NTSB B-Roll - Aerial Imagery of Francis Scott Key Bridge and Cargo Ship Dali

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  • Опубліковано 25 бер 2024
  • March 26, 2024: NTSB B-Roll of the March 26
    Francis Scott Key Bridge that was struck by
    Cargo Ship Dali in Baltimore, Maryland.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,2 тис.

  • @jessicam5712
    @jessicam5712 Місяць тому +526

    Now we have to wait patiently for Brick Immortar to make a video about this

    • @readmorebooksidiots
      @readmorebooksidiots Місяць тому

      Plainly Difficult is probably working on his script for one too

    • @heavyweight6440
      @heavyweight6440 Місяць тому +25

      This is the best comment. #BIUltras

    • @AMacLeod426
      @AMacLeod426 Місяць тому +9

      Beat me to it...

    • @ferris-fam
      @ferris-fam Місяць тому +3

      yessssssss

    • @heavyweight6440
      @heavyweight6440 Місяць тому +38

      @@readmorebooksidiots I don't think anyone will have a video out within the next 1-2 years. NTSB has to undergo all the investigation stuff, a lot of documents, voice recordings, videos etc. have to be examined etc. That stuff takes time. This is gonna be a long wait :-( as always.
      Look at Mentour Pilot. He just made a video about MH 370, which crashed exactly 10 years ago. Over the last 10 years, new stuff and information is coming out to this day. In his video he refers to two investigations that were published like just a year ago.

  • @willowsloughdx
    @willowsloughdx Місяць тому +278

    One reason why huge container ships like Dali are so economical to operate is that they are powered by a single, massive engine. Lose that engine and the ship loses the ability to navigate. New bridges are expensive. Perhaps it is time to mandate that similar ships must be escorted by two tugs when passing under vulnerable infrastructure.

    • @heavyweight6440
      @heavyweight6440 Місяць тому +16

      I know nothing about the Dali, but I cannot image that it doesnt have any redundant systems like backup generators that are just in place, to power hydraulic systems or rudders, to make the ship at least manouverable, if the main engine fails. But that would drive costs... maybe you are right.

    • @fuzzOverlord
      @fuzzOverlord Місяць тому +17

      I had pretty much assumed it was a requirement for tugs to steer big ships out of tight harbors. Apparently I assumed wrong.

    • @thelegendoflivz
      @thelegendoflivz Місяць тому +9

      idk if a tug could veer it off course in time... or at all. ships aren't like planes. They are constantly battling the force of nature that is water.

    • @cmartin_ok
      @cmartin_ok Місяць тому +10

      Perhaps, like commercial airplanes, it's time to insist that big ships have at least 2 engines (and 2 propellers)? RIP to all those who lost their lives in this tragedy and condolences to those they have left behind

    • @carbonking53
      @carbonking53 Місяць тому +45

      Many US ports do mandate a tug escort in and out of critical areas. This one does not. Baltimore is known for it's ineffective and unscrupulous government.

  • @skyvenrazgriz8226
    @skyvenrazgriz8226 Місяць тому +276

    Well this footage gives a better feeling for the scale of this disaster.

    • @ElDJReturn
      @ElDJReturn Місяць тому +21

      Most definitely. Amazing how the ship took out that big pillar, but then again, I've see towns smaller than that ship.

    • @JohnHallgren
      @JohnHallgren Місяць тому +3

      The collapsed span was about 1/2 mile long, with center span 1200 feet.

    • @youtubeSuckssNow
      @youtubeSuckssNow Місяць тому +1

      ​@@JohnHallgrenwas the middle like 170-200ft clearance?

    • @JohnHallgren
      @JohnHallgren Місяць тому +3

      @@youtubeSuckssNow Wikipedia says it was 185 feet…

    • @adam_mccullough
      @adam_mccullough Місяць тому

      STFU no it doesn't

  • @SD40Fan_Jason
    @SD40Fan_Jason Місяць тому +118

    As a Floridian, this is a stark reminder of the 1980 disaster in Tampa Bay, though the casualties were much more severe. A Greyhound bus and its passengers were among the casualties in that tragic and avoidable incident.

    • @lucmarchand617
      @lucmarchand617 Місяць тому +1

      Yes,it was big news calgary alberta greyhound was big on that time.the father of stevie nick fleetwood mack work greyhound HO he was piss when people died on bus just sad.this wreck why was no tugs or caisson protect base bridge is insane but sad again.😮

    • @telesniper2
      @telesniper2 Місяць тому +5

      @@lucmarchand617 huh????🤔🤔🤔

    • @robertmcnally9305
      @robertmcnally9305 Місяць тому +3

      @@telesniper2I believe this user is referring to the Sunshine Skyway bridge collusion it’s scarily similar

    • @jbutcher1983
      @jbutcher1983 Місяць тому +4

      Avoidable. You said it there. There is no accountability anymore and people are dead while the rich people who run this world are now seeing how it effects their pocket books. Human life means nothing compared to commerce and capitalism.

    • @SD40Fan_Jason
      @SD40Fan_Jason Місяць тому

      @jbutcher1983 you say this as if it's a new concept. Capitalism was built on the bloodshed of serfs and plebians and still is today. Corporate greed has a figure written on sticky notes calculating the value of their human casualties. If the profit margin exceeds the cost of human casualties then they are just the cost of doing business. And it's been that way forever.

  • @user-hm6bn6kw6k
    @user-hm6bn6kw6k Місяць тому +46

    Sensational footage. Thank you so much.

  • @WaynoGur
    @WaynoGur Місяць тому +30

    Thank you for showing this. I live in Southern Arizona and can't grasp the full reality of what this must look like in person.

    • @Christine-uq6sw
      @Christine-uq6sw Місяць тому +1

      Even in this excellent footage, the scale is difficult to grasp. From a 33 foot sailboat a container ship is so big you can just barely wrap your head around the size. Mostly you know your boat wouldn't even be noticed from the perspective of the ship. Basically a mosquito.

  • @fhowland
    @fhowland Місяць тому +56

    Wow this really shows the scale

    • @citronzmoravy2614
      @citronzmoravy2614 Місяць тому

      Wow,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, umíš Vůbec něco jinýho ??????

  • @chrisgardner6677
    @chrisgardner6677 Місяць тому +127

    This footage shows the Port hook (anchor) was dropped, but at 8 knots, it would be like trying to stop your car with your foot on the freeway. Blessings to the families of the lost.

    • @AdmiraalDakdekkers
      @AdmiraalDakdekkers Місяць тому +5

      Is it possible that the anker dropped because the winch was damaged in the collision and it unlocked the anchor?

    • @stgeorgee
      @stgeorgee Місяць тому +8

      @@AdmiraalDakdekkersno. It entire anchor windlass system would have had to been damaged and there are to locks on the anchor chain.

    • @williamjones4483
      @williamjones4483 Місяць тому +11

      @@AdmiraalDakdekkers The anchor was dropped on purpose to try and stop the ship.

    • @HesmiyuMC
      @HesmiyuMC Місяць тому +11

      @@AdmiraalDakdekkersthe anchor line was pulled to the rear indicating it had dropped while in motioned.

    • @nicholaswhitfield9341
      @nicholaswhitfield9341 Місяць тому +12

      Plus it's not the actual anchor itself digging into the sand that holds a ship in place anyway. It's the weight of the huge length of chain dragging on the seafloor. So if there's not enough distance between when they drop the anchor and when they hit the bridge, not enough chain is going to play out to have an effect anyway.

  • @xray606
    @xray606 Місяць тому +76

    A big part of the problem is that these old bridge abutments were never designed with the thought of ships the size of small cities hitting them. That just wasn't a thing back then. And they're only getting bigger.

    • @zyeborm
      @zyeborm Місяць тому +20

      There are concrete dolphins up and down stream of the bridge designed to stop this exact thing. The ship was turning at the perfect rate to dodge them and still hit the pillar. This is a whole lot of bad luck happening all at once.

    • @zakelwe
      @zakelwe Місяць тому +13

      @@zyeborm Design is supposed to stop a whole lot of bad luck, if it doesn't then it is bad design.
      Pier protection would have stopped it but then that costs money, and there are an awful lot of bridges etc in the USA all perhaps needing some money at the moment. Difficult.
      Having said that, this is a big case of "For want of a nail, the kingdom was lost.

    • @dubious6718
      @dubious6718 Місяць тому +1

      @@zyeborm So what you are saying is that ship rammed the pillar on purpose...

    • @zyeborm
      @zyeborm Місяць тому +1

      @@dubious6718 no. Go away fool. Nobody is saying that.

    • @zyeborm
      @zyeborm Місяць тому +7

      @@zakelwe again they had protection. Presumably designed for a worst case runaway collision with enough distance to absorb the energy. Seatbelts don't help all the time, still much better off with them than without even if they aren't perfect.

  • @incubrian
    @incubrian Місяць тому +82

    these tragedies are always a stark reminder that even though we think we build tough things that seem like a fortress of invicibility and protection, things that seem like they'll always just "be there" - those things are really quite fragile in the grand scheme of things.

    • @vindiesel5466
      @vindiesel5466 Місяць тому +2

      Terrorist attack?

    • @bikercowboy1
      @bikercowboy1 Місяць тому +6

      @@vindiesel5466 don`t think so. Look at the history of this ship and you will find out that their where several similar incidents with this ship, engine failure, no electricity etc. . My personal thinking is, that greed for more money and less safety and less costs of handling this ship are the main reason for this disaster.

    • @leopardtiger1022
      @leopardtiger1022 Місяць тому

      Greed for Dollar profits by MAERSK is root cause of such disasters. They use cheap labour from India where poverty and unemployment make life hard for the youth. Big companies like Maersk exploit the poor Indians. Maersk overloads the ships and pays less attention to seaworthibess of their chartered ships. The companies in si gapore and Mumbai are mostly owned or operated by corrupt greedy opportunistic Indians.

    • @Howsoonisnow-to5nv
      @Howsoonisnow-to5nv Місяць тому +1

      indeed, as are we

    • @donbrashsux
      @donbrashsux Місяць тому +1

      I’m surprised that fully laden ship didn’t ripout all what it hit and keep going
      Imagine the weight she has onboard

  • @tonyrosa7944
    @tonyrosa7944 Місяць тому +108

    ... Thankfully the authorities had a couple of minutes to alert the right people to stop traffic in both directions before they reached the bridge, or this would have been a lot worse. It's going to make the already notoriously terrible traffic in the Baltimore area, a complete nightmare for a long time. It's a real shame and it goes to show, you just never know when a total catastrophe will strike... R.I.P. to those who lost their lives. 😢

    • @randbarrett8706
      @randbarrett8706 Місяць тому +4

      I imagine there will be a thorough investigation into whether anybody could’ve seen this coming

    • @brianl-pm8tt
      @brianl-pm8tt Місяць тому +6

      There were cars and workers on the bridge tho right?

    • @MattH-wg7ou
      @MattH-wg7ou Місяць тому +9

      Can you imagine if this had happened during rush hour?!

    • @gcvincent3989
      @gcvincent3989 Місяць тому +9

      Yet a construction crew of eight workers on the bridge plunged to their deaths.

    • @markfranz536
      @markfranz536 Місяць тому +9

      i can tell you the traffic today was insane. it took almost 45 minutes to travel about 6 miles on my way home. i live about 10 minutes from the bridge and ive been across it it several thousand times over the years. its a sad day for us here in Baltimore

  • @Controllerhead
    @Controllerhead Місяць тому +24

    bruh that lone safety cone 😂😂😂
    Incredible footage honestly. My brain can't really process the scale of this; it looks more like my 3yr old nephew just played with his toys than it does reality. Thanks for capturing and sharing this!

    • @LeeAllen337
      @LeeAllen337 Місяць тому +1

      Maybe, just maybe, if someone on the bridge stood with that cone when the bridge went down, would they have survived? I think it's possible.

    • @citronzmoravy2614
      @citronzmoravy2614 Місяць тому

      Pořiďte si DOSTAVNÍKY !!! KAŠPAŘI. A PODPORUJTE BOSTONSKÝHO 'SYFILITIKA',,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Z ukrainy juri/cz/km

  • @AccountInactive
    @AccountInactive Місяць тому +19

    Don't read the comments. Too many piloting experts and people who don't understand physics.

    • @Deontjie
      @Deontjie Місяць тому +1

      Fully Indian crew. From a company that are proud of diversity hire?

    • @amistrophy
      @amistrophy Місяць тому +7

      ​@@Deontjiefound the brainlet

    • @cinquine1
      @cinquine1 Місяць тому +4

      @@Deontjie You mean from a company trying to find the cheapest labour

    • @AccountInactive
      @AccountInactive Місяць тому

      @@Deontjie You ate the reason for my main comment. Dumbass.

    • @Deontjie
      @Deontjie Місяць тому +1

      @@cinquine1Cheap is usually not the best value for money.

  • @khundok6595
    @khundok6595 Місяць тому +5

    Excellent footage to give the clear idea about how it happened. Gr8 job.

  • @Bushpig22
    @Bushpig22 Місяць тому +21

    Heard about it and saw the collision footage all day, but this illustrates it on a completely different level...wow.

  • @jabadabadu7089
    @jabadabadu7089 Місяць тому +4

    Ships, bridges, all in all things can be repaired. But human loss... Damn 💔 Rest in peace!

  • @underseaowl7440
    @underseaowl7440 Місяць тому +67

    I thought the Sunshine Skyway would have taught us this lesson. Those transmission lines have more shipping protection than the actual bridge.

    • @jamieh9253
      @jamieh9253 Місяць тому +12

      I wonder if more dolphins or pier protection would’ve made a difference. The size of ships has grown so exponentially in the last few decades. I wonder if the protections recommended in the Skyway report would have been able to stop such a massive vessel with so much kinetic energy.

    • @chow-chihuang4903
      @chow-chihuang4903 Місяць тому

      Build the dolphins at least as strong as the pier for the tower that was struck. It definitely stopped the ship. But the tower was on it, so it was hit and the bridge was damaged.

    • @Schaden-freude
      @Schaden-freude Місяць тому +3

      Sunshine skyway was struck by a ship like 1/15th the tonnage this ship is.

  • @carotarra5022
    @carotarra5022 Місяць тому +11

    R.I.P. for the victims and courage for survivors . from Bergerac 🇫🇷 France. god bless you.

  • @khoughton411
    @khoughton411 Місяць тому +1

    Thank you for taking time to post this amazing footage. Good luck and best wishes.

  • @ShainAndrews
    @ShainAndrews Місяць тому +4

    My condolences to the friends, family, and co-workers of those that lost their lives. You are missed.

  • @spiritfree5050
    @spiritfree5050 Місяць тому +8

    So much protection around those power lines and almost nothing around the bridge pillars
    this was bound to happen

    • @Knaeckebrotsaege
      @Knaeckebrotsaege Місяць тому +1

      cause the power line stuff was built later and had to adhere to newer safety standards than the existing bridge

  • @PartsUnknown-mr1jp
    @PartsUnknown-mr1jp Місяць тому +35

    I was out fishing on a small boat by port of Miami when one of these bad boys came right by. I felt like a speck of sand looking up at Mount Everest.

    • @ChuckWood
      @ChuckWood Місяць тому +1

      I've been out here by the key bridge on a SeaDoo when one went by!

  • @gmichael5506
    @gmichael5506 Місяць тому

    Thanks for releasing this.

  • @StefanKirby
    @StefanKirby Місяць тому +1

    Thank you for sharing the B roll footage

  • @happycats5195
    @happycats5195 Місяць тому +42

    Would not want to be the propulsion system engineers or maintenance people of that company

    • @geonerd
      @geonerd Місяць тому +14

      I guarantee you that someone higher up than that made a decision that saved a few bucks....

    • @Motumatai3
      @Motumatai3 Місяць тому +9

      Video shows that the entire ship went dark once or twice, so not simply just a propulsion issue.

    • @w6wdh
      @w6wdh Місяць тому +7

      Would not want to be their insurance company

    • @cynthiasmith4130
      @cynthiasmith4130 Місяць тому

      Me neither!!!!

    • @cynthiasmith4130
      @cynthiasmith4130 Місяць тому

      Me neither!!!

  • @jasonwilde197
    @jasonwilde197 Місяць тому +8

    Now I wanna see the A-Roll footage...

  • @jamesalles139
    @jamesalles139 Місяць тому +1

    thanks for being there.

  • @leopardone2386
    @leopardone2386 Місяць тому +4

    Sal over at Whats Going on With Shipping is working overtime with this for sure.

  • @TheRailwayDrone
    @TheRailwayDrone Місяць тому +56

    The Sunshine Skyway bridge collapsed because of a bridge strike by a ship. The Big Bayou Canot Bridge collapsed because of a bridge strike, an Amtrak train plunged into the water and 47 people died. The Queen Isabella Causeway collapsed due to runaway barges and 8 people died. Hindsight is clearly NOT 20/20 as we have not learned our lesson.
    I cannot for the life of me understand why there are no concrete dolphins near every major bridge that has large boats/ships/barges that travel near them.

    • @littlewingpsc27
      @littlewingpsc27 Місяць тому +14

      Simple: probability of such a incident happening vs. cost to add them to every potential bridge that might get hit. Somebody decided it wasn't cost effective.

    • @Schaden-freude
      @Schaden-freude Місяць тому +12

      Because they cost millions to place and maintain, and normally you don't have major vessels suffering double power loss next to the bridge. This was a freak accident at best, and you can never prepare enough for those.

    • @ks_1111
      @ks_1111 Місяць тому +4

      Are you willing to pay for the installation and upkeep of them ? No ? Didn't think so.

    • @lewisdoherty7621
      @lewisdoherty7621 Місяць тому +8

      They are there, but they are too far away from the bridge's piers to work in this case. The ship passed by the dolphin on its starboard and then turned into the pier. This video solves the reason for failure. Look at the dolphins, those round concrete things on both sides of the bridge. They were too far from the pier to work.

    • @MichaelBuffum
      @MichaelBuffum Місяць тому

      This was no accident, this was planned and done on purpose in order to further damage supply lines therefore causing inflation and consumer good's prices to increase even more, we're witnessing the systematic collapse of our country unfortunately. But don't worry about it and just go ahead and stick your head back in the sand and enjoy your day.

  • @JandiFebie
    @JandiFebie Місяць тому +8

    Thank you 👍

    • @user-ud9lz4gb5j
      @user-ud9lz4gb5j Місяць тому

      Петров и Бощиров у штурвала....кот скрипаля не пострадал!!!

  • @chuckmvs
    @chuckmvs Місяць тому +11

    The authorities who determined that those four dolphins would protect the bridge from impacts by ships we're sadly mistaken,

    • @greenmirror5555
      @greenmirror5555 Місяць тому

      maybe at that time the "dolphins" and "essentials" hadn't thought about bow thrusters?

    • @michaeldigiulio5602
      @michaeldigiulio5602 Місяць тому +2

      Look at the age of those dauphins/dolphins-they were built in a time that calculated different physics, smaller vessels, etc..

    • @chuckmvs
      @chuckmvs Місяць тому

      Thats @@michaeldigiulio5602 Sorry but that’s no excuse, Safety concerns should have been address long ago for this deep water port / sizes of ships.

    • @chow-chihuang4903
      @chow-chihuang4903 Місяць тому +1

      Should’ve adjusted as conditions changed. But, money!

  • @HeavyMetal45
    @HeavyMetal45 Місяць тому +23

    Wow this was a massive bridge, it took 5 years in the 70s to build wonder what it will take with modern technology to rebuild.

    • @SmallMartingale
      @SmallMartingale Місяць тому +30

      Probably twice that with today's regulations and lack of skilled labor

    • @JacktheSmack
      @JacktheSmack Місяць тому +5

      Far less since only a fraction of the bridge was knocked down.

    • @JohnHallgren
      @JohnHallgren Місяць тому +12

      Took from 1980 to 87 to build the replacement Sunshine Skyway when it was hit similarly.

    • @kennethhanks6712
      @kennethhanks6712 Місяць тому +17

      ​@@JacktheSmackYour fraction is likely about 8/10 as ALL the main span superstructure is gone leaving only the relatively simple approach ramps. In addition before new bridge, in this location anyway, you need to clear the wreckage of the old so even an "emergency build" is going to be considerable in time and resources.

    • @avflyguy
      @avflyguy Місяць тому +8

      Couple of gallons of SuperGlue and call it good.

  • @ambulet
    @ambulet Місяць тому +17

    the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel between the Eastern shore and Norfolk VA has 2 tunnels for this very reason. And that was built 15 years before this one. Of course the Navy insisted on it because an accident like this would have bottled up 1/3 of the US Naval fleet for months.

    • @UrMomsChauffer
      @UrMomsChauffer Місяць тому

      You have to have a way to get into the port other than the tunnels. Hazmat trucks had to use this bridge, because they can't go through tunnels.

  • @CodeScrubber
    @CodeScrubber Місяць тому +6

    Somewhere, there are a bunch of people looking at video like this going "Oh fuq, where do we start..." Cutting that bridge up and fishing the remains of out of the 50ft+ deep channel is going to be a monumental challenge.

    • @frisco61
      @frisco61 Місяць тому

      US Navy ships which have recovery equipment are already on the way.

  • @berteisenbraun7415
    @berteisenbraun7415 Місяць тому +7

    Tragic for everyone involved 😮

  • @JaneJones-lg3bd
    @JaneJones-lg3bd Місяць тому +3

    Nasty situation for sure. What a mess! Those poor people who perished. Condolences to their families!

  • @phil20_20
    @phil20_20 Місяць тому +30

    We're talking about 1.34 Billion Ft. Lbs. of energy hitting that bridge pylon. That's based on 95k tons going 8 mph as it slowed before impact.

    • @markfranz536
      @markfranz536 Місяць тому +11

      F=(M*A) if im not mistaken. when i plug in the the mass( 97,000 metric tons) and the acceleration(8.4 MPH) i get 3,486,327 LB/F of force. Am I missing something or did i figure that wrong. I mean no disrespect, im genuinely asking

    • @mattmullett9521
      @mattmullett9521 Місяць тому

      @@markfranz536The acceleration is not 8.4mph, thats the velocity, and your units don't workout. The number @phil20_20 gave is a total amount of energy. 1 ft*lb of energy is equal to roughly 1.35 joules. So the ship has about 1.7 Gigajoules of energy. The energy of a moving object is given by Energy=1/2*Mass*Velocity^2

    • @MyBlueZed
      @MyBlueZed Місяць тому +3

      Foot/pounds is a measure of torque; not force.

    • @pulaski1
      @pulaski1 Місяць тому +2

      @@MyBlueZed Momentum is also measure in ft.lbs

    • @mattmullett9521
      @mattmullett9521 Місяць тому +1

      @@MyBlueZedIts a measure of torque, or a measure of work, aka energy.

  • @MakeupMobster
    @MakeupMobster Місяць тому +9

    I am already terrified of bridges. This just terrible. Prays to the men’s families who were up there working. How sad

  • @Allan_aka_RocKITEman
    @Allan_aka_RocKITEman Місяць тому +1

    This reminds me of the Sunshine Skyway Bridge near St. Petersburg, Florida being struck in 1980. I am from St. Pete, but at the time of that incident I was actually on a road trip to Maryland with a buddy of mine.

  • @Turboy65
    @Turboy65 Місяць тому +5

    I predict that this will lead to greatly expanded bridge impact standards for major waterway bridges in the future. They will be built to withstand the sort of impact that brought this bridge down. Eventually this will be the new standard, for new construction bridges at least.

    • @Turboy65
      @Turboy65 Місяць тому +1

      @hiho-fu2ekTime will tell. Neither of us has the ability to predict the future.

    • @povertyspec9651
      @povertyspec9651 Місяць тому +1

      Sunshine Skyway was built with pier protection ages ago.

    • @Turboy65
      @Turboy65 Місяць тому +1

      @@povertyspec9651 Ships got bigger, too.

    • @nonna_sof5889
      @nonna_sof5889 Місяць тому +1

      We know how to protect these bridges, we just don't spend the money to do it. Incidentally you don't build the bridge to take it, you build a sacrificial obstacle to stop it before the bridge is hit.

    • @1realtruthrightnow742
      @1realtruthrightnow742 Місяць тому

      No it won't. We still have billions of to give to Israel, Ukraine and "migrants" wake up already

  • @TheJttv
    @TheJttv Місяць тому +36

    Well this is a cluster

    • @john72ss
      @john72ss Місяць тому +2

      fear not for gay boy is on the scene.

    • @jims6450
      @jims6450 Місяць тому +1

      It's a compound, double overlapping, lefthanded, cluster f_ck, alright. But now those engineering type people get to build a fancy dancy new fangled modern gorgeous suspension bridge to replace it. More good paying jobs! And lots more car lanes!

  • @182QKFTW
    @182QKFTW Місяць тому

    Thank You

  • @jobson586
    @jobson586 Місяць тому +1

    about 7000 tons of road and bridge across that bow and only dips about 4M - amazing.

    • @OfficialTraxYT
      @OfficialTraxYT Місяць тому

      buoyancy resonates with more volume i guess

  • @davidleary823
    @davidleary823 Місяць тому +3

    Kinda sad that the transmission poles were better protected than that bridge support.

  • @Papershields001
    @Papershields001 Місяць тому +9

    It’s so sad to see those cones on the right side of the bridge. You know they were closing off the lane where the construction guys were working.

  • @keshermedia
    @keshermedia Місяць тому

    Excellent footage, thank you!
    On a positive note it "appears" (at this time) as though the bridge design and build worked correctly and came down as expected for this exact scenario.
    Perhaps the rigid structures and roadway still standing can be used again, thus saving constable time and cost. 💁
    ...
    Many prayers for those lost and for their families. 🙏🙏🙏

  • @cattnipp
    @cattnipp Місяць тому +5

    3:48 boat alongside the Dali needs to watch for falling cargo containers.

    • @northernsnow6982
      @northernsnow6982 Місяць тому +1

      Being that close, he would be trying to catch them, not watching to see if they fall. If the containers fell, that boat would be crushed. Bahaha 🤣😂😅
      It is likely the boat that brought the assessment crew to board the cargo ship. Possible to transport people back to land from the ship. But it's definitely not sitting there waiting for those containers to fall on it.

    • @cattnipp
      @cattnipp Місяць тому

      yes but why track the side of the vessel that close? Why not head 100 yards away first? This is the same stupid complacency that allows a bridge pylon to go unprotected from foreseeable ship collisions. @@northernsnow6982

  • @davidb3172
    @davidb3172 Місяць тому +10

    As a former mariner, I am dismayed at the comments made by landlubbers. It was the same on the tv when the Amoco Cadiz ran aground.

    • @Black.Sabbath
      @Black.Sabbath Місяць тому +2

      ​@@nohandleleft I was shocked when I saw it, they don't just sail towards it from the front, but turn towards it

    • @greenmirror5555
      @greenmirror5555 Місяць тому

      exactly...and to top it off in a miracle attempt to avoid loss of control they navigate directly into the main bridge support structure? Sell me that bow thrusters aren't the only thing that could turn a ship of this size going 8 knots left in 3 minutes around a dolphin.@@nohandleleft

    • @davidb3172
      @davidb3172 Місяць тому +2

      @@nohandleleftIf you had watched the video of the ship before it hit the bridge you would know she blacked out. It takes time to restart the ship's systems.

    • @northernsnow6982
      @northernsnow6982 Місяць тому +3

      ​@@nohandleleftThe ship at the time of the accident was being piloted by someone who works for the port. Nobody on the ship is allowed to pilot a boat in those areas. It's to prevent things like this from happening. If they simply used tugboats, this would have never happened.

    • @harveylordaguillo1029
      @harveylordaguillo1029 26 днів тому

      @@northernsnow6982 If only there was a well-recognized risk assessment for the passage of the Dali along this channel and established that the bridge posts possess hazard, there could have been established control measures considered such us, as you said, requiring tug boats to assist or at least standby close to these bridge posts. I am a retired Master and experienced almost losing the power of my ship in the Houston Channel but the pilot and I decided outright to anchor and have the USCG board my vessel for investigation. Although the finding was only a trivial result of pushing the wrong button in the engine room, my ship was safe and avoided the consequence of unexpected human error. Only my personal view as former mariner on this subject.

  • @DavidD-qr2vn
    @DavidD-qr2vn Місяць тому +16

    The force that hit with was tremendous, notice how much of the ship caved in.

    • @polarbeezy412
      @polarbeezy412 Місяць тому +2

      What are you talking about? A ROAD and STEEL fell on it, obviously it's going to cave in. The damage where it's caved in is from vertical, not horizontal.

    • @ryansilke
      @ryansilke Місяць тому +2

      @@polarbeezy412 That gash on the starboard bow was probably where the ship hit the steel bridge pier.

    • @DavidD-qr2vn
      @DavidD-qr2vn Місяць тому +1

      @polarbeezy412 the caved portion I am referring is below the deck. The whole left bow side of the ship is caved where it grounded on the pylon base. Yea, there is damage to the top from the bridge falling, but nothing compared to how much it is pushed in.

    • @GOLDVIOLINbowofdeath
      @GOLDVIOLINbowofdeath Місяць тому

      @@DavidD-qr2vnPier, not pylon

    • @GOLDVIOLINbowofdeath
      @GOLDVIOLINbowofdeath Місяць тому

      The part that was supposed to protect the piers from damage was not damaged. It was designed wrong as far as high ships are concerned and served no purpose except for protecting from relatively small vessels that would not have brought the whole bridge down anyway. There is a reason why bumpers on cars protrude and are a certain distance off the ground

  • @Pasandeeros
    @Pasandeeros Місяць тому +2

    That looks mighty expensive.

  • @shawkatiqbal3320
    @shawkatiqbal3320 Місяць тому +4

    Good day,
    Reference Scott Bridge disaster: I have crossed under the bridge many a times, even as master of these size container vessel. if someone puts the incident in simulation, they would find;
    that the vessel's propulsion came back with 3 ship's length space from bridge but she was put on full astern. This made the vsl lose further steerageway also cant to stbd and hit the bridge.
    On the other hand a bold decision of short burst of half ahead movement could have corrected the course brought the bow towards channel center line and steered the vessel from this disaster.
    This is my opinion after checking raw marine traffic data.

    • @greenmirror5555
      @greenmirror5555 Місяць тому

      Under simulation could bow thrusters turn this ship around the dolphins and into the support structure?

    • @lesliemacmillan9932
      @lesliemacmillan9932 Місяць тому

      Isn't that what did in the Titanic? She might have been able to steer around the iceberg if she'd kept forward power on but she went full astern instead and veered into the berg.

  • @royhindmarsh4087
    @royhindmarsh4087 Місяць тому +8

    poor ship. now every one can drive around the long way for years

    • @diane8937
      @diane8937 Місяць тому +1

      It won't take nearly that long!

    • @dubious6718
      @dubious6718 Місяць тому

      @@diane8937 Time will tell... maybe in 2025.

    • @northernsnow6982
      @northernsnow6982 Місяць тому +2

      ​@@diane8937You think this will be rebuilt in less than a year? No, it will be years before anyone drives across a bridge in that location. They still need to take down whatever hasn't fallen before they can think about starting to rebuild. Demolition above water isn't easy, especially with all the environmental issues around it. It may seem odd after this situation, but they can't allow stuff to fall in the water when demolishing things.
      Plus, they have to recover as much of the old bridge as possible. They can't just leave it there blocking the shipping lane. There is a lot of work to do in that situation, besides just building a new bridge.

  • @allmybasketsinoneegg
    @allmybasketsinoneegg Місяць тому +1

    A pretty serious reminder of how gargantuan some container ships truly are. Even mostly hollow to stay floating, that ship will be 1/10 the weight of the bridge or more.

  • @delscoville
    @delscoville Місяць тому +3

    Can see the Dali's anchor had been dropped before hitting the bridge. So speculation this was done on purpose is likely wrong.

    • @clemclemson9259
      @clemclemson9259 Місяць тому

      there are PLEANTY of stupid and foolish comments here thats for sure- I noticed the anchor as well

    • @1realtruthrightnow742
      @1realtruthrightnow742 Місяць тому

      Think bigger. It was done on purpose without the crews knowledge, it was done remotely, and the crew tried everything they could to avoid it. Did you know your own car can be started and driven away from your driveway right now? Planes, like jumbo jets could be taken over remotely in the early 80's. Its true

    • @Airplanefish
      @Airplanefish Місяць тому +4

      ​@@1realtruthrightnow742you need to get out more. Poor guy

    • @1realtruthrightnow742
      @1realtruthrightnow742 Місяць тому

      @@Airplanefish So you are saying what I said is incorrect? That Car's and planes cannot be remotely taken over? You do know the Dali's rudder was in full turn postion right, and it was was in a straight position prior to power off event. Even the NTSB is wondering how that happened, and it caused the Dali to go 180 degrees into the support.

    • @Airplanefish
      @Airplanefish Місяць тому

      @@1realtruthrightnow742 maybe aliens caused this? Do they have the remote control?

  • @witchqueen8576
    @witchqueen8576 Місяць тому +3

    Just have tugs guide past the bridge

  • @Peorhum
    @Peorhum Місяць тому +2

    These ships are really to big for safety. In the end though, the pylons were just not protected enough from possible collision.

  • @inakitablado4988
    @inakitablado4988 Місяць тому

    Menudo descalabro. Sorpresas te da la vida. Gracias por la visión panorámica

  • @davidsutton9195
    @davidsutton9195 Місяць тому +4

    Sad situation for the bridge maintenance crew.
    it hasn't been reported, but I wonder if any ship's crew are under that pile of bridge on the bow of the ship.
    I'm sure that very few people in the city recognized the potential danger. this is going to be a daunting process of clean up and reconstruction. probably upwards of 5 billion by the time all is done

    • @btafan11
      @btafan11 Місяць тому +1

      The crew survived. Unfortunately, 13 women being trafficked in a container were crushed.

    • @cattnipp
      @cattnipp Місяць тому

      Yes but they do have a Chief Diversity Officer.

    • @tambrosia
      @tambrosia Місяць тому +1

      last i heard gross estiimate to replace this bridge was from 2 billion US to 8 billion US
      Bet this one will be closer to 8BILLION US

    • @diane8937
      @diane8937 Місяць тому

      ​@@btafan11yeah sure, all the way to Sri Lanka.

    • @AndreiTupolev
      @AndreiTupolev Місяць тому +2

      What extraordinarily bad taste replies

  • @Dirk-van-den-Berg
    @Dirk-van-den-Berg Місяць тому +7

    How many ships will it take to get the steel parts out and the heavy concrete of the road out?

    • @nnelg8139
      @nnelg8139 Місяць тому +10

      I bet they'll use pontoons to float the intact truss sections out, and leave the concrete on the seafloor.

    • @JimBoIndy
      @JimBoIndy Місяць тому +4

      They have HUGE barge cranes that can lift those sections onto large barges. Big Hoss is the name of one of them, but I believe it's down in the Gulf of Mexico at the moment

    • @littlewingpsc27
      @littlewingpsc27 Місяць тому +4

      They might use shaped demolition charges to cut the truss sections into manageable chucks that can either be floated out with pontoons or lifted onto barges and hauled away for scrap.

    • @markfranz536
      @markfranz536 Місяць тому

      they wont be able to leave anything on the sea bed. a lot of people dont realize how shallow the bay and Patapsco river are. I was just down at the key bridge on my boat a week ago fishing and its only about 55 feet in the channel give or take and those container ships need all of that depth to get in and out. especially at low tide @@nnelg8139

    • @john72ss
      @john72ss Місяць тому

      its all on the bottom of the river

  • @bazzer621
    @bazzer621 Місяць тому +2

    Looked to me that instead of powering forward, which would have given the ship steering, they were trying to stop it, which is impossible!

  • @rollingmancave4547
    @rollingmancave4547 Місяць тому +20

    Best video of the accident. No Bridge Support Skirts/aprons, how did this happen?

    • @lewisdoherty7621
      @lewisdoherty7621 Місяць тому +5

      The dolphins (bumpers) are there, but too far away. The ship passed by the dolphin on its starboard and then turned into the pier. This video solves the reason for failure. Look at the dolphins, those round concrete things on both sides of the bridge.

    • @shopdog831
      @shopdog831 Місяць тому +5

      no steel bridge is strong enough to take a direct hit from a Panamax like that. this isnt in the bridge engineers this is on the shipping company who didn't maintain there powerplant.

    • @chow-chihuang4903
      @chow-chihuang4903 Місяць тому

      And too few in number, with too large a gap between them. The power line towers have better protection (the diamond-shaped walls around each of the ones near the center of the channel).

    • @lewisdoherty7621
      @lewisdoherty7621 Місяць тому

      This is like having guardrails on a highway. We can reduce, but not eliminate accidents. The bridge shouldn't take a hit because it should be protected by proper "dolphins" which indicates a civil engineering failure. Properly configured, massive dolphins in front of the bridge's piers should take a hit. They should be slightly away from the bridge, so not to transmit the energy of the collision to the bridge. Now that ships have substantially increased in mass, the engineers are going to have to revisit protections for bridges.@@shopdog831

  • @tonycotto8073
    @tonycotto8073 Місяць тому +17

    why does it seems like the power line towers had more protection from impact than the bridge supports

    • @norgeek
      @norgeek Місяць тому +9

      While it wouldn't surprise me if the power lines were a newer construction and updated rules enforced a much sturdier collision barrier, it seems to me like they're more anti-curious-people than anti-big-ships.. it's *very* hard to dissuade that much mass/momentum from doing damage, especially with what seems to be a thin, hollow structure surrounding the power masts.

    • @Zarcondeegrissom
      @Zarcondeegrissom Місяць тому +3

      because they are newer than the bridge, yet that is a very good question among a few others regarding ship sizes over time vs the age of the bridge.

    • @fgbae8220
      @fgbae8220 Місяць тому +1

      i wish your parents had more protection too

    • @Zakster90
      @Zakster90 Місяць тому +8

      Those were probably built after the Skyway bridge collapse in Tampa, thats what began much more strict regulations for structures like bridges and powerlines that sit on the water to have massive steel reinforced concrete walls.
      This bridge predates that incident so it did not have adequate protection.

    • @VeryFamousActor
      @VeryFamousActor Місяць тому

      Better yet make a giant sand bar

  • @dre-oj1998
    @dre-oj1998 Місяць тому +4

    That container ship is 3 times the size of container ships around the time the bridge was built.

  • @arailway8809
    @arailway8809 Місяць тому

    The NTSB has done its job. Time to send the demo. crews in.

  • @johnnylego807
    @johnnylego807 Місяць тому +2

    Is there no redundancy in each segment? How did it manage to take the rest of the entire bridge out??

  • @tremorsfan
    @tremorsfan Місяць тому +4

    Imagine how much worse it would have been if it had happened at morning rush hour.

  • @oldschoolman1444
    @oldschoolman1444 Місяць тому +10

    The bridge supports sure didn't seem to have much protection around the base in the event of an impact. The power line towers had better safeguards!

    • @jonathanhodges836
      @jonathanhodges836 Місяць тому +1

      The boat is 20 times the size! What I uld atop that?

    • @M0TTS1292
      @M0TTS1292 Місяць тому +4

      The power lines were also recently put up, within the last year or so

    • @jonathanhodges836
      @jonathanhodges836 Місяць тому

      @@M0TTS1292 and a large boat turned directly I to a bridge so

    • @zyeborm
      @zyeborm Місяць тому +1

      Next to the power lines you will see the "concrete dolphins" designed to protect the bridge from a runaway ship. They got very unlucky here with the ship turning at exactly the rate needed for them to miss the protections.

    • @dubious6718
      @dubious6718 Місяць тому

      @@zyeborm "Unlucky"

  • @danhammond8406
    @danhammond8406 Місяць тому +2

    And no bridge pier protection to speak of. Just one tiny dolphin on each side

  • @QuaaludeCharlie
    @QuaaludeCharlie Місяць тому +2

    Now , There's a Drone .

  • @ddh2o759
    @ddh2o759 Місяць тому +3

    This tragic accident highlights the vulnerability of a key pier.

    • @tambrosia
      @tambrosia Місяць тому

      shows our bridges can be brought down in a heartbeat and can cripple our nation.
      Just remember folks Demorats have allowed chinese companies to run our ports and in some cases bridges too...no problem with that now is there eh Joey

  • @28th_St_Air
    @28th_St_Air Місяць тому +9

    Can you imagine the number and volume of the “oh F#!&$” screamed by the people in the ship’s bridge as it started to bring down the Key Bridge?

    • @MrShipBuff
      @MrShipBuff Місяць тому +3

      Probably everyone was running around frantically trying to get the power back on, putting the engines in full reverse and turning hard to port.

    • @Bonjour-World
      @Bonjour-World Місяць тому

      at least one 'Oh Shinola'

    • @marksapollo
      @marksapollo Місяць тому +1

      I imagine the crew are quite traumatised for it causing the death of several people. They will all most likely still be on board too ensuring the ship remains afloat etc. looking after the containers as I expect some have hazardous or frozen goods

  • @SterileNeutrino
    @SterileNeutrino Місяць тому +1

    That bridge may have had a chance against a 70's freighter but a superfat container ship like that, no contest. Prayers to the people who found themselves on the bridge at that moment.

  • @fennec13
    @fennec13 Місяць тому +2

    5:02 - why was there no hardened crash protection for the towers on this bridge ?? The power lines running alongside the bridge have barriers 0:50 -
    to deflect a ship (hopefully) I don't see any such protection for the two towers on either side of the main span or ANY of the piers for the causeway !
    Wow, what a poor set-up. This sort of disaster was only a matter of time.

    • @lesliemacmillan9932
      @lesliemacmillan9932 Місяць тому

      I think you are over-reading the protection those electricity pylons have. The little islands are just dry land to mount the pylons on. A large ship hitting one of those would destroy it, too.

  • @chocolatefrenzieya
    @chocolatefrenzieya Місяць тому +18

    Fantastic call on stopping traffic, but super curious why crew wasn't taken off bridge.

    • @futureshock7425
      @futureshock7425 Місяць тому +5

      that's going to be important.

    • @littlewingpsc27
      @littlewingpsc27 Місяць тому +7

      Maybe they weren't in radio contact if doing pot hole work. Surprised they didn't see the ship coming at them and decide to get off the bridge.

    • @df446
      @df446 Місяць тому +6

      There was no time to "stop traffic". Maybe to "stop traffic" after the bridge was down, but that's it. The short timeline allowed for nothing else. Shame on government spokesmen for implying otherwise.

    • @spiercephotography
      @spiercephotography Місяць тому +17

      If you see when they first lose power (from other footage) to the time they hit the bridge, it was a little less than 3 minutes. It was only about a minute before it started to drift towards the bridge and hit that they made the mayday call- before that you can see the ship attempting to get the power back on to keep them on course. There was no way the crew could have made it off the bridge in time.

    • @AenesidemusOZ
      @AenesidemusOZ Місяць тому +14

      ​@df446 The ship's crew called in a mayday and the police at both ends stopped traffic immediately - VERY fast response. They sent people to try to warn the work crew but didn't get them all off in time. The police radio traffic makes it quite clear.

  • @nonna_sof5889
    @nonna_sof5889 Місяць тому +5

    It's insane there's only one dolphin per pylon per direction. And pretty far out at that.

  • @pzktupel2390
    @pzktupel2390 Місяць тому

    Ein Meisterwerk der Architektur 🙂

  • @johnnylego807
    @johnnylego807 Місяць тому +2

    Is there no redundancy in each segment? How did it manage to take the rest of the entire bridge out?? Was the road itself that strong? Or was it hit at a critical segment?

    • @lesliemacmillan9932
      @lesliemacmillan9932 Місяць тому

      The main span is a continuous structure -- all one welded piece. There are no "segments" other than the viaduct approaches. One load-bearing girder fails, the whole thing falls.

  • @lewisdoherty7621
    @lewisdoherty7621 Місяць тому +3

    The problem is obvious: There are the dolphins to stop ships, but they are so far in front of the bridge's piers, the ship went around the one on the ship's starboard side and hit the pier. At 5:22, look at the dolphin and then look at the angle of the ship at which the ship hit the piers. See the round concrete things in the water. Those are bumpers called dolphins. They should be close to the piers, but with a gap to prevent the collision entry from being transmitted to the piers.

    • @zyeborm
      @zyeborm Місяць тому +2

      You'll probably find the distance they are away from the bridge is exactly the gap you have described for a fully laden runaway ship. This was a perfect storm with the rate of turn of the ship.

  • @scottscouter1065
    @scottscouter1065 Місяць тому +7

    MAYBE when the bridge is rebuilt it will have ISLANDS around the bases of the towers like the islands around the power line towers. The design and construction of bridge supports NEVER anticipated ships as massive as the MV Dali squeezing past the supports. RETROFITTING barrier islands? WAS it ever even considered?

    • @mikehawk4714
      @mikehawk4714 Місяць тому +1

      Need to ban bridges. People are dying.

    • @kareno8634
      @kareno8634 Місяць тому +2

      Islands sound like good idea. Ship is Not even Big, compared to the Mammoth ones being built. They're causing issues, Ports now not deep enough.

    • @scottscouter1065
      @scottscouter1065 Місяць тому +3

      Sometime bridges are needed. Losing teeth is a real bummer!

    • @Manigo1743
      @Manigo1743 Місяць тому

      @@mikehawk4714 More people are killed by cars, so we need to ban those too, right?

  • @dparamedi
    @dparamedi Місяць тому +2

    Sorry for the lives lost. The shipping company will need to accept there responsibility for this.

  • @awidesigns
    @awidesigns Місяць тому +1

    Considering the news is saying the search is on for the missing 6 construction works......little surprised to see not much happening around the ship or waters by the bridge. This is a major water way and Transportaion element. How about we get to work removing the sections not close to the accident. Its pretty obvious what happened not like you need a huge investigation on how the structure failed.

    • @lesliemacmillan9932
      @lesliemacmillan9932 Місяць тому

      They are probably arguing about what criminal to name the replacement bridge after. Once they get that important stuff out of the way, then they'll get around to recovering bodies of the dead and clearing the channel.

  • @browneagle2393
    @browneagle2393 Місяць тому +8

    Heartbreaking....seeing beauty to now ashes. Prayers lifted for all.....

  • @TRADERJEJ
    @TRADERJEJ Місяць тому +7

    Hmm... massive ramparts around the power poles but nothing more than the pillar footings on the bridge??

    • @cinquine1
      @cinquine1 Місяць тому

      They are newer. Safety standards are constantly improving, but it's rare that people go back and fix the old problems

  • @user-nc6nq2pt8q
    @user-nc6nq2pt8q Місяць тому

    На честном слове, этот мост держался! Небольшой толчок и он сложился как карточный домик! Жалко погибших людей! Соболезную их родным.

  • @LurkerPatrol5
    @LurkerPatrol5 Місяць тому +1

    I live near this bridge and would often go to Hawkins point to enjoy the scenery, which was great esp at sunset. I flew my drone here once and thought man I hated the footage, I should go back one of these days and get another shot. Now I never can.
    We need to start reducing the sizes of these ships, they're becoming insanely untenable and dangerous. Ships need to be escorted past important infrastructure like this on tugs.

    • @lesliemacmillan9932
      @lesliemacmillan9932 Місяць тому

      You realize it's because of these super-large ships -- many are much bigger -- that you can buy a powerful computer to carry in your hip pocket for a few hundred bucks.

  • @6allmotivepowers363
    @6allmotivepowers363 Місяць тому +3

    Wow. It'll certainly be interesting to know just what caused this calamity (aside from the obvious).

    • @smytb
      @smytb Місяць тому

      They will Never release the full details to the public! 😢

    • @Airplanefish
      @Airplanefish Місяць тому +1

      ​@smytb yes they will. It will be at least 18 months but you will be able to read everything

    • @smytb
      @smytb Місяць тому

      @@Airplanefish The government never tells the truth!

    • @jimhofoss9982
      @jimhofoss9982 Місяць тому +2

      @@Airplanefish yah, there will be an official report….the reason why it happened will not be exposed

    • @northernsnow6982
      @northernsnow6982 Місяць тому

      Poor infrastructure, and no use of tugboats. That's what caused this.

  • @brendarice8454
    @brendarice8454 Місяць тому +9

    Prayers for all!

    • @mikehawk4714
      @mikehawk4714 Місяць тому +3

      Prayers to who? And what good will that do? Feel better about yourself now?

    • @johanea
      @johanea Місяць тому

      Not that I need any, but thank you.

    • @geonerd
      @geonerd Місяць тому +1

      Why didn't your shy ghost avert the disaster in the first place?

    • @Bromon655
      @Bromon655 Місяць тому

      @@geonerdGod doesn’t prevent disasters from happening.

    • @veronica_bohemian
      @veronica_bohemian Місяць тому

      ​@Bromon655 what is he good for? Really.

  • @electrikhan7190
    @electrikhan7190 Місяць тому

    A tragedy, but unbiased documentation helps those that truly learn from the mistakes of the past. Designing, improving and maintaining society unfortunately depends on loss and errors, but only when corrected and addressed properly after. The power pylons appear to have better ship guarding than the bridge, but what bridge really what could withstand a collision with vessel of that capacity.

  • @borasahin7212
    @borasahin7212 Місяць тому

    Minor damage on the ship vs collapsed bridge. The flimsyness is unbelieveable.

  • @MaxPivovarov
    @MaxPivovarov Місяць тому +9

    Almost everywhere in the world they use a sandbank around the bulls of the bridge, to prevent such incidents. If the depth near the bulls was 8-9 meters, then the ship would just run aground and would not have destroyed the bull.

    • @skunkjobb
      @skunkjobb Місяць тому +4

      No they don't, most bridges don't have that. Not only because of cost but that such underwater fill would constrict the flow of the water. It is used sometimes yes but it's not a common thing.

    • @Madwonk
      @Madwonk Місяць тому +1

      Port of Baltimore is already extremely narrow. Having a sandbank would make it impossible to get in and out.

    • @Tholapsyx
      @Tholapsyx Місяць тому

      To add to what everyone said, tide is a thing 😐. Way too many armchair experts around here.

  • @catsforhire9116
    @catsforhire9116 Місяць тому +5

    I am surprised the falling bridge did not do more damage to the ship, such as capsize it or fracture the hull. RIP to the bridge workers whose lives were lost.

  • @RT-qd8yl
    @RT-qd8yl Місяць тому

    Was this from the drone that was in the area the afternoon of the 26th? There was what I assumed to be a drone working between 100-300' AGL with a really weird ADS-B tag.

  • @hassocks1206
    @hassocks1206 Місяць тому +1

    It could have been a lot worse. But the loss of one life is too many. My thoughts are with those who died and their families.😢

  • @SunnnyDay
    @SunnnyDay Місяць тому +6

    A massive structure of steel, concrete and rebar, shattered into splinters by that ship.

    • @ks_1111
      @ks_1111 Місяць тому

      You do realize that ship weighs more than the section it took dow n right ?

  • @popi870
    @popi870 Місяць тому +2

    So sorry for those that losr their lives and their loved ones.

    • @mikehawk4714
      @mikehawk4714 Місяць тому

      How sorry are you reslly?

    • @popi870
      @popi870 Місяць тому

      I do Mike, thank you for asking. I hope you have a great night. ​@@mikehawk4714

  • @izukukageyama7552
    @izukukageyama7552 Місяць тому +3

    Am I the only one vaguely curious about what exactly was in those front port cargo containers that got completely eviscerated?

    • @kristinebalena3969
      @kristinebalena3969 Місяць тому

      I thought some kind of truck, but that could be false. I read Maersk customer supplies, including trucks, propellers etc.

    • @lesliemacmillan9932
      @lesliemacmillan9932 Місяць тому

      Probably plastic water bottles and yogurt tubs heading for the Orient to be "recycled" for pretends.

  • @sponduli
    @sponduli Місяць тому +1

    looks like an unfortunate situation

  • @AliJaeJR
    @AliJaeJR Місяць тому

    I can't get past the fact that the bridge workers were FAILED to receive any notice to abort the bridge!!!

  • @GodBlessedAmerica
    @GodBlessedAmerica Місяць тому +4

    This is why vessels of this size should be escorted to open waters by tug boats. Sure is less expensive.

    • @Rimrock300
      @Rimrock300 Місяць тому

      Risk vs damage/cost assessment. In this location not found worthwhile

  • @karlbrundage7472
    @karlbrundage7472 Місяць тому +15

    The fact that no buttresses were in place on this bridge, after the Sunshine-Skyway disaster is a damning condemnation of the people who control our infrastructure, from the state departments of transportation, to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to the Federal Department of Transportation and yes, the National Transportation Safety Board.
    You own this

    • @cybercityoedo808
      @cybercityoedo808 Місяць тому +3

      As usual they wait for something catastrophic to happen before they do something. I've used this bridge a couple times and never thought it was one ship collision away from collapsing... Could not imagine just minding my business and having the road collapse from under me.

    • @karlbrundage7472
      @karlbrundage7472 Місяць тому

      @@cybercityoedo808 Because all of us have been led to believe that the "authorities" are on top of all of this and they're always working to "keep us safe".
      No, they're working to keep their Unions, corporations and special interests safe. If you think there's a dichotomy between "worker" and "employer", just look at the makeup of the current NLRB.
      No, "Big Business" and "Labor" have gotten together and they run the current government.
      Fortunately, those of us out here in rural America have plenty of guns and clear fields of fire.
      Good luck to the rest of you......................

    • @jonathanhodges836
      @jonathanhodges836 Місяць тому

      Thise big ships aren't supposes to go through u shitheel!

    • @kevindepew8193
      @kevindepew8193 Місяць тому

      You can't make everything accident proof. We don't have infinite funds to spend a fortune making everything safer every time a disaster happens.

    • @jonathanhodges836
      @jonathanhodges836 Місяць тому

      @@kevindepew8193 a boat turning directly into a main structure is no accident