Love the continuing ed videos. The videos of your Union Hall job hunts were equally great. Those took me right into John McPhee’s book: LOOKING FOR A SHIP.
I knew a couple of the characters in McPhee’s book. The mate he chronicled named Chase has long been the Captain of the Maine Maritime Academy training vessel Bowdoin after he got off the Lykes Lines freighter in the book. Another officer in the book was a school mate of mine.
We know your background that you have shared with us ,the long haul rides on the motorcycle the hikes ,the quarantine voyage ,…..nerd doesn’t fit in the conversation in any way . We see a daring, focused, intelligent woman with a plan ! And I’m no scholar, just a retired construction worker ,who still works part time in the summer . I need to stay active for healthy living if you stay idle to long , you may have trouble getting up one day , and I’m not ready for that .( I’m 73 and enjoy every day .) we have no doubt you will succeed !….
@@m.leinewolczko glad you smiled ! You’re good to go , you really do have a good head on your shoulders ! I’d be proud to have you on point in any situation ! Keep up the good work !….
This is one of your best explained production yet, Very well done. Does the simulator have motion control? Will deck pitch & roll in heavy seas? Is ships engine & propeller vibration simulated.
With the mass and inertia involved, you would know you're F'ed with plenty of time to freak out about not being able to avoid it. Simulators properly run are a great teaching aid, and can be lots of fun.
The biggest difference between the simulator and real life. When you walk into the simulator, you know there is going to be some sort of emergency and you are on your toes for it. Real life emergencies occur on a shift that you are half asleep and on a shift you were expecting to be very boring and routine.
Learning now so you'll be earning more later. SMART!
🥳
Fabulous video. The sim scenes are excellent.
More to come!
Love the continuing ed videos. The videos of your Union Hall job hunts were equally great. Those took me right into John McPhee’s book: LOOKING FOR A SHIP.
🙌
I knew a couple of the characters in McPhee’s book. The mate he chronicled named Chase has long been the Captain of the Maine Maritime Academy training vessel Bowdoin after he got off the Lykes Lines freighter in the book. Another officer in the book was a school mate of mine.
Love your videos. Nuts and bolts about a world I know little about. Keep them coming.
🙌
We know your background that you have shared with us ,the long haul rides on the motorcycle the hikes ,the quarantine voyage ,…..nerd doesn’t fit in the conversation in any way . We see a daring, focused, intelligent woman with a plan ! And I’m no scholar, just a retired construction worker ,who still works part time in the summer . I need to stay active for healthy living if you stay idle to long , you may have trouble getting up one day , and I’m not ready for that .( I’m 73 and enjoy every day .) we have no doubt you will succeed !….
Haha I mean nerd in the most loving way 😂🙌
@@m.leinewolczko glad you smiled ! You’re good to go , you really do have a good head on your shoulders ! I’d be proud to have you on point in any situation ! Keep up the good work !….
Id love to have a go at handling one of those ships, well ship simulators in a tricky situation.
It's pretty fun!
@@m.leinewolczko yes I bet, looking forward to seeing some of that if your able to film it 🤞🤞
@@MrCrabbing It's in the editing stages now 😁
Bloody Awesome.... All we ever had was the CG test and Hands on survival...lol
😂
This is one of your best explained production yet, Very well done. Does the simulator have motion control? Will deck pitch & roll in heavy seas? Is ships engine & propeller vibration simulated.
Thanks for this input! I'll make sure to cover that info in the next couple of vids 🙌 They'll be a bit more hands-on
With the mass and inertia involved, you would know you're F'ed with plenty of time to freak out about not being able to avoid it. Simulators properly run are a great teaching aid, and can be lots of fun.
You got that right 👍
The biggest difference between the simulator and real life. When you walk into the simulator, you know there is going to be some sort of emergency and you are on your toes for it. Real life emergencies occur on a shift that you are half asleep and on a shift you were expecting to be very boring and routine.
Absolutely 🙌
Great stuff, really interesting. Learning to quickly and accurately access the situation, "Your Fucked!" Simple, concise, and oh so Madeleine.
Hahaaa lightens the mood a little too
Dealing with the simulation gremlins will teach you a lot🤓
Indeed haha
Good chance to practice u-turns in a canal. 😅
Hahahaha right
"You're fucked" lol. Classic Emergency Shiphandling comment.
😂😂🙌