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Italian Liner Sinks - lights go out

Discussion in 'Fred's House of Pancakes' started by GrumpyCabbie, Jan 14, 2012.

  1. GrumpyCabbie

    GrumpyCabbie Senior Member

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    A cruise liner sank last night on the Italian coast;

    BBC News - Italy cruise ship Costa Concordia: Search for missing

    Costa Concordia: Three Dead And About 70 Missing After Cruise Ship Runs Aground Off Italy | World News | Sky News


    What concerns me a little is that the ships lights went out. There are shots of a helicopter shining its searchlight on a completely dark ship. I remember from the Titanic (official reports - not the movie) that they kept the lights on right up until the end. Even if the modern generators failed because they're flooded there must be a backup battery system or even a system of emergency lights such as those in all commercial buildings. I believe the law in the UK is that battery powered emergency lighting must maintain full brightness for at least 4 hours. Surely there must be something similar on a passenger ship?

    What would happen to those in lower cabins if the ship was suddenly plunged into darkness? How on earth would they find their way out quickly in such a situation? A scary thought. Trapped in the dark, below deck as the ship lists violently and starts to sink.

    Anyone know the legalities of this?
     
  2. qbee42

    qbee42 My other car is a boat

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  3. Trebuchet

    Trebuchet Senior Member

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    Holy Cat's I thought it was just a small cruise ship at first but it carried 4,200! Sixty nine people are still missing and two or three dead. Pity the poor off duty crew which are usually berthed in the very lowest decks!
     
  4. GrumpyCabbie

    GrumpyCabbie Senior Member

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    But that indicates emergency lighting on a large ship must operate for 18 hours. So how come this Italian ship was plunged into darkness after only a few hours? Early on the videos show bright lights on deck but later the ship was completely in darkness - other than the flashing lights of the life vests.
     
  5. airportkid

    airportkid Will Fly For Food

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    Curious - the ship capsized onto the side AWAY from the breached hull. How did that happen? Unless it got breached on both sides.

    Well, that Captain's lost his ticket. Hitting a submerged reef is inexcusable, like running out of gas in an airplane. Shoal water's been well plotted for centuries; that reef didn't get up to stretch its legs and sit down somewhere new.

    As to lighting, I would guess at some extreme degree of list the generators and electrical apparatus would start to come off their mounts, breaking restraints not designed to take stress from such extreme angles. And/or the seawater started shorting everything out - the compartments are watertight, but if flooded the components are not waterproof.

    Interesting that we still make all comparison to the most famous wreck, Titanic, even though since its demise there have been several much more lethal wrecks, including one that killed three times as many people as were lost on Titanic.
     
  6. GrumpyCabbie

    GrumpyCabbie Senior Member

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    Apparantly the ship did list one way and then suddenly shifted over to the side it's on now. Does that mean the hull is breached on both sides or did water slosh from one side to the other? It is said the captain aimed for the shore when he realised the ship was sticken - could that have caused it to capsize the way it did? Surely there are waterproof doors or compartments to stop this? What about the pumps? Ok they're not going to stop it sinking but at least delay it.

    Several more lethal wrecks? I'm sure there were and probably many many high losses of life during WW2. We all remember the Titanic because it was 'unsinkable' and the ship that sank yesterday was on Friday 13th!?!

    Apparantly the captain stayed with the Italian ship to the end, unlike the captain and crew of the Oceanos which sank off South Africa 20 years ago. It is said the captain and crew did a runner without helping the passengers! [ame="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MTS_Oceanos"]MTS Oceanos - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia[/ame]


    Realizing the fate of the ship, the crew fled in panic, neglecting to close the lower deck portholes, which is standard policy during emergency procedures. No alarm was raised. Passengers remained ignorant of the events taking place until they themselves witnessed the first signs of flooding in the lower decks. At this stage, eyewitness accounts reveal that many of the crew, including Captain Avranas, were already packed and ready to depart, seemingly unconcerned with the safety of the passengers.
     
  7. fuzzy1

    fuzzy1 Senior Member

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    All the pictures here last night were of a very brightly lit ship -- several examples here: Ship aground off Italy. It wasn't until after many hours of insomnia, long after the great majority of passengers were off, that I saw the first pictures of a darkened ship.
     
  8. GrumpyCabbie

    GrumpyCabbie Senior Member

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    The first pictures with the lights on where when it was sitting upright. Later the lights were off when it was listing badly and passengers were still be rescued. On the following you can still see the flashing lights on the life vests as the passengers are taken from the sinking ship.

     
  9. spiderman

    spiderman wretched

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    Pretty sad in these days of GPS, etc.
     
  10. qbee42

    qbee42 My other car is a boat

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    Well, it is an Italian ship. Not everyone follows the standards, and sometimes backup systems are not kept in good repair. One of the chief reasons that most ships are not US flags is that our requirements are much more stringent. Liberia is a popular place to register ships since they have low taxes and lax safety requirements.

    This is not unusual for groundings. The breached side is sitting on the bottom. As the ship fills with water it gets heavier and settles. The breached side is supported by the bottom, so the ship lists away from the breach.

    Tom
     
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  11. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    they said he was way off course, that's gonna take some 'splainin.:cool:
     
  12. hyo silver

    hyo silver Awaaaaay

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    The lifeboats don't seem to have been very useful, and it's not like it never occurred to anyone that a boat might list. Any idea what those standards are? Maybe they should deploy automatically when activated by getting wet. (OK, with allowances for rain and spray, but still...)
     
  13. amm0bob

    amm0bob Permanently Junior...

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  14. daniel

    daniel Cat Lovers Against the Bomb

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    'Nuff said. :( Choose wisely when you sail. Or fly.
     
  15. GrumpyCabbie

    GrumpyCabbie Senior Member

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    Why should an Italian ship be a problem? 50 year old stereotypes are out of place here. It's 2012 not 1962! :(
     
  16. Rokeby

    Rokeby Member

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    Hats off to Tom, qbee42, for providing good background data on this. :yo:

    Once the ship has listed to 45º or so deploying the lifeboats can be
    problematic. On the side the ship is listed, tilted towards, the lifeboats
    hand away from the ship and can be difficult to board. On the uphill
    side, as the lifeboats are lowered they will drag against the side of the
    ship and tend to dump their contents outward.

    Under SOLAS, the emergency generator is required to be located on the
    main deck or above to prevent issues with internally rising water
    levels, whether from flooding or overly enthusiastic fire fighting water.
    Most probably any issues with the emergency generator are fuel
    supply related. Possibilities include:
    - the emergency generator fuel tank wasn't kept topped up
    - there was more than one fuel tank to make up the required amount
    and the second tank was not opened
    - the fuel was not treated or changed periodically and became
    contaminated with bio-sludge and clogged the filters

    Of course, speculation on the loss of electrical power can go forever;
    shorted emergency light or bilge pump circuit... etc, etc, and etc.

    I'm afraid that this is just one more illustration that it it doesn't matter
    how good/current/expensive the physical systems are, safety has as
    much or probably more to do with the quality, experience, training (on-
    going), and commitment of the officers and crew whether its a
    passenger/cruise ship, a bulk oil tanker, or an offshore oil rig.

    Same is true ashore for busses, 18 and up wheelers...
    and lowly passenger cars for that matter.

    Be careful out there...

    FWIW, here are some non-cruise industry compiled vessel sinking data:
    Cruise Bruise - Cruise Ship Sinkings and Groundings
     
  17. Southern Dad

    Southern Dad Active Member

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    Hind sight is always 20/20. I'm sure the captain is sitting in his jail cell thinking about what he did wrong. I wonder if he'll get 99 weeks of unemployment.
     
  18. airportkid

    airportkid Will Fly For Food

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    A question for Tom (qbee42) - in Aug 2000 a 500 ft. Russian sub (Kursk) sank in 350 feet of water; all hands were lost. At the time I wondered why a rescue could not be effected by simply getting three or four ships with heavy lift equipment to drop lines to the stern of the sub, grapple it and tip the sub up on end enough to get its stern above the surface, allowing any survivors to get out. The sub was later raised so lifting it was feasible. Would that idea have worked? I assumed it an obvious thing to do but politics interfered very badly in that disaster so the crew was doomed almost no matter what was tried. Anyway, I've always wondered if a rescue by upending the sub would have worked.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_submarine_K-141_Kursk

    On this disaster, thanks by the way for explaining why the capsize went away from the breach. Makes sense.
     
  19. icarus

    icarus Senior Member

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    Remind. Ou of the "Queen of the North"? What was the captain and mate doing at the time of the accident?

    Icarus
     
  20. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    celebrating?:eek: