Faulty By Design?: When Ships' Plans Fail

Ойын-сауық

Some ship design failures can stem from simple mathematical errors - but others are broader and more complex. British battlecruisers like HMS Invincible and roll-on-roll-off (Ro-ro) ferries like MV Estonia don't have very much in common, but the whole success of their function hinges on critical design Achilles' heels. In the case of the battlecruiser a lessened armour scheme and, for the ferries, a whopping great hole through which to load cars. When the designs worked, they worked well; but when small failures were introduced or the ships were pushed beyond their capabilities then things could get fatal. Featuring stories of the battleship HMS Dreadnought, battlecruisers HMS Invincible, HMS Indefatigable, HMS Queen Mary and SMS Seydlitz and the ferries MV Princess Victoria, MV Estonia and MV Herald of Free Enterprise.
Oceanliner Designs explores the design, construction, engineering and operation of history’s greatest vessels- from Titanic to Queen Mary and from the Empress of Ireland to the Lusitania. Join maritime researcher and illustrator Michael Brady as he tells the stories behind some of history's most famous ocean liners and machines!
#ships #engineering #disaster #fail #story #documentary #design #boats #titanic #navy #ferries #stories #history #facts #maritime

Пікірлер: 764

  • @smogdanoff7053
    @smogdanoff70533 ай бұрын

    My mom went a cruise with her family on the Viking Sally (M/S Estonia) in the late 1980’s. There was this kinda famous artist performing on the main stage (can’t remember his name) Anyways my grandma had mentioned to my mom that she thought he was ”slimey” Y’know, corny and stuff. Anyways my mom being the small child that she was, took that literally, and was determined to see for herself. So she got some flowers, walked up to him and gave them to him. He thanked her and gave her a hug in return. Mom comes up running to grandma and exclaims ”He wasn’t slimey!”🤣

  • @AstraEatsBears
    @AstraEatsBears3 ай бұрын

    The opening line of this made me chuckle "Ships are, and this may surprise you, very big" Just the kind of information I come to this channel for, my friend, Mike Brady 🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @rasmusalmqvist5960
    @rasmusalmqvist59603 ай бұрын

    Early in the morning of Wed, 28 September 1994, I woke up to helicopters hovering over the house I lived in in Turku (Finland). Much to my surprise, one had Swedish markings and it was trying to land at the local hospital (TYKS). Opening the TV I learned that a "ferry had experienced and accident" and thought they might be bringing some patients for care. As the morning advanced, the full scale of the disaster started to dawn. Much respect to the rescuers and my deepest condolences to those who lost loved ones. ❤

  • @realtsarbomba

    @realtsarbomba

    3 ай бұрын

    I remember being in Turku university hospital dentist (the round building) on the morning of Estonia disaster and while I was being tortured on the dentists chair I watched through the window as helicopters landed one after the another bringing in survivors and a lots and lots of body bags. Helipad was about 100 meters from where I sat on the second floor, it was a somber sight, there weren't many survivors at this point 😔 Rest in peace to all of the victims of Estonia and my condolences to the victims families.

  • @PeteFIN

    @PeteFIN

    2 ай бұрын

    I'm Finnish too and i had just recently started my military service at the time. It was the first night we spent out of barracks in tents somewhere in the woods of Eastern Finland. The weather was not nice, rained so much and we got hardly any sleep all night. In the morning an army truck driver said he heard on radio of a ship disaster in Bay of Finland. We were so exhausted at the moment that i couldn't really process the information and it was vague info anyway at that point. Later that day when we dried up back in the barracks we started to realize what had happened. It's definitely one of the collective flashbulb memories for people around here...everyone remembers it vividly and it touched us deeply, still does, even though there weren't many Finns aboard. But our ships, Silja Line and Viking Line were there leading the rescue operation and most survivors (and bodies) were brought to Finland. Bless the souls who were lost 💙

  • @Rilhon
    @Rilhon3 ай бұрын

    Ooooh, Estonia! Very cool to see you talk about this ship, I'm from Sweden and here it's pretty much just Titanic and Estonia (and Vasa) that are the main sinking disasters that are in popular knowledge, so it's cool to see her discussed internationally as well!

  • @redbaron3344

    @redbaron3344

    3 ай бұрын

    Well, hello from Estonia 🇪🇪 😁

  • @elliotwizerd

    @elliotwizerd

    3 ай бұрын

    Well as a Swed i can confirme your comment

  • @Rilhon

    @Rilhon

    3 ай бұрын

    @@redbaron3344 Hello from Sweden!

  • @bluerazor7049

    @bluerazor7049

    3 ай бұрын

    Fun fact, she had a couple of names throughout her career. She started out as the Viking-Sally for the Viking Line before being renamed the Silja-Star for the Silja Lines, Wasa King for the Wasa-Lines and finally Estonia for Estline.

  • @Katoshi_Takagumi

    @Katoshi_Takagumi

    3 ай бұрын

    Now, technically speaking the Estonia wasn't a ship. These are ferries, and unlike ships, ferries aren't particularly seaworthy in comparison. Then again, neither are those silly looking cruise ships even though they are nominally ships but lack sufficient freeboard.

  • @dodolurker
    @dodolurker3 ай бұрын

    I'm Estonian and I was a teenager when the Estonia sank. In addition to just the overall shock of it, there was a personal connection - my mother travelled to Sweden around that time and I wasn't sure what ship she was on. Luckily she wasn't on the Estonia and her trip started the following morning. She told me afterwards that they did stop at the Estonia's sinking location and her ship took part in the rescue efforts.

  • @Saukko31
    @Saukko313 ай бұрын

    Estonia! I am from Finland and I remember this disaster. Hard to believe it has been 30 years since it. Thank you for talking about her too.

  • @user-ej1dh3hb6l

    @user-ej1dh3hb6l

    3 ай бұрын

    F EU

  • @Fritzsche-ki6gv

    @Fritzsche-ki6gv

    3 ай бұрын

    Bro is british @@user-ej1dh3hb6l

  • @Sashazur

    @Sashazur

    3 ай бұрын

    There’s a great and horrifying article online in The Atlantic magazine that has eyewitness accounts of the Estonia sinking.

  • @dallesamllhals9161

    @dallesamllhals9161

    3 ай бұрын

    @@user-ej1dh3hb6l FÅRK DIG!

  • @Fritzsche-ki6gv

    @Fritzsche-ki6gv

    3 ай бұрын

    why did my reply get deleted@@user-ej1dh3hb6l

  • @vsikifi
    @vsikifi3 ай бұрын

    Estonia's bow ramp was kind of designed to fail together with the bow visor. It was too long to just close the hole when lifted up. Part of it went higher than the deck on top and was covered by a "hump" in the top of the visor. So when the visor broke off, it hung from the ramp and the ramp wasn't designed to carry such a load, so the falling visor pulled the ramp open. I have traveled on that ship. Back when its name was Viking Sally and it was running between Finland and Sweden. And it was not the only sunk ship that I have been a passenger on. The other one was Viking Saga, later named Sally Albatross. A navigation error brought it to too shallow water and it contacted the rocky sea bottom and started taking in water to too many compartments Titanic style. Its crew was able to beach it and prevent if from sinking completely so there was no loss of life. Even lifeboats were not needed because people could simply walk out of the ship onto the sea ice. It sat half sunken there for weeks but was eventually raised, repaired and returned to service.

  • @filanfyretracker

    @filanfyretracker

    3 ай бұрын

    sounds like that ship should have had some kind of switch that would have opened if the visor was not tightly closed and trigger a master caution on the helm(or whatever the boat term is for the primary "Oh Shit" alarm).

  • @skunkjobb

    @skunkjobb

    3 ай бұрын

    @@filanfyretracker There was such an alarm but only with a light (no sound) and it wasn't very well placed on the bridge so it's not certain that they observed the alarm at all. Further, there seems to have been uncertainty about such a basic thing as if green or red means open. It was different for different doors, green for open on some and red for open on others. Not a good design.

  • @Obi_Wan_Kenobi_027

    @Obi_Wan_Kenobi_027

    3 ай бұрын

    Remind me to never sail on a ship after you lmao

  • @IZAQ_

    @IZAQ_

    3 ай бұрын

    The Viking Saga was a disaster in general, having had multiple fires onboard, having to make very big rebuild due to them, ones that go as far as to make the ship class as a totally different ship

  • @johns8364

    @johns8364

    2 ай бұрын

    @@Obi_Wan_Kenobi_027 The unsinkable Molly @vsikifi

  • @exharkhun5605
    @exharkhun56053 ай бұрын

    I am extremely impressed by the sheer force of will and restraint you've shown in talking about accidents with Ro-Ro ships and not calling them "Roll-on, Roll-over's" even once. Truly the trained human mind in action is a marvel to behold!

  • @asmith8947
    @asmith89473 ай бұрын

    Sipping my tea this morning while my friend Mike Brady cheerfully discusses some major maritime disasters. 😊

  • @BFSilenceDogood

    @BFSilenceDogood

    3 ай бұрын

    Cheers from Michigan

  • @greglivo

    @greglivo

    3 ай бұрын

    He's actually my friend Mike Brady.

  • @stephengrimmer35
    @stephengrimmer353 ай бұрын

    I missed boarding the Herald of Free Enterprise by 5 minutes. Driving to Zeebrugge my petrol light came on, and I stopped to re-fill. I ended up in the stand-by queue of a dozen or so cars. The six or so in front got on, and I and the rest were turned away, so I drove to Dunkirk to catch a later sailing. Arriving in Dover in the early hours we heard the news.

  • @raywalsh5414

    @raywalsh5414

    3 ай бұрын

    If you had just made it to the Herald of Free Enterprise you might have spotted the bow door left open behind you and mentioned it to one of the crew.

  • @RobSchofield

    @RobSchofield

    3 ай бұрын

    We had also planned to travel on this sailing back to the yUK. In the end we chose to travel the next day. I can remember us watching the news on TV in horror - and no small measure of relief.

  • @jousfish

    @jousfish

    Ай бұрын

    Wow, talk about a lucky escape!

  • @mckinneyc1000
    @mckinneyc10003 ай бұрын

    I worked on the Belfast to Scotland route on a ro-ro ferry for over four years. I can tell you of the furoristy of the weather is so very humbling even on a large well built ship. But thanks to the lessons learnt from the Estonia and Herald of Free Enterprise I never once felt the ship would succumb to the sea.

  • @fastinradfordable

    @fastinradfordable

    3 ай бұрын

    Unfortunately humans feels about if a ship will sink or not. Are irrelevant.

  • @BigAl38

    @BigAl38

    3 ай бұрын

    Small world another Belfast man on this channel

  • @marhawkman303

    @marhawkman303

    3 ай бұрын

    only ro-ro I've ever been on never left Puget Sound. That model wasn't even operated in stormy weather. Seemingly in large part due to not actually having a full door.

  • @kallekoo

    @kallekoo

    3 ай бұрын

    More like the ferries being double-ended and not very large @@marhawkman303

  • @NorwegianAirShuttleRBLX
    @NorwegianAirShuttleRBLX3 ай бұрын

    Thank you for finally mentioning Estonia! I really feel like her and her unfortunate fate are not talked about enough.

  • @fw-tri-2324
    @fw-tri-23243 ай бұрын

    Yes!! Very happy to see you mention this disaster. It's frankly a little strange how under the radar the sinking of M/S Estonia flies, internationally speaking. I'm from Finland and for Estonians, Swedes and us it's been a lifelong search for answers. Would love a longer video on the topic.

  • @erinw6120
    @erinw61203 ай бұрын

    Ooo, finally see a ship i know, the S.S. Badger! Haven't seen her in ages, but she's still running services between west Michigan and Wisconsin.

  • @jimwhall6609

    @jimwhall6609

    3 ай бұрын

    I was on her a few years ago! Amazingly fun!

  • @sharkbytecomputer

    @sharkbytecomputer

    3 ай бұрын

    Down for service this winter due to some issues - With the lift gate if im not mistaken - at the end of last season, but should be back up and running in the spring hopefully. Even without riding on it - its fun to watch it come in and out of port

  • @emo7636
    @emo7636Ай бұрын

    HMS 'Dreadnought' has to be one of the absolute most awesome sounding name ever. That name just demands respect.

  • @redbaron3344
    @redbaron33443 ай бұрын

    I am just happy that MS Estonia was mentioned on this channel. I hope there will be more of Estonia and Baltic Sea . And also, hello from your Estonian 🇪🇪 subscriber 😁

  • @Fritzsche-ki6gv

    @Fritzsche-ki6gv

    3 ай бұрын

    Schiff

  • @dallesamllhals9161

    @dallesamllhals9161

    3 ай бұрын

    Baltic Sea? Sry' But! Østersøen her.

  • @Fritzsche-ki6gv

    @Fritzsche-ki6gv

    3 ай бұрын

    @@dallesamllhals9161 bro we dont need swede

  • @tomi_9212

    @tomi_9212

    3 ай бұрын

    @@Fritzsche-ki6gv In Finnish it is too East sea or itämeri in Finnish. Maybe because of Finland's long history under Swedish rule.

  • @iLozers-kj7yv

    @iLozers-kj7yv

    3 ай бұрын

    im also Estonian

  • @Ah01
    @Ah013 ай бұрын

    In Estonia disaster there were some 12 unhappy coincidenses that together caused the sinking. Without any of them it would not have taken place. Design weaknesses were from the severe end: weakness of the visor locking was one and the lack of visibility (superstruckture blocked the view) from bridge to bow another. I travelled on Viking Sally during a heavy storm in 1988, enjoyed the view outside in front of the bridge, one deck down and remember wondering why the bridge was not in front end of the superstruckture but some 10m backwards. Senseless flaw, since on the accident the bridge personnel should have noticed the vizor problems in real time and not fatally too late.

  • @vibingwithvinyl
    @vibingwithvinyl3 ай бұрын

    I was 16 (almost 17) when the Estonia sank. Being a Finn, it hit home pretty hard. I had been on that ferry couple of different times, back when it was the Viking Sally and again when it was the Silja Star.

  • @realtsarbomba

    @realtsarbomba

    3 ай бұрын

    I was 14 and remember being in Turku university hospital dentist on the morning of Estonia disaster and while I was being tortured on the dentist chair I watched through the window helicopters landing one after the another bringing in survivors and a lots and lots of body bags. Helipad was about 100 meters from where I sat. Rest in peace to all of the victims of Estonia.

  • @jonihamalainen2228

    @jonihamalainen2228

    3 ай бұрын

    I was 6 & was scared the all late 90:s when on cruise ships when it was windy conditions. I was also abboard in the Viking Sally when it hit the rocks & flued. Was it in 93 or 95? Anyway.

  • @pohjanakka4992

    @pohjanakka4992

    2 ай бұрын

    I am also a Finn, over a decade older than you and had also traveled in that ferry several times back when it had those other names. I have always had bit of a claustrophobia problem and never liked to sleep in those under the deck windowless cheap cabins, but that disaster made it worse because I kept imagining what it must have been like for all those people who had been in those cabins and never made it out. These days I don't take the ferries to Sweden or Estonia often, but when I do I either pay for a cabin near one of the exits to the deck, preferably near to where the lifeboats are, no matter what it does to my budget, or I don't take a cabin at all. Sure that sinking was equally as deadly to a lot of people who made it out of the ferry and then drowned, or died of hypothermia, in the cold sea, but I think I'd still prefer dying under an open sky to drowning trapped inside that kind of maze.

  • @danielmaher152
    @danielmaher1523 ай бұрын

    I read with the herald of free enterprise that it was made worse that they had not emptied the ballast tanks after loading the top car deck. Doing so would have meant the open door would have been higher, meaning in theory that even though the door was open, providing the sea was calm they would have been OK. As they hadn't emptied the ballast tanks that hole was a lot lower in the water. Loved this video as always.

  • @dag1704

    @dag1704

    2 ай бұрын

    It baffles me, that the ships designers never thought about that. You could easily make alarms scream without stop, disengage the engines, when the ramp is open, or even put water sensors into the ship, that automatically close and check the doors of the ferry. As a software engineer, I am a bit out of words, that they have no idiot support build in what so ever... Always, really always think about the most stupid stuff the user can do or happen randomly :D shit happens all the time and in that case, people die if it does... The ramp is open and the ship happily sails onto the ocean is one of the first, that comes to mind...

  • @danielmaher152

    @danielmaher152

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@dag1704 I mean yeah! Even something that told them of by the way the ballast tanks are full. I mean I know this was the 80s but even liners like the lusitania and titanic had automatic doors in the necessary areas.

  • @cubismo85
    @cubismo85Ай бұрын

    M/S Estonia was a messy story. Almost 850 Swedes drowned. I remember being 9 years old in 1994 waking up 7 in the morning to watch Disneymovies on Swedish TV just to be met by a board bulletin with text. Irritated i woke up my parents and told them a ship had sunk. They didnt believe me first but once they put on the TV it was clear. That day it was all about the accident and i remember how angry i was that there was no cartoons shown on the TV.

  • @wacholder5690
    @wacholder56903 ай бұрын

    Family members missed the "Herald Of Free Enterprise" by 20 minutes due to an - in first sight - unfortunate traffic jam on the way to Zeebrugge. We - at home - knew that they intended to be on that ship when the news from its capsizing came in. But fortunately we got a call that they missed the ship and were now standing in awe in the harbour with the rescue operations on the way. Sometimes bad luck turns into good luck ... Only sometimes.

  • @FoxDragon
    @FoxDragon3 ай бұрын

    As someone who has lived in the Pacific Northwest of the USA my entire life, the design of those Ro-Ro ferries is just so interesting to me! We have ferries that cross the Puget Sound multiple times per day, but they are completely different. They are totally open at both ends, because it's protected water. On the very rare occasion that intense winds cause larger than usual waves, they don't run.

  • @Sashazur

    @Sashazur

    3 ай бұрын

    Same for the car carrying ferries that operate between Manhattan and Staten Island. It’s not open ocean.

  • @kallekoo

    @kallekoo

    3 ай бұрын

    That's a thing confusing people: Ro-Ro Ships being called ferries because they take passengers. An actual ferry is like a Puget Sound type double-ended one. Somebody claiming it's because of the open car-deck, then why aren't car-carriers called ferries having all decks open

  • @bodan1196
    @bodan11963 ай бұрын

    Estonia's sister ship, today named M/S Bluefort, is said to have almost suffered from the exact same fate with the bow door damaged in januari 1993. Almost two years ealier.

  • @rebinred495
    @rebinred4953 ай бұрын

    The Estonia, she was indeed one of the most tragic sinking in these last couple of decades. Happy you mentioned her

  • @AverageAlien
    @AverageAlien3 ай бұрын

    Finally! I've always been hoping for you to make a video about the MS Estonia. This ship has always haunted my thoughts. I think this is way more tragic than Titanic ever was.

  • @PassiveSmoking
    @PassiveSmoking3 ай бұрын

    When I was doing my A-levels, the Estonia disaster had just happened and the Herald of Free Enterprise disaster was still relatively recent history. My Design Technology teacher referred to ships of that design as "Roll on, Roll off, Roll over ferries"

  • @BAZTI12
    @BAZTI123 ай бұрын

    I wasn't born when Estonia occurred but I quickly learned of the catastrophe since I live in Stockholm Sweden, many people here have some (at least distant) relation to someone who was onboard, including me.

  • @KPW2137
    @KPW21373 ай бұрын

    Also, thank you Mike for bringing up Estonia. It was a horrible tragedy nad it's still very much remember in the Baltic region.

  • @IZAQ_
    @IZAQ_3 ай бұрын

    The problem with the Estonia wasn't fully the bow visor, one of the causes for the disaster was that the visor had allegedly not been maintained properly (together with a large part of the ship), nowdays ships don't usually have bow visors unless they were built before the mid 80s, ferries now typically use clam doors. Another thing that you would usually find on other ferries is that on the car decks there are big walls/doors which close when the ship is at sea which divides parts of the car deck, however the Estonia didn't have these due to her being designed to operate close to the shore (mainly on the route Kapellskär-Mariehamn-Naantali) so it didn't have these. As a conclusion, a lot was learned from the M/S Estonia and ferries (especially in the baltic sea) are now built to very high standards

  • @kath1626
    @kath16263 ай бұрын

    I still remember the sinking of the Estonia, it was all over the news, papers, radio and tv. It was so incomprehensible that a ferry would sink in our modern times.

  • @Teverell
    @Teverell2 ай бұрын

    The Herald of Free Enterprise is the first disaster I remember, I was six when it happened, and it made a great impression on me. I came across a Reader's Digest article about it when I was nine or so and the writing, and pictures, were pretty vivid to me - and we had been on ro-ros, so there was that tiny 'that could have been us' even though we'd never been on Herald nor travelled to Zeebrugge, using the Dover-Calais route to France instead.

  • @LOstere
    @LOstere3 ай бұрын

    Very cool to see you cover the MS Estonia! I'm Estonian myself and for some of us here, it's basically our 'Titanic' (metaphorically).

  • @martincoufal7598

    @martincoufal7598

    2 ай бұрын

    How many people in Estonia do believe that the disaster did not happen in the way that official report says?

  • @laurenscobie1
    @laurenscobie13 ай бұрын

    The Estonia documentary series on discovery is worth a watch. As suspected by a lot of locals and survivors, it seems there might be more to the sinking than the initial investigation concluded. To much to mention in a comment but worth watching if anyone is intrigued

  • @HarveyJohnWillmott

    @HarveyJohnWillmott

    3 ай бұрын

    There is 100% more to this than we’re being told. I’ve seen a few documentaries about it.

  • @andyhouston69

    @andyhouston69

    3 ай бұрын

    I belive Estonia was blown up by russia and then they went down and collected whatever was on board.. I also belive someone warned the Swedish goverment to never invastigate this to hard. Since they first said they would basicly pick up the ship and then suddenly changed their mind. Hell, maybe someone even told them exactly what happend and the truth never can leave that room.

  • @Sashazur

    @Sashazur

    3 ай бұрын

    There’s a great and horrifying article online in The Atlantic magazine that has eyewitness accounts of the Estonia sinking. Depending on what you believe, it may not be accurate regarding the cause of the sinking, but exactly what the cause was didn’t make much difference to the people who were there.

  • @missscarling

    @missscarling

    3 ай бұрын

    The documentary is great, definitely worth a watch. Interesting about the big hole that was found. It will be interesting what will be brought up when the new investigation is completed.

  • @burkezillar

    @burkezillar

    3 ай бұрын

    @@andyhouston69 I think you're right to a point. I don't think the ship was blown up, however it definitely hit something out there. Probably a Russian sub, there is a possibility it could've been another "friendly" sub. What we do know is that we won't find out properly what happened, and the visor will be the answer.

  • @missscarling
    @missscarling3 ай бұрын

    My Granny's cousin died on the MV Princess Victoria. There was a creepy artists impression of it mid sinking in my Grandparents hallway for years. I used to stare at it for hours when i was a kid. Maybe thats why im so interested in ship disasters today. Pretty morbid huh?!

  • @ccalthrop6347
    @ccalthrop63473 ай бұрын

    The Herald of Free Enterprise was actually departing Zeebrugge, not Dover.

  • @WasNotWas999

    @WasNotWas999

    3 ай бұрын

    Good point, also worth a mention that by pure luck it capsized on a sand bank.. Otherwise the death toll may have been even higher

  • @nickfarrow9032
    @nickfarrow90323 ай бұрын

    Despite only being seven years old at the time, I remember the Herald of Free Enterprise incident well. It dominated the news for about a week. Made me quite scared of ferries for a few years and I didn't go on one after that until 1992.

  • @benderbendingrodriguez420
    @benderbendingrodriguez4203 ай бұрын

    finally the Estonia is brought up! another very famous sinking im shocked hasnt been covered yet even in more detail. great video as alway!

  • @Japimon87
    @Japimon873 ай бұрын

    The bow structure of Estonias visor and ramp was practically a normal thing in all the baltic ferries before the accident. There are even photos of FIN-SWE ferries leaving port and driving long distances with both ends open in the archipelago to get all the exhaust gasses of :) And if you look closer the Estonia had also another design failure. The bridge was so back, that because the forestructure, they could not see the front visor from the bridge, not even in a calm day. There is a ton lot more about what comes to Estonia, it would be sufficient to many episodes, but I'm just glad that you did not take those more on frame in this video.

  • @aritakalo8011

    @aritakalo8011

    3 ай бұрын

    Main problem was the bow door was upward opening. Plus it was big empty volume. Meaning on sailing into a wave the doors own buoyancy tried to lift it open. Only thing keeping it closed was lock bolts on lock shackle blocks and well eventually the metal fatigue of constantly being hammered open by the sea ripped the locks. Estonias sister ship had same bow visor fail year before Estonia disaster. Only it was calmer storm so it only partially opened with one bolt still holding on while badly bent. It managed to limp back to harbor with cracked open visor. After Estonia all these up opening bow visor door were welded shut as deadly flawed. These days they use outward and sidewards sliding front doors recessed into the main Hull frame. Meaning as wave strikes the door it is pushed *closed* with even more force rather than being tried to be ripped open.

  • @Japimon87

    @Japimon87

    3 ай бұрын

    @@aritakalo8011 Ei tarvii opettaa äitiä naimaan, mutta muille tää info oli varmaan ihan hyvä. jos nyt löytävät sen kun on vastauksena mun kommenttiin eikä omana kommenttinaan

  • @xergiok2322

    @xergiok2322

    2 ай бұрын

    The ferry lines between Stockholm and Finland are mainly through archipelago, providing calmer waters than the route between Estonia and Sweden, so it was less of a problem. I believe the Estonia wasn't really designed for ocean sailing to begin with.

  • @davidfarrow875
    @davidfarrow8753 ай бұрын

    Herald of Free Enterprise was a member of a fleet of three ro-ro ships built for the Dover to Calais route - the other two were Spirit and Pride. I believe Herald held the "blue ribband" equivalent for the fastest channel crossing. I rode on her twice in the 1970s. She was not supposed to be on the Zeebrugge route as the linkspan at Zeebrugge was not designed to handle her. In order to unload cars from E deck the bow ballast tanks had to be flooded to lower the ship enough to connect the linkspan. When she departed Zeebrugge, as well as the doors not being closed, the tanks had not been emptied so she was sitting too low in the water. The failure to close the doors was a classic case of someone assuming someone else had done it but no-one did it and no-one checked it had actually been done.

  • @taisoni1
    @taisoni13 ай бұрын

    I think M/S Estonia should deserve it's own episode where the disaster could be analyzed minute by minute. Like Mike said, it's one of the worst peace time shipping disasters. Over 850+ people died.

  • @kallekoo

    @kallekoo

    3 ай бұрын

    You can find the radio conversations on KZread, some shorter and at least one like two hours

  • @moi-ev3pi
    @moi-ev3piАй бұрын

    Nice to see Estonia in this video. Probably for me the most touching incident as finnish person.

  • @arlandaplanespotting
    @arlandaplanespotting3 ай бұрын

    I'm from Sweden and I remember the Estonia accident so well. In the town where I live there is a memorial plaque for the people who died. Here in Sweden there are still theories how this accident happened and that the official investigation doesn't tell the truth....

  • @paulroustan3643

    @paulroustan3643

    3 ай бұрын

    Something dodgy with the official narrative, if it was Russia responsible, then we would’ve known by now, but that they aren’t blaming Russia, then you have to ask what NATO hand played in this incident.

  • @PersephoneDaSilva
    @PersephoneDaSilvaАй бұрын

    Mad props to you for not giggling every time you had to say "roro" or "roro ferries." I chuckled when I heard you saying it.

  • @dml79
    @dml793 ай бұрын

    I have traveled with Ms Estonia several times in my childhood in the 90s. Sailed once in a heavy storm between Vasa and Umeå in the Gulf of Bothnia when she was called Wasa King. Scary in retrospect. We had our cabin forward in the ship and I could see the bow visor straight out our cabin window. She was a really nice ferry for her time but terrible with everything that happened afterwards.

  • @pille-riinkorell9441
    @pille-riinkorell94413 ай бұрын

    Very tragic story with Estonia... Im very glad you mentioned this ship ❤️‍🩹

  • @Fuchswinter
    @Fuchswinter2 ай бұрын

    There's a monument for the estonia on Museum Island in Stockholm, in between the Vasa Museum and the Mariner's cemetery. It's just a triangle of grey stone that you walk into from either a staircase downwards or into from even ground (and then up out of). It's very quiet, very simple and incredibly somber. You just stand there, entirely alone, reading name after name after name, knowing that it's a full humam life cut short. I recommend taking a look if you're in the area. Something else, the problems with the bow visor had occurred several times before on other ships, but it was never catastrophic and the shipping companies didn't really talk to each other about minor incidents. So there was a ton of hints that the design might have structural issues but it was so strewn out the crew of the estonia could never have known. It's frustrating and tragic. (I believe Beyond the Breakers made a double episode.)

  • @oscarellenius2007
    @oscarellenius20073 ай бұрын

    I was on board Estonia once as a kid when it was in port in Stockholm cause my sister worked for the company that owned Estonia. She personally knew a fair few of the bridge crew.

  • @johnshepherd9676
    @johnshepherd96763 ай бұрын

    The Queen Mary and the splendid cats were armored against 12" guns at expected battle ranges. HMS Queen Mary was a victim of poor ammunition handling coupled with disabling of her anti-flash protection. Their main battery was 13.5" not 15" Hood was as well protected as a Queen Elizebeth Class battleship. Here is how you tell the hit that sank her was a fluke. The IJN Kirishima was basically a splendid cat. Post war analysis showed she took 20 16" Mk 8 AP rounds and did not detonate. To put that in perspective, Bismarck's 15" rounds were about 1700lbs. The MK 8 was over 2700lbs. The primary damage mechanism of an AP round is shrapnel. The MK 8 was a massively more powerful round.

  • @Rybo-Senpai

    @Rybo-Senpai

    3 ай бұрын

    Someone's been watching Drachenifel, because I came to the it was a fluke opinion after his video on the subject. Would love to see a colab between Drach and Mike

  • @WidleyWesident
    @WidleyWesident3 ай бұрын

    Ah, the Herald of Free Enterprise. A sad tale which changed much of the cross channel ferry designs and operating procedures. The same design of ferry used to operate from Portsmouth to Cherbourg and Le Havre. Although the continental ferry port is close to the top of Portsmouth harbour, it was pretty normal to see the ferries leaving at the harbour mouth with their front doors still wide open. Oh, and one of these cross channel ferries was sold to a Middle Eastern operator who had similar problems: I still have memories of seeing it on its side, just south of the entrance to the Suez Canal. ☹️

  • @nakkari100
    @nakkari1003 ай бұрын

    As a Finn living in Turku, I can still remember how my mother walked me to see the helicopters bringing victims of Estonia, which were landing at Hellpad next to our local hospital. Helicopters look so cool, but afterward, I have understood how tragic and devastating it all was

  • @TheVargr
    @TheVargr3 ай бұрын

    When you started talking about the roll on ferries I was already thinking of SS Princess Victoria. She sailed at that time to keep to British Rail times despite the terrible conditions. All survivors were the fittest men and no women or children survived. The Lifeboat that rescued the survivors still exists and is being preserved in a Carpark in Doughadee, Northern Ireland.

  • @rob5944

    @rob5944

    3 ай бұрын

    See my comment above. Profits before safety still goes on. For example our buses were sent out in blizzard conditions and I was nearly stranded. Luckily I made it back, but it was a dangerous journey and I was getting very cold by the time I reached my own car in order to drive home!

  • @timothyjoksch

    @timothyjoksch

    3 ай бұрын

    @@rob5944 It was the same with Estonia. And also with the Jan Heweliusz in 1993.

  • @rob5944

    @rob5944

    3 ай бұрын

    @@timothyjoksch crews not being given enough time to do their jobs properly?

  • @timothyjoksch

    @timothyjoksch

    3 ай бұрын

    @rob5944 running through whether the ship wasn't made for.

  • @rob5944

    @rob5944

    3 ай бұрын

    @@timothyjoksch ah, I see.

  • @IloveCruiseShips1912
    @IloveCruiseShips19123 ай бұрын

    22:03 As someone who has been on a ferry, i can agree that ferries have became a lot safer due to engineering and development and are now adays, very safe. Great video as always, keep up the great work :)

  • @weirdmindofesh
    @weirdmindofesh3 ай бұрын

    Regarding the Herald of Free Enterprise, management didn't ignore the warnings and request for lights showing if the bow door was closed, they had dismissed the request all together. Per the wikipedia article, "Issues relating to the breaking of waves high on the bow doors while under way and requests to have an indicator installed on the bridge showing the position of the doors were dismissed; the former because of the attitude that ships' masters would come and "bang on the desk" if an issue was truly important, and the latter because it was thought frivolous to spend money on equipment to indicate if employees had failed to do their job correctly.[16]"

  • @spike555
    @spike5553 ай бұрын

    S.S. Badger-the oldest coal fired steam ship still in operation in North America. I think an episode on her would be great. I have ridden her from Wisconsin to Michigan, the kids and I on vacation, drove my truck on in WI, 4 hrs later drove it off in MI. When they pull into port in MI they have to do a 180, so they drop a anchor, it grabs and the tail of the ship swings around, they throw her into reverse, pull up the anchor and back right into the dock.

  • @TopHatTITAN
    @TopHatTITAN2 ай бұрын

    5:52 As some in a Discord server I was part of call her "the Stalker of the Atlantic", Olympic ALWAYS turns up near the ship or object in focus. I dunno how this happens, but it’s just too funny.

  • @nathanl7018
    @nathanl70183 ай бұрын

    Thank you for showing the S.S. Badger. I’ve been on that ferry before and hope to travel on her again this summer. I grew up near one side of her route in Wisconsin and often watched her head out on Lake Michigan on her way to Ludington.

  • @northerncaptain855
    @northerncaptain8553 ай бұрын

    I remember the loss of the Estonia well. Years later I’d command large RoRo’s and the lessons of the Estonia’s and the other RoRo losses were not lost on me.

  • @radiodont4028
    @radiodont40283 ай бұрын

    One major flaw in the Estonia's design was that her superstructure extended ahead of the bridge, so that it completely blocked its view of the bow. This is another reason why the crew didn't notice that the visor was coming loose.

  • @pollexx8844
    @pollexx88443 ай бұрын

    Loved the video, very well done. However; small mistake I found at 10:05. The thickness of the armor of the Invincible's barbettes is listed as 9 inches, the same thickness as the SMS Seydlitz's barbettes. Though, the centimeter and dialogue description are correct. just a minor typo on the inches. Again, I love your videos and every you do, keep up the great work have a good day

  • @jbenjamin59

    @jbenjamin59

    3 ай бұрын

    I saw that same small tiny mistake, which btw did in ANY WAY take away from this amazing video

  • @geofjones9
    @geofjones92 ай бұрын

    It was neat to see the "Badger" , a Lake Michigan ferry originally built to haul railroad cars from Mamitowoc, Wis, to Ludington, Mich. It now runs that route with passenger cars, semi trucks, and passengers. I rode that trip a few times, very nice!

  • @terohyvarinen4358
    @terohyvarinen43583 ай бұрын

    About the Estonia's fate: before the actual accident, to more Baltic cruise had had issues with their bow vizors and gates. The first one was the Apollo, the second one was the Diana II. The latter was closely related to the Estonia, though smaller, and had those vizor lock issues in 1993 (!) The vizor, being big construction, cause tens of tons of buoyancy when submerged to a wave. Moreover, there are dynamic forces caused by the speed of the ship and waves hitting the bow section. To make things even more complex, the vizor itself is not perfectly watertight. Water inside the vizor, or between the vizor and the ramp, cause forces pushing the vizor open. While submerging, the internal water supports the vizor; while rising up from the waves, it increases a moment pushing the vizor open. Moreover, there are dynamic forces I can only imagine, caused by the ship movements and the water moving inside the vizor. All these forces stresses and relieves the vizor and front gate/ramp system thousands of times between Tallinn and Stockholm. And, during her final voyage, the vizor system failed. Moreover, the ship was not new. It was built the Viking Line and sailed as Viking Sally for about 10 years between Turku (Finland) and Tallinn since 1980. After Tku - Sthlm traffic she sailed a few years on other routes on the Baltic, facing far more severe sea conditions than the protected Tku - Sthlm route. I am not an expert on metallurgy, but how does metal fatigue affect? The locking bar of the Atlantic lock was 80 mm thick, going through 85 mm holes. The forces caused by the vizor were between zero and tens of meganewtons. There were dozens of rumors about the reason for the vizor and bow ramp construction failing. Loose bolts, neglecting the maintenance etc. You know, the best experts are always found on the marina quays, leaning backwards, keeping their thumbs in their rear pockets (as I am doing right now). And while detailed information of the vizor, ramp and lock mechanisms is available, there ae still, 30 years later, different kinds of beach experts.

  • @greggweber9967
    @greggweber99673 ай бұрын

    When that happened, I thought of the last car to board the previous ferry, the first car on that ship, the last one on that ship, and the first one on what would be the next ferry. And the people in those cars.

  • @rieger.design
    @rieger.design3 ай бұрын

    RoRo. Such a fun word to say. Thank you

  • @Rantasalmi47

    @Rantasalmi47

    3 ай бұрын

    also theres RoPax which i like better 👍

  • @scottthompson3670
    @scottthompson36703 ай бұрын

    Hearing the mayday and subsequent radio communications between Estonia and other ships is Erie

  • @thomasackerman5399
    @thomasackerman53993 ай бұрын

    The loss of the three cruisers in the Battle of Jutland sadly was echoed decades later in the first years of WW2: The loss of the battlecruiser HMS Hood when engaged in combat with the Bismark and Prinz Eugen.

  • @pnxelectrical
    @pnxelectrical3 ай бұрын

    A missed opportunity to mention the further evolution of bow doors; gone is the upward swinging visor and in its place a 2 piece door arrangement that utilises the very force threatening to rip it open. Ask n to the design of a boradhead arrow tip; you have 2 halves/sides that come together to close and, much like how arch bridges get increased strength thanks to the keystone, the force of the water trying to get in, actually makes it harder, allowing it to take the types of pounding waves that, in days of yore, would've ripped the visor off and flooded the ship. A small point in the grand scale of this video but vital nonetheless. Keep up the cracking content

  • @scotpens
    @scotpens16 күн бұрын

    "There's something wrong with our bloody ships today." Characteristic British understatement!

  • @AndreWehrle
    @AndreWehrle3 ай бұрын

    13:36 the _S.S. Badger_ still steams across Lake Michigan to this day, although she only carries automobiles now and not railcars. I took her from Manitowoc to Ludington at the age of 14; I should make it a point to do that again.

  • @UKCountryball138
    @UKCountryball1383 ай бұрын

    From bad ship looks to Faulty designs thank you Mike

  • @swedishmake-upgeek5650
    @swedishmake-upgeek56503 ай бұрын

    I went on the Estonia about a year before she sank. I can’t believe it’s been 30 years already.

  • @James-fg3ed
    @James-fg3ed3 ай бұрын

    Just clicked on the video. But i know that its gonna be good. Its always a good day when mike uploads

  • @ztoob8898
    @ztoob88983 ай бұрын

    It's so refreshing to hear actual human narration instead of a cursed robo-voice.

  • @Stevie___
    @Stevie___3 ай бұрын

    The continued evolution of RoRo ferries is interesting to see given the constant need to transport people and goods as efficiently as possible. Unfortunately speed took precedence in cases such as the Herald of Free Enterprise. Apparently because it was so shallow the squat effect was partly responsible in allowing water into the ship. Another great episode, awesome channel 👌

  • @cjmillsnun

    @cjmillsnun

    3 ай бұрын

    That and the fact that she was trimmed by the head.

  • @Ett.Gammalt.Bergtroll
    @Ett.Gammalt.Bergtroll3 ай бұрын

    As a Swede, mentions of Estonia always gets me in a special, dour mood. In the collective consciousness of Swedes, it is seen as “our Titanic” of sorts.

  • @Vavy_Duh
    @Vavy_Duh3 ай бұрын

    Estonia is one of my favourite ships in history (idk why) so I’m SO glad your talking about it!

  • @teijaflink2226

    @teijaflink2226

    3 ай бұрын

    Mine too, definitely not the prettiest or most interesting ships, it's more the story and tragedy that seemed to follow her until she sank, like two different murders on the ship some years before the sinking.

  • @wacholder5690
    @wacholder56903 ай бұрын

    12:55 It was revolutionary for *automobiles* only. Rolling carriages on ships has been used widely for railcars back in the early 1900s and even before. Like for instance the railcar ferries on the Great Lakes in the US. The Pere Marquette Line Ferries come to my mind, which operated from 1897 until its merger in 1947, operating 13 ferries by then. With some notable losses of course, because poor and violent weather conditions on the Great Lakes would not stand far behind that of "open sea" on oceans. You did show the "S. S. Badger" from 1952, which is the last coal-fired / piston engine powered Great Lake ferry. Its predecessors date way back to the end of the 19th century. Thanks for sharing !

  • @akiko009
    @akiko0093 ай бұрын

    Nice video. It should be noted -- even though this doesn't neatly fit into the video's topic -- that there have been many questions raised about the Estonia disaster and how it was investigated. For example, survivor testimony that contradicted the official timeline was ignored. And divers dispatched to the site afterwards didn't recover bodies, but based on video evidence released much later seemed to be looking for an individual or documents. There were also interesting choices by some governments that could easily be construed as a coverup, such as the abandoned plan to encase the entire wreck in concrete. As a result the Estonia disaster is an ideal target for conspiracy theories, some of which might even prove to be correct over time.

  • @Bryan921SS1
    @Bryan921SS13 ай бұрын

    Yay the Badger!! Been on her many times, she is a great old ship on Lake Michigan

  • @ronjon7942
    @ronjon79423 ай бұрын

    The “Badger” at 13:30…I’m guessing that is the ferry that crosses Lake Michigan?? I’ve not seen it in person, but while at the Milwaukee Model Train show, this modeler had an extremely impressive, detailed, and LARGE diorama featuring the Badger. The diorama included a ‘floating’ ferry that moved through the harbor and docked, opened its doors, and unloaded and loaded trains and maybe automobiles (if I remember correctly). The level of detail was so amazing that I sometimes forget I actually have not seen it live - although I have in a documentary or two…or three, now :)

  • @xb0xisbetter

    @xb0xisbetter

    3 ай бұрын

    If you live in Wisconsin, you should take a ride on Badger some time. They offer short cruises now, so you don't need to think up excuses to go all of the way to Ludington. Sunset cruises are particularly nice.

  • @MKUltraRoboCat
    @MKUltraRoboCat3 ай бұрын

    Love the SS Badger drawing, I have many fond memories of family day trips on that ferry

  • @janinedunkel7605
    @janinedunkel76053 ай бұрын

    We took the Badger across Lake Michigan a few years ago. It was great fun, but it satisfied any wisp of desire I had ever had for taking a cruise. The lake was calm, the sky clear, my mal de mer well in hand, but looking a just water for a couple hours....nope. Glad we did it, the coal fired old girl was great, bringing back pleasant memories of steam engines and locomotives.

  • @nigellawson8610
    @nigellawson861011 күн бұрын

    When it came to the Battle Jutland, the fact that Beaty allowed cordite to be stored in the turrets without regard to safety played a major role in the loss of three British battle cruisers during the course of that battle. Beaty’s incompetence was further compounded by the fact that he also ordered the flash tight doors, which were vital for preventing flash fires from reaching the magazines, disabled in order to increase the rate of fire of his squadron.

  • @rockymountainlifeprospecti4423
    @rockymountainlifeprospecti44233 ай бұрын

    Very well done Mike

  • @Myke666
    @Myke6663 ай бұрын

    Learned of Estonia a few years ago, glad to know you allowed more ears to hear her story, Mike!!

  • @mrxcaliber4320
    @mrxcaliber43203 ай бұрын

    Awesome video, Mike! Once again you provide very explicit details about ships nearly forgotten to history! Well done!

  • @orozcocris93
    @orozcocris933 ай бұрын

    the estonia had traded hands a few times before she met her end. the designer had stated the ship was never meant to be out in the ocean. it was meant to stay near the coast and called out the owners for not following those guidelines. her sister ship had the same exact problem happen when she was out at sea but did not go down. it was found the bolts that held the hinges were not welded properly or were improperly designed for that matter and had to be welded and reinforced for her to go into service

  • @CorellianYT1300Series
    @CorellianYT1300Series3 ай бұрын

    The biggest design fault with MS Estonia was that the bow ramp situated behind the visor was actually higher than the bow door and deck above it. That meant that to enable the visor to be closed a ramp housing was built into the visor. When the visor was closed it was like a little hump on the deck. When the waves broke the lock on the visor and the resulting forces eventually broke the hinges, the visor didn't just fall off cleanly. After the hinges broke, the visor moved forward and actually briefly hung off the ramp. The weight of the visor pulled the ramp open and the rest is history. It can be assumed that if the visor had simply fallen cleanly and left the ramp intact, the outcome would have been different. Greetings from Estonia! I remember the disaster. It was rough.

  • @kallekoo

    @kallekoo

    3 ай бұрын

    Was about tell the same, You were faster. Adding to the visor and ramp design fault the front part was built so that the visor was nor visible from the bridge. Seeing the visor about to fall would have made a difference. Also excessive speed against the storm was a factor. There have been several similar cases with the visor locks failing, luckily with lesser consequences. This case has also brought up many "flat earthers" making conspiracy theories and documents to prove them, some probably trying to cover up the design an operational mistakes, others just trying to be wise or not accepting facts.

  • @mjf1036
    @mjf10363 ай бұрын

    note to self. check the weather forecast and seas report prior to loading onto any ferry!

  • @andresenorebro
    @andresenorebro3 ай бұрын

    Estonia is an scar on the face of Scandinavia. Thank you for giving her place on this video and I hope you go more in depht on her sinking. This sinking I think was not as easy explained as this and our goverments has blood on there hands for not reising the ship up to envestigate furder…. Thank you again.

  • @kallekoo

    @kallekoo

    3 ай бұрын

    Estonia is merely a scar on the face of the shipbulder and even more the shipping company. Getting her raised is probably too late, even to get the victims properly buried. A lighter point is that it would end discussion over these funny conspiracy theories and prove some know-alls not so clever

  • @saprumk4
    @saprumk421 күн бұрын

    Please do a full video on M/S Estonia!!!

  • @metallicasnake
    @metallicasnake3 ай бұрын

    Great stuff as always, Mike. Thank you and your team for such wonderful and informative presentations.

  • @leafs9328
    @leafs93283 ай бұрын

    A little note on the battlecruisers: Seydlitz suffered the hit described at 9:30 not at Jutland but a year prior in 1915 at Dogger Bank, though she does suffer similar hits in Jutland, the Germans for their credit investigated what happened after Dogger Bank and implemented anti-flash protections which would save their ships from the fates suffered by the British Battlecruisers. Edit: Included Timestamp and fixed some spelling errors.

  • @tomi_9212
    @tomi_92123 ай бұрын

    Wish we have full video of Estonia's disaster as it took per% more victims than the Titanic. Greetings from Finland.

  • @norcalray7182
    @norcalray71823 ай бұрын

    Love these videos. Great job Mr Mike.

  • @louisapyne
    @louisapyne2 ай бұрын

    Wonderful as always; great detail, fabulous drawings. A small slip here, the Herald of Free Enterprise was sailing from Zeebrugge to Dover, and came to rest outside Zeebrugge harbour.

  • @oceanlover3530
    @oceanlover35303 ай бұрын

    Great vlog! Very interesting and well presented. Thanks for posting! ✌🏻👍🏻✌🏻

  • @edjopago1
    @edjopago13 ай бұрын

    Another brilliant and well researched video, Mike. Thank you.

  • @marcuswalters8093
    @marcuswalters80933 ай бұрын

    I am immediately fascinated by the presenters clothing. That's undoubtedly a detachable collar he's rocking, for instance.

  • @marklease9717
    @marklease97173 ай бұрын

    Another outstanding video, mate! Cheers!

  • @Soruk42
    @Soruk423 ай бұрын

    20:32 I remember this when it played out in the news, being from Kent, England. However, the ferry met its demise travelling FROM Zeebrugge on its way to Dover.

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