Oil Tanker VS MONSTER WAVES
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 7 ก.พ. 2024
- In the heart of a raging sea, an oil tanker faces off against monstrous waves, a battle of engineering against nature's fury. This is a gripping tale of survival, where human ingenuity is tested by the relentless power of the ocean.
#shorts #shorts #wave #waves #ship #ships
Thank you to Licet Studios for providing the footage!
Video attributions: Thomas A.D. - บันเทิง
The structural integrity of these ships is remarkable.
I was also on the SS Thompson Pass in the Pacific Ocean. 3 football fields long tanker. When standing on the main deck, looking forward, the amount of flex was terrifying. I'd say good engineering and great welding. Valdez to Panama.
You need to be very brave.😲🫢
The protection of the Most High God is more remarkable. Only by His mercies these ships make that journey without incident.
@@lindacharles1947the video is fake , the camera is much stable
@lindacharles1947 what utter twaddle and how insulting to the engineers and skilled craftsmen whi build these ships. You are an embarrassment to yourself.
Imagine crossing seas like that in the ships from the 1700's 😱
That’s how you know that shit was lies about Africans being brought to America lol
PEOPLE BEFORE ARE BUILT DIFFERENCE. TODAY IS FEMININE ERA. OPPPS I MEANT NO OFFENSE I'M JUST SAYING HEHE🙂
Even so it would have been BRUTAL!
Unless you have sailed through rough seas, you would never understand true power of ocean.
Aaaàààamen
That true
South China sea
I guess so
Imagine it's 1700 and your boat is made of wood
Those Captains deserve medals without them and the workers we would have nothing and the truckers. These 2 professions don’t get the recognition they deserve THANK YOU TO ALL OF THEM
💯
YES!!
If EU & US would produce owns goods and not ship from China, we wouldn't depend on those giant polluters
Pastor dowell
Thats why joining the organised labour movement is important to get the recognition they deserve.
I would not be able to do that for anything. May God bless everyone who sets foot on this ship and every ship. 🙏
My Dad worked on an oil vessel call OverSeas Alaska for 40 years he would be away 3-4 months at a time. As a young girl I always was afraid for my dad. Thank God he made it and retired in 1987.
🫡 ✊To your dad! 🫶
I like happy endings. I'm glad for you too.❤
Blessings to you and your family. I hope your father is still well, 40 years after his retirement.
Your father didn't have life..😮
@@airkunaI disagree with you completely because what better way of making your life beautiful than living in the water enjoying the beautiful nature and traveling around nonstop from country to country spending one night here the other night somewhere else learning about people places culture and diversity.. you will gain a lot of knowledge and experiences as you travel
I’m almost getting heart attack just by watching this 😂
Hat off to the captain and crew there're incredible.
Imagine being at the helm of that ship.😮❤
Да там по фигу , корабль сам нормальный
There's no captain and crew on these ships..
@airkuna so you are telling us we have created such fantastic AI drone oil tankers now that is truely awesome. I know we have many self driving trucks on our highways. But the due have a human in them yet just incase. Most people are completely unaware of these trucks. This the first I have seen these Hugh ships with AI operations, truely amazing.
@@airkuna, does sp9nge Bob and Squidward pull them through the ocean?
No crew or captain, just like there is no brain between your head.
I admire those people who actually steer the ships through those waves. If that was me, I would be somewhere on that ship under a table crying hysterically.
It's u n me buddy
Couldn't of said it any better!!!
I have experienced similar situations times on large ferries and always feared for my life. It is very dangerous and scary
My older bro was a deep sea diver in the nrth Pacific. He recalled the daunting moments those heavy boots didn't submerge him fast enough when 20 ft waves had him looking down at the recvery deck that he had his air line attached to. Good pay high risk. ❤😮😅
😂😂😅😅
Um, that's not a NZ navy ship, it's a tanker. Takes some real balls to sign up for this kind of work.
So the RNZN doesn't have replenishment ships? I better pop into HQ tomorrow and tell them. Thanks for that.
Ok, fair point, but in general, many of these shorts have incorrect info@@JDWDMC
@@JDWDMC might want to ask about your hurt feelings to them also. Thoughts and prayers for you 🙏
Narrator: southern ocean
One second later: off the coast of France 😂😂
@@JDWDMCyes the narrator says three different locations. No idea where this really is.
I was on a tanker off the coast of Outer Banks, NC. when our ship was hit with a rogue wave. Waves were 12 to 15 feet when out of nowhere, a 50-foot wave hit. It was very devastating. Crushed our lifeboat, ripped steel handrails,and more. Never forget it.
Wow! A heck of an experience
Surprise Surprise !! That will make you swear ?😂
To be incredibly nerdy and somewhat off topic, I think rogue waves have to do with constructive and destructive harmonics. When opposing waves meet, they'll either cancel each other out or "boost" each other. With all the different currents, the tides and the wind, it seems that oceans remain fairly "level" with all of the opposing waves interactions leaving a "comfortable average" wave height. Once in a while, all of these opposing waves meet at just the right time to create these monsters.
Why i love sea so much
50 ft !!! Well worded and VERY good; if I was a surfer in the Hawaian Finals. Jumping Jacks!Grant me the strength!
That’s what’s called “confused seas”. There’s no actual direction of the waves to point the bow. This is the most dangerous and terrifying sea state. Without expert captain skills, perfect ballast locating and nerves of steel, capsizing, hull breeches or catastrophic engine failure will result.
En la noche sería más aterrador.😂 Buen intnto, con buenas fintas.... 🤣💤😴
@@user-lh4kl1df3nEnquanto resgatávamos uma cápsula de um foguete Ariane francês na década de 80 a Corveta em q eu servia embarcado, entrou numa tempestade assim e por muito pouco não afundamos no meio do Oceano Atlântico e era de noite, assustador e área infestada de tubarões.🤦♂️👉🦈Ps. Eram 4 corvetas sendo uma da França, só a nossa entrou na tempestade.🤔
Try it alone during 20' seas in a 54' Ketch.
In the pitch black of night.
Skills have nothing to do with it. We're all at the mercy of GOD!!!
@@beezeboo6035 What's it like to live in fear and ignorance of something that doesn't even exist?
Seems ridiculously pathetic to me.
I'm literally feeling fear in my chest. My dream of a cruise just evaporated 😮
Kkkkkkkkkk
No slow boat to China for you hey?
The stress on that ship would be phenomenal, especially with oil on board.
😂
Oil on board every boat😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
I can’t confirm my next statement.
But I believe this ship is empty, she looks like she’s riding high.
@966Mako unless she released her ballast to ride higher during the excessive waves and sea conditions.
Still, it's a scary situation.
Cape Horn is a treacherous stretch of ocean, also The North Sea.
Rounding Africa was far rougher than north sea from my experience.
My 100% RESPECT to these Person's on board terrifying just watching but grateful for the service they provide
Fuck that.
Facts😆😆😆
All money ain't good money 🤣
My sentiments exactly!!!🫣😬😬😬
Just imagine, our ancestors navigated the Seas in small wind powered wooden ships smaller than a modern city bus...
Well, they went out into the seas….
The strength of the ships keel is incredible, how it supports the weight of the front section when it's hanging mid-air between waves is phenomenal.
What they failed to show was the crew throwing up.
Right😂
Só de ver essas ondas me da uma dor de barriga de medo, só de está vendo. Imagina quem está lá no navio trabalhando ..😮
Was on a aircraft carrier , hit a typhoon off Singapore, waves breaking over the flight deck, ripped all the cat walks off ,to midship
How he keep the camera so steady with waves is awesome 😁
The narration doesn't have much to do with the video other than a ship and some rough seas.
😂😂😂 I feel ya
Just unbelievable. The situations those incredibly brave men put themselves in to make sure that everyone receives what they need, is remarkable!! They’re literally putting their lives on the line every time they go out into those seas and oceans!! My gratitude is immense, and my prayers that they get to go home to their families are sent!! Thank you so much for the work that you do, thankless in the main it probably is most of the time!! There ARE people who know and understand, and realise just how much you do!! Love to you and those you love…always…Mario🌟
Seas like this can cause a ship to hog enough to jackknife the keel, which then rapidly leads to the ship sinking in two main pieces.
That's what happened to the Edmund Fitzgerald. Got bridged across two waves and split in two.
@@BillSmith-rx9rm The fact the forward section is upright but the stern section is upside down suggests another scenario might be what happened. Basically a rouge wave broke over the bow, flooding the cargo holds though the cargo hatches forcing the ship to dive into the bottom bow first while the stern is still on the surface with the engine running. The midsection caved in and broke apart and the stern sunk. The cargo spilled out and now lies in a concentration between both main sections of the wreck. The momentum from the propeller rotates the stern until it's upside down then it hits the bottom.
I could not cope with this I'd be ill hiding somewhere out of sight ,I'd be petrified x
HOW DO THESE SHIPS...NOT... BREAK !!!!😂😂😂😂😮😮😮
Sometimes they DO!😮
Nope...won't even entertain the idea of a cruise ship
I've been on many cruise trips and have never seen anything like this
Right there with you!
These people! Why do they do this??
This ocean R O A R S ! ! !
Salute to the folks that build these ships........
God bless the sailors
Shakelton’s crew did that in a 20 foot boat navigating by stars.
Захватывает дух. Два раза ещё в юности попадал в шторм на Черном море. На Метеоре близ Сочи болтало балов 8 Он ещё и сломался
As a former crew member of the Polar Star I still miss that sh!t every single day. Even over 25 years later.
Been there,winter north Atlantic
Didn't know that the NZ navy operated tankers.
Are those up rights crows nests. How would you like being up there in that storm.
been there done that thanks for bringing back some old memories
Huge respect for these guys, keeping a cool head in situations like this is crucial, every decision, every reaction, every thing you do has consequence. Deep Sea Mariners are a breed apart.
The sea is a formidable foe. Storms got so severe up in the Aleutian Islands during WW2 that my father had to take his ship out of harbor and ride them out at sea, for fear his ship would be dashed against the shore. He was the captain of a minesweeper.
One moment it's the southern ocean, next it's the coast of France.
Which ?
Both are very different.
Should show the inclinometer.
I will never..
Me neither…. 😳
Do you think an Oil tanker is a NZ navy ship?
Why not?
The ocean plays with it like a toy!!! Glad I'm not on it... Namaste!!!
White master 🤠💂
The voice over is something that was cut from a different video...one of those "top ten big waves caught on camera" type. I'm quite familiar with both the clips the voice mentions. And while both show some pretty alarming oceans, neither is as terrifying as what we are shown in THIS video.
This ship is a petrochemical tanker. It's being thrown around like a little sailboat.
For it not to crack in half when up in the air...is quite amazing.
Incredible. A massive oil tanker that probably weighs millions of tons if it's full of oil, and the sea can still toss it around
I'll be in the bar!😱😱😱
Thank God there’s at least one video on this topic that doesn’t play “Yo Ho, All hands hoist the colors high.. Heave, Ho Theives & Beggars”! 😂
I never knew one could get "seasick" watching a video
my grandpa was a captain of a ship not that big of a ship but I don't know how the hell he did that because this looks terrifying rest in peace grandpa.
Denizciler saygıyı hak ediyor,hangi millet ve dinden olursa olsun, Allah onları korusun
😱😱😱
J'ai peur de la mer 🌊
Je meurt sur place!🫣😬
Bravo à tous ces travailleurs courageux!💪💪👍
This is where you put your faith in quality Welds
How did the vikings do this insanity
I don't think the unlucky ones made it if they ran into a storm like that.
I’m getting sea sick just watching this
That is frightening, those men are strong hearted.
That is one huge ship being tossed around like a feather
That's a shaking not stirred moment mr bond
Whenever I see these videos... I just can't help thinking about the AMAZING SKILL and FANTASTIC level of BRAVERY that has to come along with doing something (meaning: a job) like this...
I, TRULY, APPLAUD THE MANY PEOPLE WHO WORK WITH/IN ANY PROFESSION THAT WOULD PUT THEM IN THESE KINDS OF CONDITIONS - AGAIN AND AGAIN! 😮🌊🚢👏👏👏👏👏
" the ol cook came on deck n said fellas its to rough to feed ya"...
I guess it's better to take the waves on the side to reduce the chance of the hull splitting or buckling.
Not really....would increase the risk of capsizing
More of a angle, it's hard to see. We do it racing sometimes. I had my drop out bolster seat break apart in a offshore race. Running in 5 to 8s. In boats 24 to 32ft. We'd be 10ft level out of the water. One team I passed for second said my prop was even with there ,eye sight as we went by. He said his boat was completely out of the water too. Also ,saw my busted seat cushion flying around. I said that happened a 3miles earlier. I saw them in the distance and wanted 2nd place. So I was falling into my Navigator the whole time. We ended in 3rd. Boats were sinking too.
Where are the women arguing that you never see women doing these jobs! I mean where is the equality! 😉
This brings back nightmares, a series of Arctic storms that lasted 17 days.
Dont ever disrespect a welder...they can cost your company alot.
All it takes is one inch of weld to fail.
Remarkable engineering of that tanker. I could never be on that ship, I'd spill my tea 😂
Every time I was offshore I always trusted my captain and the vessel. I NEVER thought we would crash or sink. Not once and we were in some heavy seas. Maybe I was young and dumb.
Can't be real... Why is the camera absolutely still, not moving WITH the ship?
The camera is on a hand-held gimble stabiliser in your hand, the ship moves, but the subject stays still. They are used on drones or any fast-moving scenes like football matches etc. 😉
Θεέ μου. Τη. Μου. Θύμησες😭😭😭🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷
Nem da pra acreditar que enquanto estou aqui no conforto da minha casa, há homens tão corajosos nessa situação.
Insane to think about the last 5 centuries of sailing wooden ships
I would be downstairs having a cup of coffee if I were on this thing
Must be hard not to spill the Captain's coffee under this weather. He really hates it when somebody spills his coffee.
Looks like a November day in the Gulf of Alaska... working on board can be pretty boring... days like this make ya feel alive.😅
سبحان الخالق ،منظر مخيف يا هل ترى كيف سيكون يوم الحساب ؟
اللهم إرحمنا برحمتك .
They would have to sedate me during that craziness.
This is one of the reasons why I changed my mind about buying a sailboat. There are also reefs in the middle of the ocean that haven't even been mapped yet that have sunk sailboats. Blew my mind when I learned about it. A family crashed into one in the middle of the night while in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. I mean land sticking up out in the middle of the ocean. Makes sense when you consider that's exactly how islands are created over thousands of years.
God bless people working on this ship
Respecting the ocean and its power is a wise thing indeed.
The sheer force and torque on that hull is unfathomable. Deep too………
That’s scary , I worked off shore on oil rigs and always felt sorry for the standby vessel in ruff weather
This is what they call Cape Horn.
sailing near Antarctica... near the cost of France.....Yeh, France is in Antarctica.
" Hahaha You call that a storm?!"
-- Lt. Dan
That's not a wave that's literally the ocean folding over lmao
They keep saying it’s different places
What's curious to me is how those three masts remain almost perfectly vertical while the ship rolls left to right.
Our forefathers took these massive seas on with much smaller wooden ships. Balls of steel on those great Men of the West 💪🏻
Ocean 😈
Ship 😈
Those Who in the ship 🗿🗿
As long as the engine is running and no water ingress, you’re still safe jst dont fight the waves keep the engine dead slow ahead🇵🇭🇳🇴
This is terrifying but very very cool
Does anyone know, where the love of God goes, when the waves turn the minutes, to hours?
Any man on that boat has worthy seeds
Why aren’t we thanking the engineers of these ships! Damn how many trials and errors to get this right and how many lives lost during that process. They don’t show us how the “sausage” is made 😂
Guys have guts of steel working out there😮
How the hell do they prevent these ships from capsizing?? Amazing captains and crews
Sailing back in the day would have been crazy lol...
cudo's to the engineers who designed this thing. amazing it just doesn t break up theres so much stress on that hull
Você tem medo de viajar de avião? Vai de navio kkkkkk