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Anonymous
have some boats, /hr/
>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
is the OP carrier sinking?
>> Anonymous
>>311485

aircraft carriers do not sink.
>> Anonymous
>>311485

It's in a maneuvers operation - so, no.
>> Anonymous
OP picture COULD be the legendary 15 degree list the Lincoln did back in like 95.
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
last one, and worst one.

upload some more if you have it.
>> Anonymous
>>311488
just sayin, that ones rolling and not level, ships that big you don't usually see do that...
>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
>>311491

It's the USS Reagan in the picture.
>> Anonymous
Here's the description of OP's pic:

USS Ronald Reagan (CVN 76) conducts rudder checks as part of the ship's Board of Inspection and Survey (INSURV) following a six-month Planned Incremental Availability. All naval vessels are periodically inspected by INSURV to check their material condition and battle readiness. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class M. Jeremie Yoder (RELEASED)
>> Anonymous
I was told those things can
t list all that far, like 25 degree3s and bad things happen
>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Gentleman
     File :-(, x)
>> Gentleman
     File :-(, x)
>> Anonymous
>>311491
/r/ info on what the hell you're talking about
>> Anonymous
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I don't see the fucking USS Iowa in here. And it's the goddamned king of boats.
>> Anonymous
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How about a real boat.
>> WE
>>311629

NICE boat
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
Longshore?
>> Anonymous
>>311629
is that in san francisco? Sorry, ausfag here
>> Anonymous
>>311646
not sure, I just google emma maersk.
>> Anonymous
>>311646

Not SF, SF doesn't have real Ports any more for ships like this. I also doubt this shot is of the Oakland docks. Don't have any islands like that around the bay to my knowlege.
>> Bat Guano
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This carrier sank.
The USS Oriskany (CVA-34), a 30,800-ton Essex-class aircraft carrier (1945-1976), was sunk in 2006 off Florida and turned into a reef.
>> Bat Guano
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>> Bat Guano
     File :-(, x)
>> Bat Guano
     File :-(, x)
>> Bat Guano
     File :-(, x)
>> Bat Guano
     File :-(, x)
>> Bat Guano
     File :-(, x)
Blub.
>> Anonymous
>>311723
>>311725
>>311726
>>311727
>>311728
>>311729
>>311730

God thats fucking criminal. Ship was beautiful, should have made her a museum.
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>>311736
>God thats fucking criminal. Ship was beautiful, should have made her a museum.
>Fixed:
Ship is made from steel. Should have let the Indians take it apart by hand for cents a day.
>> Anonymous
>>311737

Failed Fix is FAIL.
>> Anonymous
>>311736
an artificial reef is infinitely more useful than any museum could ever hope to be, especially with the extremely rapid rate of destruction of natural reefs. fish deserve hidey-holes too.
>> Anonymous
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/r/ing larger images of the Jahre Viking
>> Anonymous
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in the meantime... Queen Mary II in SF
>> Anonymous
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>>311629
Sister ship to the Emma Mærsk.
>> Anonymous
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>>311866
>>311629
They are xbawks hueg!
>> Mr. Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
Freedom... one of many forms
>> Anonymous
I demand Bismarck.
>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
so whats the biggest ship currently in operation?
>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
>>312248
What is happening in this picture? I see the old wooden boat is British. What of the other one?
>> Seafire !1ixiiX/lyc
     File :-(, x)
>>312253
A 1956 Mayflower replica & HMS Ark Royal (R09), a british aircraft carrier
>> Anonymous
>>311740

So they should make an artificial reef, you don't have to destroy a piece of history to do so.
>> Anonymous
>>312217

Probably one of the United States' Supercarriers. Barring that, a cruise ship.
>> Seafire !1ixiiX/lyc
     File :-(, x)
>>312217
>>312296

Actually Emma Mærsk that was posted earlier is the longest ship in service right now. The biggest ship ever built was supertanker Knock Nevis, but according to Wikipedia it loses in gross tonnage to Batillus class supertankers.

Pic: A Batillus class tanker

Does anyone remember what was the supertanker that sunk off the coast of Ireland/Scotland? IIRC it is the largest wreck in the world.
>> Gentleman
>>312299

Wikipedia tells me it's the Kowloon Bridge.
>> Seafire !1ixiiX/lyc
     File :-(, x)
>>312307
Thanks!
>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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OH SHI-
>> Anonymous
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>>312931
Thanks, I love when ships get in trouble. Damn shame 10 megapixel DSLRs weren`t available for Titanic sinking.
>> Anonymous
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>>312942

wouldnt have mattered if there were 500mb cameras around for that incident as whom would have shot it ?


Anywho have a what may potentially be made into an 'Mindfuck'.
>> Anonymous
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woh oh oooooh shes a working class boat !
>> Anonymous
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Cleanup on Isle 3
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
This thread has to be the best i've come across on /hr/. I'm planning a 'Ground Zero', 911 /hr/ thread in the next few days then onto military aircraft.

Do ppl want ?
>> Anonymous
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Keepin the waters safe from submarines !
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
Comming from Australia it was quite interesting to see a what looks like a coast gaurd or police boat with gun turrents both front and rear especially so close to shore.

Possibly for manouvers not to sure as this wouldnt happen where I live.
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
This is more of what I would be accustomed to seeing in local WA waters
>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Pasha Bulka Haydn
     File :-(, x)
Pasha Bulka - grounded in Newcastle Australia in June 07.
>> Anonymous
>>312959
Survivors on the lifeboats could have taken photos.
>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>>312981
Bud the types of camera's they had back in those days would have made it impossible. Let alone the fact that they would have been more scared for their lives to grab anything more then hopefully their children

More from OP's set
>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
Another pic thats part of the set from previously posted
>> Anonymous
>>312965
I`ve just about have every photo from 911, I don`t think you could post anthing new. But then again I might be wrong. Always looking for new 911 photos, especially hi-rez.
>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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More Aircraft Carriers as they just look mad
>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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I really like this pic :)
>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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Getting pretty close to the end of my high res pictures now. I hope annon liked
>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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and im spent, 27 pics in total and im gonna go sleep.

I'll attempt to submit some more later.
>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Bat Guano
     File :-(, x)
>>311479
US nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, USS Ronald Reagan (CVN 76), gets her starboard anchor painted in gold.
>> Anonymous
This thread is excellent, thanks a lot guys.

Pity /hr/ doesn't have many threads of this calibre these days.
>> Anonymous
>>311500
Could some military fanboy name me the type of ships and airplanes in that picture (aside from the obvious Nimitz class carriers en B2 Spirit)?
>> Anonymous
>>313149
The ones with V shaped tail fins: F-18
The ones with two vertical tails: F-15
The ones with single tail fin: F-16
>> Anonymous
>>313124
why are the anchors gold?
>> Anonymous
>>313149
Carrier L-R: USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN-72), USS Kitty Hawk (CV-63), USS Ronald Reagan (CVN-76)

>>311485
OP pic is USS Reagan undergoing high-speed trials.
>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
>>313149
also, the ships directly behind the carriers are Ticonderoga-class Aegis cruisers,

the rest of the ships behind them are Arleigh Burke-class Aegis destroyers

and the ship in the rear is either a resupply ship or a command ship (too hard to tell)
>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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anybody know why, like in this ship, these supertankers sail so low?
>> Bat Guano
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>>313504
Low means full cargo in the hold, in your case crude oil. Not as heavy as water, but heavy enough to laden the Norwegian Ultra Large Crude Carrier (ULCC), Jahre Viking (aka Knock Nevis), 565,000 tons, 485.46 meters (1,503 feet) long, damaged in the Iran-Iraq war and converted into a shorebound oil containment vessel off Saudi Arabia, if I remember correctly.
And here she is with empty holds, riding tall above the waterline.
>> Anonymous
>>313528
damn i wonder how much money a full cargo of oil would be worth
>> Anonymous
>>313124
"Paint my anchor, nigger."
>> Anonymous
>>313532

In the case of the Jahre Viking, if it were still sailing today, a full load would be 4.1 million barrels at $104 a barrel, which is $426.4 million if my math is correct.
>> Icarus !!OeCP5XEspZE
>>313532

Ran some quick numbers...

ULCC at Full capacity (total long tons - empty tonnage)

550,000-320,000 = 220,000 long tons

to 223,530,320 kilograms

3.4 kilos to the gallon of light sweet crude

65744211.8 gallons

55 gallons to barrel

1195349.31 barrels

$104 barrel

$124,316,328 Cash for contents, plus cost of ship
>> Bat Guano
     File :-(, x)
The Knock Nevis is a Norwegian owned supertanker, formerly known as Seawise Giant, Happy Giant, and Jahre Viking. It is 458.45 m (1,504 ft) in length and 68.9 m (226 ft) in width, making her the largest ship ever constructed (However, by gross tonnage measure, she is fifth, 236,710, behind the four Batillus class supertankers- 274,838-275,276 tons gross). It was built between 1979 and 1981, damaged during the Iran-Iraq War, and refloated in 1991, but is now used as an immobile offshore platform for the oil industry.
Knock Nevis has a deadweight of 564,763 tonnes and a summer displacement of 647,955 t when laden with nearly 650,000 m³ (4.1 million barrels) of petroleum. The ship has a draft of 24.6 m (81 feet) when fully loaded, which makes it impossible for the ship to navigate even the English Channel, let alone man-made canals at Suez and Panama. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knock_Nevis
Pic: Comparison of some of the longest ships (Knock Nevis, Emma Mærsk, RMS Queen Mary 2, MS Berge Stahl and USS Enterprise). Colours are representative of the ships' underside and topsides. Lengths are drawn to scale, the profiles are drawn using multiple photos and diagrams, and may not be entirely accurate. The ships are not the "five largest" in the world, but the largest of each type. Knock Nevis is still the largest ship ever built, and Emma Maersk the largest ship in operation.
>> dedla !MQbFngGEl2
>>311609
>>312085
Yamato trumps them, still.

>>311740
QFT.

>>312293
Those pieces of history need maintenance and upkeep, which having to scrap by on donations which turns them into insults of anything they might've been honored for.

Trashy museums don't do squat to just sitting down and reading details, which is the reason you're wondering around an overpriced self-guided tour of a refurb to begin with.

The only thing a ship-turned museum can give you is tourism photos and a sense of scale, which you can make very a mock-up of cheaply compared to fixing up a tub of rust
>> dedla !MQbFngGEl2
>>313669
Good god damn look at the typos. You can get the gists. I sleep now.
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
What ship would this happen to be? And whats the story?

>>312996
And why is there a concorde there?

>>312331
And wuts happening here?

zomg thats the end of my question time...
>> Anonymous
>>313729
It is the new VTOL Concorde variant.
>> Anonymous
>>313729
Yeah, what the fuck IS that concorde doing there?
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>>313729
>> Icarus !!OeCP5XEspZE
>>313791

The carrier (Nimitz) has been turned into a air and space museum, the Concorde is probably also on display, as most if not all of them are out of service anyway.
>> Anonymous
>>313729

>>313791


the concord and that whole set up there is a tourist attraction in new york city, ive been there before, that carrier is the one they were on in the first National Treasure movie
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
Elly Maersk when docking in Zeebrugge, Belgium on her maiden voyage.
>> Bat Guano
     File :-(, x)
>>313853
Elly Maersk?
They made a sister ship to the giant Emma Mærsk, a Dutch container freighter; 397 meters long x 56 meters wide, 156,907 tons, carries 11,000 20-ft containers.
>> Anonymous
>>311737
They tried to sell it to someone interested in it for a museum or scrap. They never got interested parties, eventually I think it was the state who bought it to turn it into a reef to boost tourism. Was a pretty neat show on how they had to clean it out and then set it up to sink as perfectly as they could, they wanted it resting in the right orientation on the bottom which they succeeded at.
>> Anonymous
>>313836

Fail.
USS Intrepid. Essex class. Not Nimitz.
>> Bat Guano
     File :-(, x)
Ships tools.
An 18th Century Persian astrolabe - maker unknown. The points of the curved spikes on the front rete plate, mark the positions of the brightest stars. The name of each star being labeled at the base of each spike. The back plate, or mater is engraved with projected coordinate lines. From the Whipple Museum of the History of Science in Cambridge.
>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>>313963
Yes, the Elly Maersk. There are a total of 8 ships of this type, with 4 others awaiting completion.
On the pic you see the bow of the Elly, with another ship of the Maersk Lines, the Santa Catalina, being towed in. The Catalina is only 3430 TEU, with the Elly being 11000 TEU. The difference in size was really huge.
>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
>>313729
That is the Intrepid museum in New York City. When I went there the concord was being refurbed so I couldnt get close to it. The sub in the picture was a conventional sub that carried nuclear cruise missiles.
>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
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>> Anonymous
>>313124
lol, the BM has a brush
>> Anonymous
>>311740

:3