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I'm going to be a celebrity!



 
 
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  #11  
Old October 4th 04, 01:45 AM
Morgans
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"Roger Long" wrote in message
. ..
Mark your calendars boys and girls! November 29, The History Channel,

"Deep
Sea Detectives". R.A.P.'s own Roger Long will be seen pontificating
ponderously and speculating on the cause of a ship sinking.


How about giving us a "heads up" on say, November 27th or 28th?

Chances are way better that I will "remember" to watch it, than if no one
mentions it until then.

Thanks, and I look forward to it.

What do you do, or how did you get involved in this project?
--
Jim in NC


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  #12  
Old October 4th 04, 02:42 AM
Roger Long
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What do you do, or how did you get involved in this project?

See:

http://home.maine.rr.com/rlma

Actually, it's kind of a hoot how I got involved. The sons of the couple
that own and run the film company that is producing this series are my kids
best friends. At least every other day I am shuttling their kids or mine
back and forth. As they say, "It's not what you know, it's who you know."

Except that, a couple weeks ago, I got a call from someone saying, "Hi, I'm
a producer with the Lone Wolf Documentary Group, you probably never heard of
us but, ...". The fellow found me entirely without realizing that I knew
his bosses.

If you like sea stories, there is a book out called "Tall Ships Down" by Dan
Parrot. It tells about the sinkings of five sail training vessels. I was
involved in the post accident analysis of three of them. One of the
investigations involved going to London to testify in a parliamentary
inquiry as an expert hired by the British government. The ship was owned by
the Queen's cousin. I was the only one in the inquiry to testify that there
was any problem with her stability (which was truly abysmal as the inquiry
eventually found). As I walked into the room where the House of Lords met
during WWII to tell a couple hundred people that the Queen's cousin was
responsible for the death's of 19 people, well, let's just say I was a
little hyped. The moments after I proved, using the defense's own numbers,
that it only took a 22 percent increase in wind speed to capsize the vessel,
there was a stillness in the room that I can still feel. Certainly the most
dramatic moment of my life.

Another of the accidents got it's own book, also recently published. "Pride
of the Sea" by Tom Waldron. I appear several times in the story as I had
basically been trying to tell people for a couple years, "Hey, this boat is
dangerous." I gave a talk on sailing ship stability (and the studies of it
I had done in connection with the U.S. Coast Guard to establish regulations
for school ships) to the Society of Professional Sailing Ship Masters. I
pointed out the "Pride" as being the vessel in the study population that you
would most expect to capsized (aside from the ones that had not gone down
already). At that moment, only the people drifting in the liferaft knew
that the ship had already capsized. They were found the next morning and my
phone rang a few hours later.....

Because of the extensive study I did for the regulatory project, I arguably
knew more about the stability of large sailing ships at one point than
anyone on the planet. A lot of research was done a couple years later and I
drifted away from the whole world of sail to design oceanographic research
vessels, mostly fast high powered ones, and learn how to fly airplanes.

--

Roger Long





  #13  
Old October 4th 04, 02:57 AM
Morgans
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"Roger Long" wrote in message
. ..
What do you do, or how did you get involved in this project?


See:

http://home.maine.rr.com/rlma


Roger Long


Cool! It is amazing, to see the diverse range of interests represented in
this group. That is one reason I like it around here so much.

The off topic posts like this don't bother me one bit. If we could get all
the pure BS, like opinions on things, (like politics and religion that no
one is going to change anyone else's mind about) we would be all set!

I have a small interest in sailing, but limited to 25' to 32' sailboats on
Lake Erie. That is in the past, but some of the most memorable times in my
life, were on the lake.

I look forward to it, and also in your inside views, after we all see the
show!
--
Jim in NC


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