am

Machinist Mate here.
Last edited by Oso on Tue Jun 03, 2003 1:18 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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