Fly-through of World War I Battle of Jutland wrecks

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  • Опубліковано 29 вер 2024
  • Courtesy: JD-Contractor A/S
    This video show data presented in NaviModel, which is part of the EIVA NaviSuite software suite for offshore survey and engineering operations, from the Battle of Jutland survey carried out by JD-Contractors A/S.
    The Battle of Jutland was the largest naval battle of World War I, during which more than 8,500 people lost their lives and 25 ships were sunk. The battle was fought from 31 May to 1 June 1916.
    The Director and founder of JD-Contractor, Gert Normann Andersen, sponsored the Battle of Jutland survey aimed at documenting the decay on the wrecks of the battle. The documentation from the survey will, among others things, be used in a new Sea War Museum in Thyborøn at the west coast of Denmark, close to the battlefield focusing on World War I, which opens on 1 July 2015.
    About NaviSuite
    From ROV- and vessel-based surveys to sonar, multibeam and single beam echo sounder operations, and everything in between, the five products composing NaviSuite cover the complete spectrum of offshore applications as well as the entire data workflow, from sonar and sensor data acquisition through to post-processing.
    Selecting NaviSuite means reduced procurement and training costs through standardisation on a single software suite, regardless of application or equipment type. You can choose between a number of standard bundles dedicated to specific applications or tailor your own setup by selecting between the various products and features offered in NaviSuite.
    Learn more at www.eiva.com/na...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 17

  • @davy1458
    @davy1458 Рік тому +5

    This is really cool....thanks for sharing. I imagine some of those more shallow wrecks came to rest on bottom with men still alive in some compartments. Such a gut wrenching fate.....makes my stomach sick with claustrophobia.

    • @ifax1245
      @ifax1245 Рік тому

      The pressure wave inside the hull would've kill all instantly.

    • @davy1458
      @davy1458 Рік тому +1

      @@ifax1245 pressure wave from what? Magazine detonation? Men survived the magazine detonation in the Arizona.....or were you referring to the pressure wave from water implosion? I'd agree with you on that but some of the wrecks at Jutland are very shallow.....shallow enough for divers so I don't think water implosion would come into play......hope my response doesn't come across as arrogant...not ment to be...hope you don't take it that way.

    • @Benepene
      @Benepene Рік тому

      @@davy1458Yeah but with HMS Defense Invicible and Lion it was different, all magazines (close to a Little nuke when it comes to tonns in tnt) blew, it is highly unlikely they would have survived, but Not impossible

  • @Wykletypl
    @Wykletypl 7 років тому +31

    25 ships lost in total, and... only 3 wrecks shown? Disappointing, don't You think?

  • @michaelmcclellan6944
    @michaelmcclellan6944 3 роки тому +1

    Only the dead has seen the end of war

  • @kayjay7780
    @kayjay7780 8 років тому +3

    More left of Invincible then I thought, Queen Mary ?

  • @matejhromin2925
    @matejhromin2925 3 роки тому +1

    Good job UA-cam algorithm

  • @wkeil1981
    @wkeil1981 8 років тому +2

    Cool

  • @HM2SGT
    @HM2SGT 4 роки тому +2

    Look at all those targets! I could spend scads of time looking every one over. 😺

  • @brianwolle2509
    @brianwolle2509 6 років тому +1

    incredible!

  • @mikearakelian6368
    @mikearakelian6368 3 роки тому

    Hard to see anything with this... Waist of time

    • @jherman6132
      @jherman6132 3 роки тому +4

      Here's tickets to English camp