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DerbyDad03 DerbyDad03 is offline
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Default Does a capital ship sinking actually SUCK a swimmer down to drown?

On Tuesday, December 22, 2015 at 1:17:55 AM UTC-5, wrote:
On Mon, 21 Dec 2015 21:06:35 -0700, Tony Hwang
wrote:

Sylvia Else wrote:
On 22/12/2015 11:04 AM, M. Stradbury wrote:
Is it true (or an urban myth) that a swimmer would be sucked
under (presumably to drown) when a capital ship sinks?


Mythbusters tried it, and concluded that there was no significant
sucking sown.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rvU_dkKdZ0U

Sylvia.


So when ship is abandoned, crews jump off the ship, they hang around the
sinking ship, right? They always swim away from the ship as much as
they can. Ask any sailors.


I was a sailor (blue water USCG) and there are lots of reasons to get
away. For one, you really don't want to get caught in the oil slick.
That is plenty of reason, right there.
The oil can be on fire or catch fire.
On a war ship, there might be some ordinance that will go off.
If you are close you might also get snagged in the rigging. That will
drag you down for sure.


If I may ask, what did you do in the USCG?

I was a LORAN-C technician. One year at LORSTA Sylt, Germany and one
year at LORSTA Port Clarence, AK. The remainder of my 4-year enlistment
was spent as a LORAN instructor at the USCG Training Center on
Governors Island, NY.

My total sea time consisted of a few thousand 7 minute ferry crossings
between Governors Island and Manhattan. Countless times I missed the last
(3 AM) ferry to the island and had to sleep in my car until the 6 AM
crossing.