The Scary Job of Cleaning Multi-Billion $ Ships Underwater

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  • Опубліковано 4 лип 2022
  • Welcome back to the Fluctus Channel for a feature on the exciting and physically challenging world of underwater ship cleaning.
    Fluctus is a website and UA-cam channel dedicated to sea geeks. Whenever you are curious or an incorrigible lover of this mysterious world, our videos are made for you !
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 984

  • @jackiecs8190
    @jackiecs8190 Рік тому +2208

    "Some hull cleaning may involve diving to depths that exceed normal diving depths" nope! the biggest ships have a draft of maybe 30 meters, or about 100 feet. That's certainly not shallow, but it's also *definitely* not the realm of saturation divers

    • @BornAgainCynic0086
      @BornAgainCynic0086 Рік тому +115

      on normal air at 100ft you can only dive for 20 minutes without having to decompress, then wait ages before diving again. 41 Minutes at only 50ft

    • @michaelmccarthy4615
      @michaelmccarthy4615 Рік тому +30

      It seems automated equipment could clean the lower portions of any ship without intervention...
      or a ship would rise higher out of the water without a load on board.

    • @bigredc222
      @bigredc222 Рік тому +87

      I was wondering if they were talking about oil platforms?

    • @michaelmccarthy4615
      @michaelmccarthy4615 Рік тому +25

      Its not clear what the deeper diving is needed for...

    • @BornAgainCynic0086
      @BornAgainCynic0086 Рік тому +11

      @@michaelmccarthy4615 to stay longer underwater and finish the job.

  • @jackiecs8190
    @jackiecs8190 Рік тому +630

    "most ships are dry docked for their annual maintenance" ummm what? most ships are dry docked every 5-20 years, not annually

    • @getchasome6230
      @getchasome6230 Рік тому +60

      Some ships never dry dock

    • @miamijules2149
      @miamijules2149 Рік тому +28

      Nah nah guys... it’s annual.... I heard it somewhere. Lol

    • @ashleyholmes2485
      @ashleyholmes2485 Рік тому +4

      5-10 years

    • @JK-wc5oq
      @JK-wc5oq Рік тому +41

      Under SOLAS regulations ( and certainly UK regulations) a cargo ship has to be dry docked twice in a 5-year period, with a minimum of 2 years between checks and a maximum of 3 years. So effectively every 2.5 years.

    • @t-rex4211
      @t-rex4211 Рік тому +5

      With fuel prices now though they’ll have them out every other day 😉

  • @jasonarcher7268
    @jasonarcher7268 Рік тому +811

    I did that for a few years. It was a great gig. I got to travel everywhere the cruise ships go, and finish every work day at an all you can eat buffet. We used water powered machines, that ran off of the ship's firepumps. Much simpler than the big hydraulic carts they're using here.
    My favorite spot to work was cozumel. The water was so clear, you felt like an astronaut or something.

    • @Martin_chatwin
      @Martin_chatwin Рік тому +31

      how do u get that jobs so like heaven to me

    • @jasonarcher7268
      @jasonarcher7268 Рік тому +41

      @@Martin_chatwin it really was a pretty good gig. There are a few schools around the country that will train you to be a commercial diver. Getting into a niche like cruise ships however, was a little bit of dumb luck I think.

    • @muhammadashhabulyamiin
      @muhammadashhabulyamiin Рік тому +15

      @@jasonarcher7268 god bless your job and life, man. Btw, except not being paid; what is the risk you scared the most?

    • @jasonarcher7268
      @jasonarcher7268 Рік тому +22

      @@muhammadashhabulyamiin thank you, and God bless. I didn't like diving around sharks. It didn't happen often, but it was scary.

    • @TheFailedmessiah
      @TheFailedmessiah Рік тому +2

      @@jasonarcher7268 how’s the pay? I imagine it being pretty good.

  • @natashapamnani7221
    @natashapamnani7221 Рік тому +67

    These divers are incredibly skilled and are heroes to be willing to do such precarious work; they deserve to be generously compensated.

    • @Noneofyourbiz123
      @Noneofyourbiz123 11 місяців тому

      They are well paid.

    • @wazup3333
      @wazup3333 10 місяців тому

      ​@@Noneofyourbiz123how much?

    • @Noneofyourbiz123
      @Noneofyourbiz123 10 місяців тому

      @@wazup3333 look it up

    • @the6ix665
      @the6ix665 10 місяців тому +2

      They get close to 1k and hour

    • @sinane.y
      @sinane.y 7 місяців тому

      @@the6ix665 one comment below a guy who did this job says the pay sucks

  • @russellwilliams3209
    @russellwilliams3209 Рік тому +301

    Diving in the ocean is EASY, but my job as a 'sewer' diver is where the REAL challenge is at! I mean, I have dived in pipes that were tiny and big. Also, pipe systems that span MILES and are literally like mazes under your feet that you never knew existed, especially in cities like NY, Chicago and Phoenix! I have dived them all and get called to travel the country to do so! Not to mention, the pay! I get paid amazingly well because nobody else will do it and I love it🤣
    I find all kinds of treasures and get to keep whatever I pull out. Last year, I found a wedding ring worth 19k, a necklace worth 12k and a prostetic eyeball worth 7k! I do attempt to find the owners of items that are obviously sentimental, but they usually never come forward. Which leaves me to sell them, make a profit and continue adding toys like the helicopter I just bought, so thank you for flushing!

    • @BoratfromKazakhstan
      @BoratfromKazakhstan Рік тому +18

      my friend some shitty jobs in America 🤣

    • @GraceGritLove
      @GraceGritLove Рік тому +18

      That’s really cool! Stay safe.

    • @junior17medval
      @junior17medval Рік тому +8

      How much do you get paid? Give an estimate if you’d like.

    • @LK-bz9sk
      @LK-bz9sk Рік тому +7

      I have done some cave diving back in the day. Super claustrophobic. Just reading your post gave me a bit of an adrenaline rush. You get paid for your skills for sure but we all know the big bucks are because almost no one has the nerves to do what you do.

    • @kiloton1920
      @kiloton1920 Рік тому

      How many Xanax you take before going in the tube?

  • @christophergrant2893
    @christophergrant2893 Рік тому +191

    It's actually once every 5 years a vessel is dry docked plus has other scheduled maintenance procedures in that time frame too

    • @asianinvasian9022
      @asianinvasian9022 Рік тому +6

      I was about to say, once a year seems very frequent for dry-docking

    • @death_parade
      @death_parade Рік тому +1

      @@asianinvasian9022 So could it be that its once a year if you can't use divers to clean the hull and if you can, then its only once every 5 years its required? Sorry if noob question.

    • @asianinvasian9022
      @asianinvasian9022 Рік тому +3

      @@death_parade If I were to guess it is a mistake. There is no way they could afford to fully drydock a ship once a year it just isn't financially feasible

    • @death_parade
      @death_parade Рік тому +2

      @@asianinvasian9022 Oh OK. Thanks. BTW, what is it that drives the up the cost of dry docking the ship. Is it because dry docks are few and thus hiring one is expensive simply due to supply-demand? Or is it because the process of transferring the ship to a dry dock is inherently expensive in and of itself> Thanks in advance.

    • @asianinvasian9022
      @asianinvasian9022 Рік тому +1

      @@death_parade lost potential income. Every week a ship isn't at sea is a week that ship is not making money. Combine that with costs of the work done to the ship and it's quite a bit. It is worth noting, do not take what I say as gospel as I'm not in the business. I'm just using what little I do know and trying to make logical guesses off of that info

  • @equalevolution5563
    @equalevolution5563 Рік тому +461

    I wish I had a fan the size of one of those propellers right now. This heats intense. Lucky ship! Get to travel those lovely freezing cold waters.

    • @sandro327
      @sandro327 Рік тому +7

      @Repent and believe in Jesus Christ 🤡

    • @b.schafer6858
      @b.schafer6858 Рік тому +2

      Why are you geiering at an object touch grass

    • @user-cr5jv8xz7k
      @user-cr5jv8xz7k Рік тому +6

      @Repent and believe in Jesus Christ نعوذ بالله من الشرك ،
      المسيح هو عبد لله وحده وليس ربا

    • @p5tsku
      @p5tsku Рік тому

      we have air cleaner :)

    • @dmx0352
      @dmx0352 Рік тому

      😂

  • @jubankta1627
    @jubankta1627 Рік тому +177

    It’s so incredible we think our lives are the center of it all when there is really so much more that we never see or hear of!!Thank You so much for making this video!!

    • @paulocostaswine.1909
      @paulocostaswine.1909 Рік тому +6

      Sociopaths think their lives are center of it all. So are you a sociopath cause that’s something one would say

    • @cornell833
      @cornell833 Рік тому +2

      So true 👍

    • @raheemallen2003
      @raheemallen2003 Рік тому

      📢 Alert A Sunday Law will be The Mark Of The Beast when enforce by law, Those that keep Gods seventh day sabbath will be prohibited from buying and sell and persecuted. Jesus is coming are you ready?

    • @Eclipse-lw4vf
      @Eclipse-lw4vf Рік тому +4

      huh>? never thought nor assuumed my life was the center of it all what lmao, thats spooky thinking

    • @rosynhaalves6274
      @rosynhaalves6274 Рік тому

      Sim, o que vocês falou é uma grande verdade

  • @wilfredprins9718
    @wilfredprins9718 Рік тому +42

    That intro with the navy ship made me smile.
    It remembered me of an event in St Johns, Newfoundland years ago.
    We sailed in with our offshore working vessel for some repairs that needed a big crane and a some divers.
    The divers came fully suited up in drysuits and dive helmets.
    They said the water quality, after many decades of the harbour being the endpoint of sewer pipes, wasn't good.
    When finished they rinsed down for a long time before getting out of their diving gear.
    The next portcall there were some Dutch and Belgium navy ships inside who were in the area for an exercise.
    On the aft of the dutch navy ships divers, navy crew, were getting ready for a propellor inspection. Before getting in there thin wetsuit they were getting buckets of water out of the harbour which they poured over themselves....
    (100mtr besides them was a big sign on the quay saying not the swim or fish in the harbour because of the water "quality")

    • @oxyfee6486
      @oxyfee6486 Рік тому +5

      I remember my girlfriend and I going on a raft down the Rio Grande in Jamaica, our raft tipped over, we laughed it off but it was kind of scary. We both swallowed a ton of water, at the very end of the river was a huge sign on a bridge warning people not to swim or drink the water because of sewage.😳

    • @DFWJon
      @DFWJon Рік тому

      @@oxyfee6486
      WOW. Every year we take a family vacation to the beach and it seems like you always hear about someone getting some kind of flesh eating bacteria somewhere in the U.S., be it from either a freshwater and/or a saltwater source, and it always scares me for my children because you just never ever know. Fortunately, as well as unfortunately, there are all kinds of unknown harmless and harmful bacteria and sea life that we “land folk” have yet to discover and sometimes when stuff is discovered it’s a little too late for some poor person and/or people. I think I’ve read where the infected water has to enter through your nose in order for the flesh eating bacteria to enter your body but I could be wrong. I mean, who has ever swam anywhere, and I mean a back yard swimming pool, a local creek, a river, a pond or lake, the ocean or whatever, and not gotten a little bit of water up or in their nose??? And I’m sure it doesn’t take much if the bacteria is present!?!?!? I know, for a fact, that I have gotten some amount of water in just about ALL of my orifices, just about, any, and every, time I have ever went swimming anywhere. But I suppose you can’t live a happy life in fear but you can be smart about it I guess. Or as smart as you can be.

    • @pieterpietersen3517
      @pieterpietersen3517 Рік тому

      @@DFWJon Typical American uneducated paranoia.

    • @smatchimo645
      @smatchimo645 Рік тому +1

      @@DFWJon i freaked myself out reading about all the nasty stuff you can get just by swimming in a creek or river, sewage or not. Especially when my migraines start up. I spent a ton of time in the Sacramento River and Mill Creek. In this rural area, I just know the water is used for farming irrigation, which has tons of chemicals, and would always wonder how much was in the swimming areas.

  • @patiduran2438
    @patiduran2438 Рік тому +302

    I have Meglaphobia. Ships freak me out when I get close. I could never do what these guys do

    • @Alistar608
      @Alistar608 Рік тому +26

      wtf why hahaha its just a ship, its wont bite xd

    • @GreifeLuft
      @GreifeLuft Рік тому +59

      Imagine swimming in a big See or Ocean and under you everything is gettin black an a really big submarine is pop up under you ^^

    • @Alistar608
      @Alistar608 Рік тому +6

      @@GreifeLuft just stand on it, as i said it wont bite

    • @suugondeez
      @suugondeez Рік тому +1

      r u scared of buildings lol

    • @NickHaVAnaClub
      @NickHaVAnaClub Рік тому +102

      Dude it is really weird. I have the same phobia too... But it is only with ships. I can't imagine falling in the sea near big ships it makes me extremely uncomfortable

  • @art.b5457
    @art.b5457 Рік тому +62

    I’m an underwater painter. When these guys are done cleaning I go down there to spray paint the ship.

  • @indridcold8433
    @indridcold8433 Рік тому +27

    I knew a saturation driver long ago. He got paid extremely well. He always bought his vehicles cash. He planned on retiring at 40 years of age with a substantial amount to live on for the rest of his life.

  • @shellhead8859
    @shellhead8859 Рік тому +85

    is it crazy that this is the line of work that I'm trying to get into? This kind of work fascinates me and I love diving. I hope I don't hate it.

    • @jasonarcher7268
      @jasonarcher7268 Рік тому

      There are a few good dive schools around the country. It's not too hard to get into.

    • @szpecunio
      @szpecunio Рік тому +3

      @@jasonarcher7268 yeah I think he has that done already

    • @davidguzman7472
      @davidguzman7472 Рік тому

      T

    • @bawrenches
      @bawrenches Рік тому +3

      @shellhead did you end up going for it?

    • @ZeroScapes
      @ZeroScapes Рік тому

      I've done this in local marinas for private vessel owners (30' to 70' vessels) and it is the only "job" that I completely enjoyed. The sea life you get to encounter is awe inspiring.

  • @sechi7239
    @sechi7239 Рік тому +116

    “If the tide suddenly recedes and the ship slumbs”
    Yeah, imagine if the water level should magically drop 10 meter in an instant and the supertanker get grounded. Happens a lot.

    • @0tispunkm3y3r
      @0tispunkm3y3r Рік тому +8

      Tides are so unpredictable!

    • @YyouTTubeE
      @YyouTTubeE Рік тому

      you'd be surprised

    • @Garth2011
      @Garth2011 Рік тому +2

      Yes, what a stupid suggestion about the tide. All of those guys know the tide tables and a lot more before they do what they do.

  • @leedurham2528
    @leedurham2528 Рік тому +14

    Can be cold hard Yakka, whilst hand scraping a cargo ships rudder I discovered that the hinge pin on the rudder had broken and was protruding around a metre . The crew had wondered why the ship was sluggish on the helm. Our dive company got the job to do a repair so the ship could get to drydock. After using the pneumatic wire brushes on the hull you would find dozens of pieces of wire in your wetsuit.

    • @ollie-kc6nj
      @ollie-kc6nj Рік тому +1

      Hahah same problem when I cleaning metal with wire wheel go to sit down and your like a pin cushion with the amount of wires sticking out

  • @minydoom
    @minydoom 11 місяців тому +7

    As someone who's done this professionally, I can tell you it's not scary except maybe your first few dives, and you're only scared of messing up. Pay sucks, but you gotta have a love for the job to be a diver no matter what you do.

    • @BuceGar
      @BuceGar 23 дні тому

      Low pay? I would think that the pay would be decent for this type of work.
      What are the necessary qualifications? My only concern would be that the company I'm working for would cut corners on the equipment and ask you to do something unsafe.

    • @SeaSudsy
      @SeaSudsy 2 дні тому +1

      ⁠​⁠​⁠@@BuceGarI do it I get paid $20/hr, you just need an ADCI card and be good at swimming.

  • @PavloLukashuk
    @PavloLukashuk Рік тому +22

    Yes, the technology of underwater drones is really great and helps, in the case of diagnostics and cleaning! Thanks for content! 👍

    • @peterfoster9456
      @peterfoster9456 Рік тому

      Escorts. I'm glad I'm hear. My name is Peter, like dolphins or the destroyer escort ship USS Cecil.

  • @imarcus1973
    @imarcus1973 Рік тому +35

    Saturation diver must be the closest job to astronaut!

    • @PersuChogo
      @PersuChogo Рік тому +4

      these divers are diving up to 10m. they can stay hours at that depth. I use my 18L for 3 hours at that depth.

    • @Michael-ll6bs
      @Michael-ll6bs 3 місяці тому

      Sat diving is typically only done for depths deeper than 300 ‘ down to 1000’ . We recently started diving sat in more shallow depths in the oil field, only to save on long in water decompression times. There’s no surface work being done on saturation. This is a ridiculous video.

  • @Lewdcina
    @Lewdcina Рік тому +11

    at 1:10 you called the hull of the ship the superstructure, however when talking about seafaring vessels, the superstructure refers only to the parts above the hull, the part that looks like a building on top of the ship

  • @youchida3195
    @youchida3195 17 днів тому

    We must never forget that the world revolves around people like these. I want to show my respect.

  • @oneshotme
    @oneshotme Рік тому +18

    Oily waters?? Oil isn't under the water it floats so it's not a bother when diving only getting in and out of the water. Plus you'd only have that problem outside of the USA since there are heavy fines for putting oil into the water. Plus the job isn't nowhere as bad as you're making it sound!!!
    Enjoyed your video and so I gave it a Thumbs Up

    • @person5476
      @person5476 Рік тому +2

      oh dont worry, if it gets too oily, america will invade the water surface :D

    • @oneshotme
      @oneshotme Рік тому

      @@person5476 I'll let them know to go to your house first LMAO

    • @person5476
      @person5476 Рік тому

      @@oneshotme oh im not in america, besides i have a max of 1cup of oil lol

    • @catalintimofti1117
      @catalintimofti1117 Рік тому

      oil gets under water too

  • @aighti
    @aighti Рік тому +11

    I don't like swimming next to massive objects in the water such as ships. It's an irrational fear but it's a real one

    • @thepissedoffsandwich
      @thepissedoffsandwich Рік тому +2

      Never had to, but same.

    • @namikstudios
      @namikstudios 7 місяців тому

      I wouldn't call it irrational, there's a fair amount of danger involved in swimming near such a large ship, especially if it is moving.

  • @loxxbeats
    @loxxbeats Рік тому +10

    Dangerous but satisfying work .

  • @greghayes9118
    @greghayes9118 Рік тому +14

    I would think if the tide suddenly recedes it means you are in the path of a tsunami. In which case you are probably moments from having all of your problems solved.

    • @MrBazz420
      @MrBazz420 Рік тому +2

      i was looking for this comment or something about tide "suddenly receding" lol

  • @danylooo
    @danylooo Рік тому +21

    This is the kind of work that AI could/should do for us.

    • @andyb619
      @andyb619 Рік тому

      Yes, but then we have no jobs. No jobs means no value to the wealthy. No value means we lack bargaining power to defending our franchise.

    • @danylooo
      @danylooo Рік тому +2

      @@andyb619 the solution to that is we create jobs, increase education. Quite simple really. The hard part is that the US currently doesn't have a functioning government lmao

    • @andyb619
      @andyb619 Рік тому

      @@danylooo if the government and the wealthy don't need us, we will not find that they "function". You can bet those who will benefit from AI (resource owners) will think the government "function" providing they let them have it. I'm no commie and I'm more sympathetic with capitalism, but this will create private governments with the shift in the balance of power between voters and corporate owners.

  • @mynameiswrm
    @mynameiswrm Рік тому +17

    Uhhh... you would never have a diver who's cleaning boat hulls in a dive bell. If they were working on an oil rig, deep diving, yes. But a cargo ship?? No way.

  • @Jamezy316
    @Jamezy316 Рік тому +12

    This job looks DOPE, and SCARY at the same time. Like the ones when they clean a ship in shallow water, and the water is nice, and bright blue (3:27), would be a blast. Then you have the ones super deep, where there is dark green water around the ship, everywhere else it pitch black into the abyss (3:31). That's ones thing I hate about oceans is how you get deep enough, and its goes dark, cant see anything, quickly turn from fun, to scary. Ill swim in waters like Fiji and Caribbean when you can basically see the bottom, its crystal clear. But then you have shit like at 3:31, where I would probably have a panic attack. The thought of being in his position, I just keep thinking I would slowly keep sinking into that darkness
    Actually blows my mind how weird I am about it, how I go from LOVE to Panic Attack in seconds. 3:27 or 4:08 and I would absolutely LVOE to swim, scuba dive all day, like when you swim amongst the coral, crystal clear water. Then you have 3:31, and I would have a panic attack, would want to get on land as quick as possible

    • @daize4743
      @daize4743 Рік тому

      what you are describing as dark deep pitch black abyss is what we call in the industry "perfect vision"'
      everything looks blue and visable on film otherwise you wouldn't see it but in reality depending on the ports you won't see your hand if you were to put it infront of your visor. they explain here divers working in scuba which is rarely done anymore as it is very dangerous with a limited amount of oxygen you have.
      this video also makes it seem a lot more dangerous than it in reality is. everything is well monitored double triple checked before anything is done. sadly things do still go wrong with almost always it being a humans fault be it up top or down below.

  • @joseantoniobetances
    @joseantoniobetances Рік тому +8

    These videos are first liked, and then they are seen, calmly.

  • @garyhumphrey8936
    @garyhumphrey8936 Рік тому +4

    I loved diving under ships doing inspections.

  • @DaysOfFunder
    @DaysOfFunder Рік тому +10

    Maybe I am just a wuss,
    But how can people just not be terrified of murky depths of the sea. It confounds me.

  • @user-zq7fb4ot9k
    @user-zq7fb4ot9k 9 місяців тому

    I co-owned and operated a ship hull and prop cleaning company in the 1990s with a former Navy SEAL. We’d both been to USN diving schools The work was difficult and had some risks, it’s a young man’s job for sure and oh, not a glamorous career.

  • @sbohnisomthembu8487
    @sbohnisomthembu8487 Рік тому +2

    I just finished my class 111 diving training and I'm looking forward for this exciting journey.

  • @Imwright720
    @Imwright720 Рік тому +3

    There is nothing scary at all about it. It’s shallow depths and actually quite interesting.

  • @minkles1330
    @minkles1330 Рік тому +9

    People think being a window cleaning takes brass balls but this job would scare me more.... at least being a window cleaner you won't suddenly get attacked by a shark.

    • @Va.2Az
      @Va.2Az Рік тому

      Yea, you’ll just fall thousands of feet…..😆

    • @TheBeardHampster1979
      @TheBeardHampster1979 11 місяців тому

      Sharks will be scared off by the exhaust bubbles from the scuba tank
      Not to mention the big ass cleaning machine and copper dust spreading everywhere

  • @user-mk7lf4kr5v
    @user-mk7lf4kr5v Рік тому

    الله اكبر
    لا اله الا الله
    اشهد ان لا اله الا الله
    واشهد ان محمد رسول الله

  • @LMays-cu2hp
    @LMays-cu2hp Рік тому +1

    Thank you for sharing this story.

  • @johnjihnson7162
    @johnjihnson7162 Рік тому +3

    What is scary is depths, big things made by humans, big sharks and giant octopuses and similar stuff you could imagine.

  • @charlievelez3510
    @charlievelez3510 Рік тому +13

    Wait um...what are those deep divers cleaning? I missed that entire segment

    • @michaelmccarthy4615
      @michaelmccarthy4615 Рік тому +2

      No one understood that part. What exactly was getting a cleaning so far down ?

    • @lostinlife647866
      @lostinlife647866 Рік тому +3

      these divers that are doing saturation diving are taking a diving bell down to the Titanic and they’re cleaning the hull of the Titanic that’s why it takes 28 days at a time and six divers to fully clean the hull !! While they’re down there they are invited to have diner with Captain Edward J Smith.

    • @jeremygagnon9277
      @jeremygagnon9277 Рік тому +1

      They are probably cleaning pipelines.

    • @ssherrierable
      @ssherrierable Рік тому +2

      @@lostinlife647866 lol, you can’t sat dive to the titanic, it’s too deep. We can’t mimic that pressure.

    • @Pretermit_Sound
      @Pretermit_Sound Рік тому +1

      @@ssherrierable I think he was being facetious, but you’re absolutely right 😊

  • @janicacostache4371
    @janicacostache4371 Рік тому +1

    nu numai ca imi plac aceste genuri de vloguri cureferire la cum se intretine o nava mai ales la partea subacvatica ci ador si ma hranesc cu astfel de programe de acest gen si navele si avioanele le ador in aceiasi masura si stau si cate 3 sau 4 sau mai mult uneori si urmaresc aceste programe.Deci multumesc pt astfel de editari interesante.

  • @northernsoutherngirl
    @northernsoutherngirl Рік тому +12

    Wow! Things you wouldn't even think or know about! I know those divers get paid ALOT, but me personally, I'd be so afraid!! What if suddenly another ship comes by & crashes into the ship being cleaned?? The diver would be in a precarious situation then! Glad they are moving to using ROV's instead of using people to clean!

    • @Joshuaeway03
      @Joshuaeway03 Рік тому +3

      What if fear stops you from Living out rhe purpose God has for you?
      Glory to God Miss, Because He is Faithful

    • @SuperLastboyscout
      @SuperLastboyscout Рік тому +2

      When I was young I never worried about that, but being older, yikes!!!!

    • @VMKinnovations
      @VMKinnovations Рік тому

      yup...be afraid to live!!!!

  • @dennislorenzana
    @dennislorenzana Рік тому +8

    Multi-million dollar ships and they can't create surfaces that's resistant to dirt?

    • @cosmic2096
      @cosmic2096 Рік тому +1

      Just for this Thinking about human brains just trips me man . One side they do better and on the flip side , they destroy

    • @udayanpaul8042
      @udayanpaul8042 Рік тому +2

      Yes we do have equipments to prevent growth but that's not much efficient on such larger scale. MGPS or Marine Growth Protection System is used to prevent growth, but that's just to buy some more time, can't prevent growth fully.

    • @arvindahuja1996
      @arvindahuja1996 Рік тому

      Ships do use Anti Foul Paints & Ultrasonic Anti Foul Systems but still Algae, Marine growth is unstoppable and has to be maintained

    • @TheBeardHampster1979
      @TheBeardHampster1979 11 місяців тому

      Were it so easy

  • @jarrlan
    @jarrlan Рік тому +2

    This mini doc was actually really cool

  • @niagarascenes
    @niagarascenes Рік тому +1

    Great video! Loved watching this over and over again!

  • @thegatorviking
    @thegatorviking Рік тому +4

    I have a fear of being in the water and or near big boats like this. You could not PAY me enough to do this job! LOL

  • @retiredlogic4100
    @retiredlogic4100 Рік тому +11

    The sea has always scared me,im not sure if its the dark immensely large space or the thought that something is swimming under me thinking of takeing a bite

    • @guitaro
      @guitaro Рік тому

      thalassophobia

  • @28704joe
    @28704joe Рік тому +2

    If I was cleaning those propellers I'd take the ignition keys of the ship down with me. I ain't much but I ain't gonna be fish food.

  • @RossD8
    @RossD8 Рік тому +2

    I was gonna say, automation would be the way to go here.Having said that, if they can glue some ceramics on a space shuttle to keep it from burning up, seems to me there should be some sort of coating, shield that could be applied in order to keep hulls free of these biological freeloaders.

  • @getchasome6230
    @getchasome6230 Рік тому +5

    The tide doesn't "suddenly recede" lol. It takes like 8 hours

  • @effoffutube
    @effoffutube Рік тому +3

    That job's about a heartbeat away from automation.

  • @DukeCannon
    @DukeCannon Рік тому

    OK, I had to learn more about depths involved. I was under impression saturation was for Deeeeep diving.
    Wiki says
    Today, most sat diving is conducted between 65 feet and 1,000 feet.
    Wow, had no idea!
    Thx for teaching me something new today.

  • @troychampion
    @troychampion Рік тому

    This is a well worded, well put together, and well thought out video, i subscribed because of this video, I appreciate your informative video and your helping me to learn about how thee problems are taken care of by others.

  • @midbc1midbc199
    @midbc1midbc199 Рік тому +18

    They never work alone......divers rules there would require minimum of 2 divers......the most that gets released back into the waters after scrubbing is the critters and algae and some paint and the levels of zinc or copper oxides in the paint would be less than if a person was to throw a scrap of metal in the ocean

    • @evanmurphy2165
      @evanmurphy2165 Рік тому

      Commercial divers often work alone (a 'buddy system' is not required), but they have communication with the supervisor on the surface and if on surface supply an almost unlimited amount of breathing gas - if it is a proper commercial diving operation.

    • @midbc1midbc199
      @midbc1midbc199 Рік тому

      @@evanmurphy2165depends on the job and dangers involved......never work or do a contract for someone that is super easy with putting you in a dangerous position or they have no concerns themselves

    • @Garth2011
      @Garth2011 Рік тому

      Yes, but those environmentalist nutshops never admit to the tiny amounts that amount to almost nothing. They will focus only on the fact that particles are released and then file lawsuits and convince a weak spineless judge to support them.

  • @kengleetan63
    @kengleetan63 Рік тому +5

    Very well paying job as divers but at the same time very dangerous. Risks does comes with the rewards!

    • @TheBeardHampster1979
      @TheBeardHampster1979 11 місяців тому

      So true, the best money making, (or hell, flat out efficient) jobs scare the shit out of people
      Thankfully, most of the fear goes away as you learn more about it and learn to reduce risk

  • @MuhammadAbdulRahman3941
    @MuhammadAbdulRahman3941 Рік тому +1

    That ship looks similar to My favourite titanic❤🕉💕☮️🇧🇭

  • @russellcole3549
    @russellcole3549 Рік тому +7

    Yeah, nobody believes you have to saturation dive to clean a ship hull.

  • @bvnseven
    @bvnseven Рік тому +5

    $35k-$49K per year? no thanks for that job.

    • @johnh8705
      @johnh8705 Рік тому

      I doubt they're working every day

  • @saneetsmore
    @saneetsmore 10 місяців тому +2

    I do have a lot of respect for all those divers doing this job, but still, it is a risky thing to do. I know the ship owners are trying to save money, but they can use a computer-controlled robot to do this. I am not even talking about any expensive AI robots. Common guys, we are in 21st century. Why is a human life still taken for granted.

  • @easdasdas
    @easdasdas 10 місяців тому

    I think the best way is to make a yearly dry dock. It causes less harm to the sea I think since they clean it "dry". This is a way to be cheap and not doing correct maintenance, although I must admit, cleaning divers sounds cool and looks super fun and dangerous.
    Ex crew member here, passanger ships.

  • @ozzymd1
    @ozzymd1 Рік тому +3

    The only way I can do this job when underwater is If I have the key to the ignition in my pocket

    • @PACstove
      @PACstove Рік тому

      I think you'd hear them starting the engines and have time to boogie out of there.

  • @squatchpnw2331
    @squatchpnw2331 Рік тому +3

    Could never do that job I have submichaniphobia

  • @subbywan1422
    @subbywan1422 8 місяців тому

    What ship has a hull that requires saturation diving?? That should be limited to things like certain drilling platforms.

  • @tomhermens7698
    @tomhermens7698 Рік тому

    What antifouling are they using. Lead based? Ships on the move attract very little crusstations. Having out is better and much quicker.

  • @Snowymae
    @Snowymae Рік тому +2

    I’m wondering how the release of minute levels of metals is toxic when sinking an entire aircraft carrier full of those metals is fine?

    • @OmmerSyssel
      @OmmerSyssel Рік тому

      There is no hazardous materials released, in connection with controlled sinking of maritime vessels!
      Anti fouling paint needs to be toxic, keeping the hull smooth and clean.

    • @Garth2011
      @Garth2011 Рік тому

      Torpedos would do a much better job of that.

  • @wheelerdealer7098
    @wheelerdealer7098 Рік тому +6

    Id want the ignition key 🔑 in my pocket

  • @GettheFouttahere74
    @GettheFouttahere74 Рік тому

    Barnacle Bill and Co have got there work cut out!
    Great job 👌

  • @smith5312
    @smith5312 Рік тому +14

    Saturation diving for cleaning a hull is extreme, what ship in the world draws that much water ? This video only showed a few mins of actual facts and video about the cleaning hulls, the rest was just random facts and video of diving in general. Very light on any real facts about the subject. 👎

  • @bubbagasm1
    @bubbagasm1 Рік тому +9

    I like how unconcerned they are about how bad for the environment the cleaning is.

    • @MARINE_DM
      @MARINE_DM Рік тому +6

      That’s algae and barnacle they are cleaning off, the fish love to eat it

    • @teebee5323
      @teebee5323 Рік тому

      all that "bad for the environment stuff' came from... hold on, wait for it.... THE ENVIRONMENT.

    • @bubbagasm1
      @bubbagasm1 Рік тому

      @@donmunro144 They briefly stated why in the video. The organisms liberated by the cleaning place a strain on the ecosystem. It also is removing corroded paint and metal and sending that into the water.

    • @Garth2011
      @Garth2011 Рік тому

      @@bubbagasm1 Maybe so....but there's much worse happening that "strains" the ecosystem and that would be mankind.

    • @bubbagasm1
      @bubbagasm1 Рік тому

      @@Garth2011 very true, humans are the worst thing that ever happened to the planet!

  • @jelordbustillo7987
    @jelordbustillo7987 Рік тому

    So beautiful shipping 🚢cleaning 😍💕✨💖❤💗nice beautiful shipping 🚢

  • @thisiconisactuallygoofysfa9960

    After I retired commercial repair diving. I looked at all the ships and rigs I maintained and saw where they were and how they were doing now. I was like, I didn’t fix that. And all the pics were of GIGANTIC ships or other vessels and I have severe megalophobia (fear of big things) and didn’t realize the entire time I was under those ships. The entire time I thought it was just pipes bc it was so dark. I was told to find a certain piece of something and never realized what I was next to. Had a small “stroke” from that lol

    • @purnamaalfendi1664
      @purnamaalfendi1664 Рік тому

      Ada data petahana = ada saham besar, baik , baik data... Hati - hati ... Jangan saling iri ...
      🕌
      🏨🎪
      Ada data
      Mana yang sakit ?

    • @purnamaalfendi1664
      @purnamaalfendi1664 Рік тому

      Ada data baik apa ? Ayo paham tengah dulu...

    • @thisiconisactuallygoofysfa9960
      @thisiconisactuallygoofysfa9960 Рік тому

      @@purnamaalfendi1664 English please I can’t understand

    • @Charlie-216
      @Charlie-216 Рік тому +4

      So you never realised what you were repairing ?

    • @wano2363
      @wano2363 Рік тому +3

      How'd you pass your tests?😁

  • @mystisith3984
    @mystisith3984 Рік тому +7

    It's fascinating but those underwater propellers are fiercely triggering my submechanophobia. Not a job for me. 😱

  • @brandonteal7211
    @brandonteal7211 Рік тому +1

    I don't think it's common to go into sat on a hull cleaning but. I'm no commercial diver neither though.

  • @patrickmuhwheeney6518
    @patrickmuhwheeney6518 Рік тому

    I'm loving your content...Thank you!

  • @xKmotx
    @xKmotx Рік тому +6

    Looks like exciting work. How much do these divers earn in a year?

    • @Shyttalker2023
      @Shyttalker2023 Рік тому +2

      More importantly how does one apply for a job like this

    • @bautistanaudi2150
      @bautistanaudi2150 Рік тому +4

      @@Shyttalker2023 go to a dock and ask someone

    • @andrewl6899
      @andrewl6899 Рік тому

      @@Shyttalker2023 go to commercial diving school and various companies will come talk to you when you’re close to graduation.
      Pay depends on what you do and who hires you.

  • @Dutch_bastard_23
    @Dutch_bastard_23 Рік тому +7

    I wonder how many of those brave cleaners are women and I wonder how many of those lovely feminists, screaming their lungs out for equality, want to get into this line of work, as opposed to getting more high-payed manager jobs

    • @user-vi9ql1nc9m
      @user-vi9ql1nc9m Рік тому

      So true 😆

    • @BSmithPPG
      @BSmithPPG Рік тому

      Yup. They don’t want the risk. Never have. They just want the money.

  • @AlesJezek-xw7po
    @AlesJezek-xw7po 2 місяці тому +1

    Super labombastic fantastic skolastic💘

  • @rocketman63
    @rocketman63 11 місяців тому

    The huge, looming presence of these ships makes me uneasy just watching this clip! The ships' sides, rudders, and propellers especially.
    Oddly, the bottoms of the ships don't bother me in the least. Just a huge ceiling.
    I'd always be worried to some extent about sea life, especially in murky water!

  • @ml.2770
    @ml.2770 20 днів тому

    I'm gonna need to see your LOTO procedures.

  • @SP-ny1fk
    @SP-ny1fk Рік тому +1

    Could the zinc and copper be reclaimed? Could be through electrolysis. The quantities involved would justify any investment in this area.

    • @TheBeardHampster1979
      @TheBeardHampster1979 11 місяців тому

      Ngl, I'd be there with a collection bag and making ingots at home like BigStackd

  • @someguy5035
    @someguy5035 Рік тому

    1:15
    "Superstructures" are the portions of ships that are above the free deck, not the ships' hulls.

  • @BuceGar
    @BuceGar 23 дні тому

    The amount of incorrect information, and videos that do not match the subject matter, is shocking. It actually makes it entertaining to spot all the inaccuracies.

  • @themostamazingguy
    @themostamazingguy Рік тому

    7 minutes of stock footage, 1 minute of relevant footage

  • @tabssss
    @tabssss Рік тому

    REALY GREAT VIDEO! THANK YOU FOR THE INFO!! VERY INTERESTING VIDEO!!👍

  • @carlitospearce8323
    @carlitospearce8323 Рік тому

    I still do it for a Living, for sure hard work exp is for sure necessary as well as safety..

  • @DaRealKing303
    @DaRealKing303 Рік тому

    Stunning and brave.

  • @steadijim2632
    @steadijim2632 10 місяців тому

    Nothing I hate more than when the tide suddenly goes out unexpectedly and crushes you under a ship. I’m just longing for the day they work out a way to predict the tides.

  • @jessestanley1690
    @jessestanley1690 Рік тому +1

    Divers should always use the buddy system for safety

  • @faisalaliansari4775
    @faisalaliansari4775 День тому

    Best work

  • @rfrf9553
    @rfrf9553 Рік тому

    es admirable está gente ...

  • @sukumarmurugan7641
    @sukumarmurugan7641 Рік тому

    Brilliance of Hardwork 🏅

  • @FullFinnoy
    @FullFinnoy 10 місяців тому +1

    'Dark and oily waters'... Divers working in prestine and beautiful warm waters. LOL!

  • @dreammaking-thebestdreaman1232

    This is awesome!!!!!

  • @chuckmaddison2924
    @chuckmaddison2924 Рік тому

    I'm amazed they don't have something like a car wash In the Panama Canal.
    Just drive through some big rollers.

  • @sunitadwarka347
    @sunitadwarka347 Місяць тому

    When ship comes to dock for loading, we must release hot water near Propeller. During movement it is not possible.
    Use solar water system, use sea water for heating water, Now a days in market we have plastic or stainless steel heat proof water tank available.
    The temperature around Propeller areas will increase and all sea animals will leave the fan. At least 60 % success we can achieve to clean Propeller.
    Jay bharat.

    • @sunitadwarka347
      @sunitadwarka347 Місяць тому

      Japanese have technology to make road 🔥, road is ice free during winter.
      Same technology we can use to make water hot below ship during loading and unloading.
      We don't need boiling water, smaller rise in temperature will make sea animals to leave ship.
      Jay bharat.

  • @scottmcwave9479
    @scottmcwave9479 Рік тому +2

    Seems like it would take a hundred divers to scrape that big ass ship!

  • @user-mk7lf4kr5v
    @user-mk7lf4kr5v Рік тому

    سبحان الله وبحمده
    سبحان الله العظيم

  • @dasabaja
    @dasabaja Рік тому

    There' s something about images of submerged machinery that makes me very uneasy.

  • @scarymonkey3496
    @scarymonkey3496 Місяць тому

    Do you also dive to depths which exceed normal diving depths?

  • @markbrown-sb2zm
    @markbrown-sb2zm Рік тому +1

    I had a few days where I polished 2 props a day,alone.Taking the prop through a cub brush,sanding disc then shining it like a mirror,nice lines, with a polishing disc,huge MSC ships,over 10 hours under water,got paid £ 10/day in South Africa.

    • @maurimela4390
      @maurimela4390 Рік тому +2

      10pounds per day? You need to change your profession, selling bananas is more profitable

    • @markbrown-sb2zm
      @markbrown-sb2zm Рік тому +1

      @@maurimela4390 Yip,you are right and yes,I did.

    • @maurimela4390
      @maurimela4390 Рік тому

      @@markbrown-sb2zm well goddamn. I assume the 10 was back then quite alot if money in SA

  • @lovejerky9307
    @lovejerky9307 Рік тому

    The video is a nice thought but please note the inaccuracies. Thank you for the content… BUT PLEASE DONT HULL CLEAN ON SCUBA ITS NOT SAFE

  • @augustocostaneto6030
    @augustocostaneto6030 Рік тому +2

    Muito legal. Brazil.