ORIGINAL: BrucePowers
So did the USS Maine.[:D]
I'd heard it was spontaneously combusting coal dust...
Moderators: Joel Billings, wdolson, Don Bowen, mogami
ORIGINAL: BrucePowers
So did the USS Maine.[:D]
ORIGINAL: Terminus
ORIGINAL: BrucePowers
So did the USS Maine.[:D]
I'd heard it was spontaneously combusting coal dust...
ORIGINAL: rtrapasso
Photos of the hull showed the armor, etc. was bent dramatically INWARD (photos which were still floating around on the web at one time). Rickover came up with a theory that water rushing into the hull caused this... put how armor is going to bend hull plates in like this is a nice trick. i do not believe this theory, and lots of other folks (including naval engineers) do not either.
ORIGINAL: Monter_Trismegistos
ORIGINAL: rtrapasso
Photos of the hull showed the armor, etc. was bent dramatically INWARD (photos which were still floating around on the web at one time). Rickover came up with a theory that water rushing into the hull caused this... put how armor is going to bend hull plates in like this is a nice trick. i do not believe this theory, and lots of other folks (including naval engineers) do not either.
It was not water itself, but shock wave reflected from bottom made this.
Sinking of French predrednaught Liberté, where it was quite known how it happened, showed the same syndrom: hull was bent inward. So in general that theory is quite plausible.

ORIGINAL: BrucePowers
Here is another web site (Arlington National Cemetary). It gives an overview of what Robert has discussed in better detail. It does point to additional material for those who want to read more.
http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/ussmaine.htm
Robert;
I did not mean to take the thread so far off topic.
Bruce
ORIGINAL: Terminus
Considering that she ate twenty-three heavy-calibre shells, yeah...

ORIGINAL: Nikademus
ORIGINAL: Terminus
Considering that she ate twenty-three heavy-calibre shells, yeah...
It helped that most of the shells exploded prematurely before full penetration.