Your *first* UA-cam video?! It's amazing to realize your channel is only a year and a half old, almost exactly! Your library of videos is already so vast and your videos are such high quality. I loved this video breaking down some of the design aspects from your profile drawing of the ship!
What I liked about this video is that it felt like an actual conversation about the ships features with an expert guide (you), rather than just a lecture.
Hello, My name is André, I am a merchant sailor and model sailor. I loved your channel about ships. It is very important for us lovers, enthusiasts and professionals in the maritime sector. Sailor greetings.
Kind of amazing - you look about 18 but have speech and deportment of a 35-year old. *Thank you* for talking not just 'to the technology' but with us directly.
Great video. My father and grandparents also arrived in Australia on the Strathnaver but right before Christmas in 1958. My grandad kept the tickets and even the dinner menu from the Strathnaver of which I am now in possession of.
This was an incredible first video, most other successful UA-camrs first videos look like something my 9year old could do.. I’m truly impressed, your passion shows through and I have really enjoyed binging your videos the last couple weeks Keep up the great work!
Not even half-way through and already blow away with the amount of factual and photographic detail poured into this, I hope research and such flawless presentation will persevere. Keep up the lovely work and greetings from South Australia!
Fascinating....I've always loved those four stack ocean liners...with their 'yacht like' lines. So much more impressive and beautiful than the top heavy cruise ships today.
yeah but I think the two stack and even single stack ones are even better. the door stacks still almost brutal in comparison. not the later wide, stubby twin stacks, I hate those. just a decent, turn of the century double barrel like the Oceanic or others from the same period.
@@justforever96 Most modern cruise ships especially the large ones look like ugly floating council flats. Makes me wonder if the designers are actualy deliberately trying to make the ugliest thing they can.
@@bobbyrayofthefamilysmith24 A saw someone referring to these as "apartment block in a bath tub" and since then can't shake that picture out of my head anymore. XD
Your illustrations of all the liners I've seen are incredibly wonderful...sharp, clean, detailed, precise and absolutely beautiful. A great deal of appreciation is due to you and your spell-binding remarkable illustrations and detailed information...a treasure trove for anyone interested in the subject of ocean liners. I wouldn't be a bit surprised if some world-class maritime organization would treasure obtaining your illustrations and information for permanent record to be available for generations to come. Again, I'm amazed at your meticulous and beautiful illustrations. Bravo, young chap...!!
Great video post here, I've always loved the look of all the 4 stacker ocean liners, particularly of the Cunard line. Gave him a sleeky racy look, particularly with the funnels more balance towards the front of the ship versus White Stars centrally placed stacks. You seem to be angled a little bit more too to give the impression that these were fast.... which indeed they were.
Love Lusitania info as my grandpa was a passenger when she was torpedoed. I’ll have to look around your channel a bit for more! Thanks for the well done video…
Mike- I am SO GLAD I have discovered your videos! I am a retired US naval officer (steam ship chief engineer and destroyer captain) who is a cruise ship speaker who goes by the nickname "The Ship Guy." I find your videos to be OUTSTANDING and I'd like to stay in touch with you. One tiny "nit pick" about this one: in it, you state that some of the fresh water condensed in the main condensers is purposely pumped overboard. This is not the case...ever. Fresh water on steam ships is a very precious commodity and it is never pumped over the side unless contaminated or tanks are full. Small point, but one that should be made. I look forward to you next video(s) !!!
Fascinating! I love seeing all the little ways in which she was different from the Titanic. I'm with you on liking all the 'clutter' atop the deck, especially the 'towers' for each class and the gangways connecting them. Makes the ship seem like a big jungle gym.
Mike, I've been watching your videos for a while now, and LOVE them, but I just now discovered this one; your very first. I have to say you did a truly excellent job on it! If you hadn't mentioned in the video that it was your first, I would not have been able to tell. You do absolutely great work!
The lusitania was a really sleek elegant vessel I love the gold accents towards her stern and her interiors were unrivaled even by titanic in my opinion definitely one of my favourite ocean liners her fate was not what one would wish among such an amazing ship
Fantastic video! Looking forward to the next one! Particularly fascinating as my great grandfather served aboard Lusitania (and many other liners sailing out of here in Liverpool) as a fireman
Your great-grandfather must've been tough as nails. The stokeholders on British ships, mostly from Liverpool, were known and feared in every port. They were legendary, and decidedly not to be f-... uh...messed with. That's some cool heritage to have, and something to be proud of. May he rest in peace.
The Sea water inlets and outlets are used to cool the Main Condenser. The Steam from the turbines exits into the stm side of the Mn Cond. It's filled with tubes and has a chest on each side. The sea water flows in one side and out the other thru the tubes. The stm comes into contact with the tubes and condenses into condensate, (distilled water). The Main Condenser is a pressure vessel, so as the stm condenses it forms a vacuum inside the stm side of the Mn Cond. This allows a great deal of additional work to be extracted from the stm as it passes thro the turbine. Main Condensers operate at near perfect vacuum. The stm exiting the LP turbine is under 100 deg f because of the low pressure. The distilled water used in the stm cycle must be reused. The Chief Engineer on any steam ship is always thinking about water. How much the ship is making, how much the ship is using and how much the ship has in storage. Boiler water and hotel services water.
Thanks that was a fun video today I just bought one of your 1/200 of the Titanic from your website. Have you done a video about the Titanic design like this one?
Wow - been so-enjoying all your videos, and it's pretty amazing that thi is the _first_ one, because you have such a great flow and knack for communicating, right from the start.
03:15 Modern cruise ships often have a sort-of "torch" attached to lifebuoys, that also activates on contact with (salt) water. During my time on a cruise ship i learnt that lifebuoys are not always exactly meant to give a person over board something to cling on to. It is rather to generally mark the "place" in the water where a person (presumably) went overboard, so the ship has a point of reference to go back to during a man over board maneuver. After all, it takes several minutes for a ship to do a 180°... Only in "ideal" cases, the person over board can swim to the lifebuoy and cling on to it. And if you, as a passenger or crew see someone over board, you can also throw anything (close) to the person that will presumably float, like a deck chair, a football etc., if there is no lifebuoy close by. As mentioned, the main thing is to give the ship a point of reference.
I absolutely love your channel. As a massive steamship nerd, I eat up information like this. I highly recommend if you don’t already have them, the book series ‘Ocean Liners of the World’ they’re fantastically done reprints of the souvenir issues of The Shipbuilder and they feature many photographs and drawings of these famous ships during construction , as well as in depth details on propelling machinery and have many details drawings of stuff like her steam turbines.
@@OceanlinerDesigns Also one slight correction on my behalf, the books are called 'Ocean Liners of the Past' just picked up my copy of the Lusitania to go through it again. They've also done Mauretania, Titanic & Olympic, and even Aquitaina got her own souvenir issue.
I watched your videos on Olympic's changes after Titanic's sinking, and the building of RMS Queen Mary. Somewhere along the way, I bookmarked your channel for a sub review; that means that I want to go through your videos and see whether I want to sub to you or not. I'm very glad to report that I do! I don't have enough knowledgeable people in my sub list about ocean liners, especially the nitty-gritty details that I never noticed before. Like the camber, or the whistle pulleys. You've got a new sub! I'll be looking through whatever else you have and gladly looking for any further videos I like! Thanks for all your hard work!
@@OceanlinerDesigns An idea would be a look at the changes made to lifeboats after the Titanic and also one detailing the wartime changes. Cheers Martin
Well done! Densely informative yet entertaining at the same time. I loved the insights shared by the presenter. Fantastic illustrations. I appreciated the highlighting of the elements of design as he spoke of them. It made the commentary easier to follow. A winner all around!
Gday. This is an amazing channel. I really love how much detail you have discussed and I have learned so much maritime/nautical/ships vocab from you. And Aussie too! New fav channel hands down mate
The lighted marker if thrown out when the man overboard happens, it will provide a good beacon for the ship to turn around and return too for the search and rescue.
They were discontinued because they caught fire accidentally too often owing to the dangerous nature of the phosphorus in the presence of seawater spray. Great idea poorly executed. The newest idea is a strobe light with a saltwater activated battery attached to a life preserver or vest.
Also Mike, one of the big differences between Mauretania and Lusitania is that Lustania had the hinged top ventilators (which proved to be troublesome) while Mauretania had all cowl type ventilators. It's truly sad that Lusitania is now just a collapsed stain on the ocean floor, which Titanic will be some day within the next 20 years, but Lusitania is almost absolutely undiscernable in her grave whereas Titanic is clearly Titanic and Britannic is almost absolutely preserved after being underwater for more than 100 years in the Aegean Sea. It's a truly sad sight to see Ken Marschall's paintings of Lusitania's wreck. I have been researching Titanic and maritime history in general for the last 33 years and I have constructed a Titanic website when I was 12 years old using nothing but Windows Notepad and I taught myself HTML code by viewing other websites. I used many of his paintings for my website, but that's one man that I'd love to meet someday and just shake his hand.
Hi there! I most certainly did enjoy your first video and would never have known it was your first had you not told us. That means it was excellent! However, I did spot what think was one one erroneous bit. I’m a marine engineer by trade and can say that we never toss exceed fresh water overboard. Excess condensate is stored in what’s called a “make-up feed” or “reserve feed” tank, for use when system water needs to be replenished. So those upper ports are for the condenser circulation water overboard. My guess anyway, not really knowing the exact details of her engine room, but anyway.... I’ve binge-watching you for weeks now! Thanks!
I've been watching a few videos of yours, mate, and this one popped up randomly, and it's your _first_ video? Damn! Lusitania's a ship I don't know much about, but this is just really interesting, also fun to see another Aussie sailing about :P Good videos all around!
Great video, Luisitania was my first model! I'd love to see one on the youngest sister - Aquitania, like the Britannic - she was built after the initial two so had quite a lot of design enhancements, and unique elements compared to the others. Hey why not do the Britannic too!
Man I just stumbled onto your channel a couple days ago and I've been listening to / watching every video back to back during the day ever since. It's wild that this was your first video and it's just as well done as your most recent ones. Keep it up because I'm definitely going to be looking forward to your next upload!!!!!!
I've watched a few of your other vids before this one and you have adapted quickly in front of the camera. Good content delivered in a really good way. You are very easy to listen to and I like the fact that you're not racing the narrative. Thanks for your work.
Hi, Mike! I'm glad I found your channel and I just now subscribed. I've seen your video on the Titanic then found this one. Wow! I respect and admire the amount of time and effort that goes into your videos. I've been an ocean liner enthusiast since I saw "The Poseidon Adventure" on Christmas Day of 1972 when I was 11 but you had information and photos that are new even to me! Very informative and entertaining. I know that hindsight is 20/20 but when I see photos of the Lusitania there just seems to be a sense that something bad is going to happen, there's a foreboding that goes with that ship. Maybe just my imagination... Something I'd like to suggest for an upcoming video is one about the post-war Ile de France. You probably have seen the 1960 movie "The Last Voyage" that was filmed aboard the Ile de France just before she was scrapped. Some liner lovers hate the movie but I see it as a terrific movie and one that provides an extraordinary amount of documentation about the ship on which it was filmed. The camera takes us from all the way down in the boiler room up to the bridge and top of the ship and so much of the interior is shown. "The Last Voyage" is a treasure chest of visual information. I'm looking forward to watching your next video!
I saw the Poseidon Adventure in 1972 at the Civic Theatre in Auckland and my whole family became ship enthusiasts, in fact the next year we went on a 3 week cruise on RHMS Patris.
fantastic work !!!! impressive and very smart : that richness in details !!!! thank you for sharing because my Lucy passion still goes ... only stronger ! :)
Agreed! Absolute genius and the Great Eastern was just so ahead of its time - arguably too far ahead. The book was a cracking read too as it covered his work on the railways, I'll get the details if you are interested. ~Mike
Mr Brady your pieces on ocean liners are excellent and you illustrations spot on. What caught my attention though was your wonderful voice. My ex of 25yrs was a TV new journalist in SanFrancisco and I could hear that your voice has a rare quality that makes it particularly pleasant to listen too and would be excellent for voice overs, recorded books, etc
I'm struck by the simplicity of the ocean liners amenities. Like shuffleboard or other deck games you allude to, and not having much else. Your research and amount of information put into these videos is awesome, and makes me think on how I would fit into a different historical era. I would love to think I'd be perfectly happy playing shuffleboard, or strutting up and down the promenades, or sitting on a deck chair or in a nice parlor somewhere with a book or two, but I also know I get very motion sick. Still, I can't fathom cruise ships of today (I have never been on one, never have had any desire), because I would get so overwhelmed with the sheer size and things to do.
I sure am enjoying this channel. I have this ship on my to do list. I think her stacks were painted black during WW1. That is the paint job I want for this model. I wish she had a Dazzle paint scheme, I enjoy painting the Dazzle paint schemes. I painted nine WW2 Aircraft Carrier's with Dazzle paint schemes and I enjoy every one of them. Thank you so much for coming up with this classic subject, thank you for your dedication. You look like a engineer from the time period, all you need are some sleeve garters. Have you seen the movie 1900? Keep up the outstanding work Sir.
Thanks so much for the kind words James! I noticed you have been posting some other comments on my Olympic video but they are not being published for some reason. Try writing to me via email at michael@linerdesigns.com :) ~Mike
Your knowledge of ships is very exquisite and detailed. I think you might surpass William H Miller in some of the details of some of the aspects of Lusitania.
Oh my god. So you are the guy behind the amazing Detailed Drawings of White Star (and other Ships) that I want so bad to print and frame in my office. xDDD I love your work so much! Trully inspiring!!
Your *first* UA-cam video?! It's amazing to realize your channel is only a year and a half old, almost exactly! Your library of videos is already so vast and your videos are such high quality. I loved this video breaking down some of the design aspects from your profile drawing of the ship!
What I liked about this video is that it felt like an actual conversation about the ships features with an expert guide (you), rather than just a lecture.
Hello,
My name is André, I am a merchant sailor and model sailor. I loved your channel about ships. It is very important for us lovers, enthusiasts and professionals in the maritime sector. Sailor greetings.
Kind of amazing - you look about 18 but have speech and deportment of a 35-year old. *Thank you* for talking not just 'to the technology' but with us directly.
Too kind Arne, nice to hear my youthful looks are still working for me!
~Mike
Finally a good looking, charismatic nerd
Hahaha😁😅
I think they guy from The Great Big Move is pretty cute too. He doesn’t show his face much though.
@@OfficialLeoMejia how does he look?
Indy from the Great War is a handsome fellow if I had to add someone.
@@OfficialLeoMejia u gay?
Great video! I love the amount of detail you've put into this.
Thankyou sir!
I'm a big fan of Brunel. I'd love to see a video on him and his creations. He truly was a renaissance man.
Subscribe to the part time explorer
why is the wreck of the lusitania all fucked up?
@@oldtech8520 I recommend Yamato30 channel for finding out about that
This was your _first_ video? Your quality has definitely improved but damn man, you started strong.
Hey thanks so much mate! Yep it seems like a century ago now haha. I'm sure you can relate when you think back to your first videos and music!
Still a great vid, keep rockin man
Great video.
My father and grandparents also arrived in Australia on the Strathnaver but right before Christmas in 1958.
My grandad kept the tickets and even the dinner menu from the Strathnaver of which I am now in possession of.
That's great! Wonderful treasures to keep in the family :)
This was an incredible first video, most other successful UA-camrs first videos look like something my 9year old could do.. I’m truly impressed, your passion shows through and I have really enjoyed binging your videos the last couple weeks
Keep up the great work!
Lusitania and Mauretania. Two absolutely beautiful vessels. Lean, graceful, and powerful.
Lusitania holds a special place in my heart as it's named after the Roman providence where my country Portugal now is
Not even half-way through and already blow away with the amount of factual and photographic detail poured into this, I hope research and such flawless presentation will persevere. Keep up the lovely work and greetings from South Australia!
Very much appreciated James! Nice to hear from a fellow Aussie
~Mike
Terrific maiden video. Mike, love seeing how you have matured into your role as such a knowledgeable yet charming expert on such an esoteric subject.
Thanks John! It is fun going back and watching my old videos every now and then, even if I do cringe a bit :)
Boy am I glad you have continued making videos, and honing your craft! Love this one and enjoy everything you post.
Fascinating....I've always loved those four stack ocean liners...with their 'yacht like' lines. So much more impressive and beautiful than the top heavy cruise ships today.
yeah but I think the two stack and even single stack ones are even better. the door stacks still almost brutal in comparison. not the later wide, stubby twin stacks, I hate those. just a decent, turn of the century double barrel like the Oceanic or others from the same period.
@@justforever96 Most modern cruise ships especially the large ones look like ugly floating council flats. Makes me wonder if the designers are actualy deliberately trying to make the ugliest thing they can.
@@bobbyrayofthefamilysmith24 A saw someone referring to these as "apartment block in a bath tub" and since then can't shake that picture out of my head anymore. XD
Your illustrations of all the liners I've seen are incredibly wonderful...sharp, clean, detailed, precise and absolutely beautiful. A great deal of appreciation is due to you and your spell-binding remarkable illustrations and detailed information...a treasure trove for anyone interested in the subject of ocean liners. I wouldn't be a bit surprised if some world-class maritime organization would treasure obtaining your illustrations and information for permanent record to be available for generations to come. Again, I'm amazed at your meticulous and beautiful illustrations. Bravo, young chap...!!
Great video post here, I've always loved the look of all the 4 stacker ocean liners, particularly of the Cunard line. Gave him a sleeky racy look, particularly with the funnels more balance towards the front of the ship versus White Stars centrally placed stacks. You seem to be angled a little bit more too to give the impression that these were fast.... which indeed they were.
Love Lusitania info as my grandpa was a passenger when she was torpedoed. I’ll have to look around your channel a bit for more! Thanks for the well done video…
0:00 A legend was born, no introduction just straight in to the facts
Mike- I am SO GLAD I have discovered your videos! I am a retired US naval officer (steam ship chief engineer and destroyer captain) who is a cruise ship speaker who goes by the nickname "The Ship Guy." I find your videos to be OUTSTANDING and I'd like to stay in touch with you. One tiny "nit pick" about this one: in it, you state that some of the fresh water condensed in the main condensers is purposely pumped overboard. This is not the case...ever. Fresh water on steam ships is a very precious commodity and it is never pumped over the side unless contaminated or tanks are full. Small point, but one that should be made. I look forward to you next video(s) !!!
Two Mikes don't make a right.
Fascinating! I love seeing all the little ways in which she was different from the Titanic. I'm with you on liking all the 'clutter' atop the deck, especially the 'towers' for each class and the gangways connecting them. Makes the ship seem like a big jungle gym.
Wow, this is the first video and as good as any other one. Congrats of 400k subscribers! You deserve it. 👏🏻
Mike, I've been watching your videos for a while now, and LOVE them, but I just now discovered this one; your very first. I have to say you did a truly excellent job on it! If you hadn't mentioned in the video that it was your first, I would not have been able to tell. You do absolutely great work!
Haha thankyou so much! You have to start somewhere :)
Loved it. Lusitania is probably my favorite liner of that era.
The lusitania was a really sleek elegant vessel I love the gold accents towards her stern and her interiors were unrivaled even by titanic in my opinion definitely one of my favourite ocean liners her fate was not what one would wish among such an amazing ship
Little what you would know is would would grow to be a wonderful channel thanks for all of the good videos. If only you would have known
Fantastic video!
Looking forward to the next one!
Particularly fascinating as my great grandfather served aboard Lusitania (and many other liners sailing out of here in Liverpool) as a fireman
That was a tough job! I'm glad you liked it, I'm planning on examining Lusitania's machinery in more detail soon.
~Mike
Your great-grandfather must've been tough as nails. The stokeholders on British ships, mostly from Liverpool, were known and feared in every port. They were legendary, and decidedly not to be f-... uh...messed with. That's some cool heritage to have, and something to be proud of. May he rest in peace.
I love the Lusitania she is my favorite ship. And the way you made the ship is amazing. And I think you are amazing at drawing ships.
Magnifique. I never noticed the sloping angle of the aft docking bridge before! You really do learn something everyday.
Beautiful Lusitania.❤️
Wishing LUSITANIA was going to be a Hollywood movie and LUSITANIA can be a better movie than TITANIC!
Oh man the first video.
Love it
The Sea water inlets and outlets are used to cool the Main Condenser. The Steam from the turbines exits into the stm side of the Mn Cond. It's filled with tubes and has a chest on each side. The sea water flows in one side and out the other thru the tubes. The stm comes into contact with the tubes and condenses into condensate, (distilled water). The Main Condenser is a pressure vessel, so as the stm condenses it forms a vacuum inside the stm side of the Mn Cond. This allows a great deal of additional work to be extracted from the stm as it passes thro the turbine. Main Condensers operate at near perfect vacuum. The stm exiting the LP turbine is under 100 deg f because of the low pressure. The distilled water used in the stm cycle must be reused. The Chief Engineer on any steam ship is always thinking about water. How much the ship is making, how much the ship is using and how much the ship has in storage. Boiler water and hotel services water.
Its amazing how much youve grown in the year or so ive been watching you
you have come a long way, I have been watching a lot of your videos lately, and your confidence has gotten a lot better
Thanks that was a fun video today I just bought one of your 1/200 of the Titanic from your website. Have you done a video about the Titanic design like this one?
10/10.
Great video and you have the best voice for this sort of thing.
Wow - been so-enjoying all your videos, and it's pretty amazing that thi is the _first_ one, because you have such a great flow and knack for communicating, right from the start.
great work and great video Michael !
03:15 Modern cruise ships often have a sort-of "torch" attached to lifebuoys, that also activates on contact with (salt) water. During my time on a cruise ship i learnt that lifebuoys are not always exactly meant to give a person over board something to cling on to. It is rather to generally mark the "place" in the water where a person (presumably) went overboard, so the ship has a point of reference to go back to during a man over board maneuver. After all, it takes several minutes for a ship to do a 180°... Only in "ideal" cases, the person over board can swim to the lifebuoy and cling on to it.
And if you, as a passenger or crew see someone over board, you can also throw anything (close) to the person that will presumably float, like a deck chair, a football etc., if there is no lifebuoy close by. As mentioned, the main thing is to give the ship a point of reference.
I absolutely love your channel. As a massive steamship nerd, I eat up information like this. I highly recommend if you don’t already have them, the book series ‘Ocean Liners of the World’ they’re fantastically done reprints of the souvenir issues of The Shipbuilder and they feature many photographs and drawings of these famous ships during construction , as well as in depth details on propelling machinery and have many details drawings of stuff like her steam turbines.
Great recommendation, I will be looking into this thanks!
~Mike
@@OceanlinerDesigns
Also one slight correction on my behalf, the books are called 'Ocean Liners of the Past' just picked up my copy of the Lusitania to go through it again. They've also done Mauretania, Titanic & Olympic, and even Aquitaina got her own souvenir issue.
Your quality just absolutely skyrocketed
I watched your videos on Olympic's changes after Titanic's sinking, and the building of RMS Queen Mary. Somewhere along the way, I bookmarked your channel for a sub review; that means that I want to go through your videos and see whether I want to sub to you or not.
I'm very glad to report that I do! I don't have enough knowledgeable people in my sub list about ocean liners, especially the nitty-gritty details that I never noticed before. Like the camber, or the whistle pulleys.
You've got a new sub! I'll be looking through whatever else you have and gladly looking for any further videos I like!
Thanks for all your hard work!
Glad I made the cut, welcome aboard!
~Mike
Great to see the Lusi getting the attention she deserves.
Agreed! Thanks very much.
~Mike
@@OceanlinerDesigns An idea would be a look at the changes made to lifeboats after the Titanic and also one detailing the wartime changes. Cheers Martin
Just discovered this gem of a channel. Subscribed and I think this is the last one I haven't seen :)
Welcome aboard! This was my first haha!
~Mike
I was hooked on this, Lusitania was a beautiful ship but the creator of these videos.. he's just as beautiful haha!
Amazing video, I can say this is a jewel on youtube.
Well done! Densely informative yet entertaining at the same time. I loved the insights shared by the presenter. Fantastic illustrations. I appreciated the highlighting of the elements of design as he spoke of them. It made the commentary easier to follow. A winner all around!
Thanks for watching, John!
Stunning
Really love your presentations, Mike…wonderful work!
Thank you for explaining what the night lifebuoy was. I have seen them on a lot of RN ships and always wondered what they were.
Your commentary is always well-written and sharply presented! Thanks! Olympic or Aquitania next please.
I've been enjoying your work for the last three or so months. Glad to finally see your first video.
All the best to you and your team.
A great video and exquisite illustration. This was a great deal to listen to - thank you!
Gday. This is an amazing channel. I really love how much detail you have discussed and I have learned so much maritime/nautical/ships vocab from you. And Aussie too! New fav channel hands down mate
Cheers for the kind words Todd and welcome aboard!
The lighted marker if thrown out when the man overboard happens, it will provide a good beacon for the ship to turn around and return too for the search and rescue.
They were discontinued because they caught fire accidentally too often owing to the dangerous nature of the phosphorus in the presence of seawater spray. Great idea poorly executed. The newest idea is a strobe light with a saltwater activated battery attached to a life preserver or vest.
Very well done. I appreciate all the fine details and little bits of information.
Mike I remember this video so well . Always so well done .I congratulate you on how your channel has grown over the last years .
Also Mike, one of the big differences between Mauretania and Lusitania is that Lustania had the hinged top ventilators (which proved to be troublesome) while Mauretania had all cowl type ventilators. It's truly sad that Lusitania is now just a collapsed stain on the ocean floor, which Titanic will be some day within the next 20 years, but Lusitania is almost absolutely undiscernable in her grave whereas Titanic is clearly Titanic and Britannic is almost absolutely preserved after being underwater for more than 100 years in the Aegean Sea. It's a truly sad sight to see Ken Marschall's paintings of Lusitania's wreck. I have been researching Titanic and maritime history in general for the last 33 years and I have constructed a Titanic website when I was 12 years old using nothing but Windows Notepad and I taught myself HTML code by viewing other websites. I used many of his paintings for my website, but that's one man that I'd love to meet someday and just shake his hand.
Great job-well written and spoken.You have my dream job as well.
Hi there! I most certainly did enjoy your first video and would never have known it was your first had you not told us. That means it was excellent! However, I did spot what think was one one erroneous bit. I’m a marine engineer by trade and can say that we never toss exceed fresh water overboard. Excess condensate is stored in what’s called a “make-up feed” or “reserve feed” tank, for use when system water needs to be replenished. So those upper ports are for the condenser circulation water overboard. My guess anyway, not really knowing the exact details of her engine room, but anyway.... I’ve binge-watching you for weeks now! Thanks!
Finally spotted your first video. Nice! Always good to learn from you.
This channel is by far my favourite. Congratulations for all the hard work.
Brilliant Chris, thanks so much!
~Mike
So much talent and knowledge!!!! Keeps videos coming!
I've been watching a few videos of yours, mate, and this one popped up randomly, and it's your _first_ video? Damn! Lusitania's a ship I don't know much about, but this is just really interesting, also fun to see another Aussie sailing about :P Good videos all around!
A legend was born.
Great video, Luisitania was my first model! I'd love to see one on the youngest sister - Aquitania, like the Britannic - she was built after the initial two so had quite a lot of design enhancements, and unique elements compared to the others. Hey why not do the Britannic too!
After seeing so many of your videos, I got to see where it all started! Keep up the good work my friend!
The technology and innovations of the day are remarkable to accomodatethe pasenger. Keep up the good work!
Man I just stumbled onto your channel a couple days ago and I've been listening to / watching every video back to back during the day ever since. It's wild that this was your first video and it's just as well done as your most recent ones. Keep it up because I'm definitely going to be looking forward to your next upload!!!!!!
I would like to see next the aquitania, not just for detail but to at least figure out a way to bring her back or at least half of it
lovely channel, great presenter, a lot of nice, interesting details and fine illustrations. well done.
I've watched a few of your other vids before this one and you have adapted quickly in front of the camera. Good content delivered in a really good way. You are very easy to listen to and I like the fact that you're not racing the narrative. Thanks for your work.
Thanks Robert! Sometimes it is a conscious effort to slow down the talking!
~Mike
I love this UA-cam channel.
Loved it, great the way you picked out items to detail.
Have you watched 1899 on Netflix? The ship's exterior is like Lusitania and Titanic had goth child lol I love it.
Very good. Very well done. Look forward to all future videos..
the channel i always wanted
Aha thanks for watching!
~Mike
Hi, Mike! I'm glad I found your channel and I just now subscribed. I've seen your video on the Titanic then found this one. Wow! I respect and admire the amount of time and effort that goes into your videos. I've been an ocean liner enthusiast since I saw "The Poseidon Adventure" on Christmas Day of 1972 when I was 11 but you had information and photos that are new even to me! Very informative and entertaining. I know that hindsight is 20/20 but when I see photos of the Lusitania there just seems to be a sense that something bad is going to happen, there's a foreboding that goes with that ship. Maybe just my imagination...
Something I'd like to suggest for an upcoming video is one about the post-war Ile de France. You probably have seen the 1960 movie "The Last Voyage" that was filmed aboard the Ile de France just before she was scrapped. Some liner lovers hate the movie but I see it as a terrific movie and one that provides an extraordinary amount of documentation about the ship on which it was filmed. The camera takes us from all the way down in the boiler room up to the bridge and top of the ship and so much of the interior is shown. "The Last Voyage" is a treasure chest of visual information.
I'm looking forward to watching your next video!
Sorry for the late reply Andrew but thanks so much for the kind words!
~Mike
I saw the Poseidon Adventure in 1972 at the Civic Theatre in Auckland and my whole family became ship enthusiasts, in fact the next year we went on a 3 week cruise on RHMS Patris.
@@LoganLavery I saw it at the Cinerama Theatre in Wellington about the same time. :)
fantastic work !!!! impressive and very smart : that richness in details !!!! thank you for sharing because my Lucy passion still goes ... only stronger ! :)
Thanks very much, she is an easy thing to be passionate about for you!
~Mike
Only two years? I feel he's been around my entire life at this point.
Nice to see Lusitania get some love.
I loved this. Definitely looking forward to more.
Awesome Video, great attention to detail!
Great video! I simply love this stuff. I look forward to more of these.
You look soooo cute with that kinda messy hair and the shirt collar unbottoned 🤭
Great video! I watch them all, they're amazing!
Aw. Your first video ❤. You’ve come so far and love your videos
Amazing liner....Thank you!
Also, I love the picture of the Emden in the background :)
That book on Brunel behind you :O
You should really make a video on Brunel, he essentially invented the concept of the passenger ocean liner.
Agreed! Absolute genius and the Great Eastern was just so ahead of its time - arguably too far ahead. The book was a cracking read too as it covered his work on the railways, I'll get the details if you are interested.
~Mike
Mr Brady your pieces on ocean liners are excellent and you illustrations spot on. What caught my attention though was your wonderful voice. My ex of 25yrs was a TV new journalist in SanFrancisco and I could hear that your voice has a rare quality that makes it particularly pleasant to listen too and would be excellent for voice overs, recorded books, etc
I'd love to see a video on Brunel since I'm a big fan of his! He was one incredible designer. Ships, railroads, tunnels...
Isambard Kingdom Brunel.
With one of the most awesome names ever, greatness was just about inevitable.
I can watch you in your videos all day
I loved the video, and the drawing. Keep making content, (I'll be watching it)
I'm struck by the simplicity of the ocean liners amenities. Like shuffleboard or other deck games you allude to, and not having much else. Your research and amount of information put into these videos is awesome, and makes me think on how I would fit into a different historical era. I would love to think I'd be perfectly happy playing shuffleboard, or strutting up and down the promenades, or sitting on a deck chair or in a nice parlor somewhere with a book or two, but I also know I get very motion sick. Still, I can't fathom cruise ships of today (I have never been on one, never have had any desire), because I would get so overwhelmed with the sheer size and things to do.
and this was were the legend was born
Great video sir, should make a great series. Looking forward to the next installment.
Thankyou! I will be making a few more so stay tuned!
~Mike
I sure am enjoying this channel. I have this ship on my to do list. I think her stacks were painted black during WW1. That is the paint job I want for this model. I wish she had a Dazzle paint scheme, I enjoy painting the Dazzle paint schemes. I painted nine WW2 Aircraft Carrier's with Dazzle paint schemes and I enjoy every one of them. Thank you so much for coming up with this classic subject, thank you for your dedication. You look like a engineer from the time period, all you need are some sleeve garters. Have you seen the movie 1900? Keep up the outstanding work Sir.
Thanks so much for the kind words James! I noticed you have been posting some other comments on my Olympic video but they are not being published for some reason. Try writing to me via email at michael@linerdesigns.com :)
~Mike
The funnel tensioners allowed for thermal expansion.
Your knowledge of ships is very exquisite and detailed. I think you might surpass William H Miller in some of the details of some of the aspects of Lusitania.
That is very kind indeed thankyou!
~Mike
Your videos are brilliant, you're a regular Ken Marshall mate. Love from NZ.
Wow, too kind! Hi from across the pond!
~Mike
So interesting! Loved this! ✌🏻🙂✌🏻
Oh my god. So you are the guy behind the amazing Detailed Drawings of White Star (and other Ships) that I want so bad to print and frame in my office. xDDD I love your work so much! Trully inspiring!!