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Old August 19th 04, 11:16 PM
Matt Whiting
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Juan Jimenez wrote:

Matt Whiting wrote in
:


The old wood sailing ships took a lot more beating on a...


I was talking about the hull hitting the ways. Hitting a wave at
15-20 knots is a LOT of force.



Excuse me, but who is truly clueless here? Since when did old wood sailing
ships travel at anywhere near 15-20 knots? Maybe down the business side of
a tsunami with a cat 5 hurricane tailwind...

Juan


I didn't say the ship was traveling at 15 - 20 knots. Ships have a
certain speed. Waves also have a certain speed. Ships also rise and
fall in heavy seas. It is the vector sum of all of these that
determines the impact velocity. If a ship is traveling at 8 knots, and
falls 8' into a wave that is traveling at 6 knots in the opposite
direction, the impact force is much greater than the just the 8 knots
speed of the ship. Is this really that hard a concept to understand?


Matt